The turn of the twentieth century saw the apogee of the British Empire in I
ndia, while at the same time the seeds of decolonization sprouted. The last
decades of the Raj (1930s and 1940s) saw some flickers of "constructive im
perialism," but these came too late. By then, nationalism had gathered stre
ngth. Indian leaders-including Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru-and the
government raced to raise development issues and debate the role of science
and technology therein. By 1937, many committees had been formed and repor
ts published, and the push was on to make India a modern nation-state. At f
irst sight, there seemed to be unity of purpose, but in reality this was no
t so. As this paper shows, the thin veneer of the development discourse eva
porated when put under pressure by class interests.