The books that have been banned and withdrawn in India may be divided into certain types. The concern here is with books that have been withdrawn simply on the basis of a legal notice from a private party, i.e., not banned by an order from law enforcement agencies, whether the ban is subsequently upheld by a court of law or not. The number of books voluntarily withdrawn by publishers upon a legal notice has increased over the last 15 years. Some publishers that did so are Penguin India (twice, Peter Heehs' book on Sri Aurobindo; The Hindus), Harper Collins India (the unflattering biography of Dhirubhai Ambani), Bloomsbury India (the unflattering biography of Air India that Praful Patel disliked), Oxford University Press (it withdrew an article by A K Ramanujan from an edited volume) and the University of Mumbai press (it withdrew passages from Rohinton Mistry's Such a Long Journey from a course booklet; the novel is available for purchase in India). The cases involving OUP and the University of Mumbai are fundamentally different from those involving the Indian arms of Bloomsbury, Harper Collins and Penguin. The former undertook their actions on the basis of violent social boycotts and the latter upon mere legal notices (Penguin & Bloomsbury) and unexplained behaviour (Harper Collins). Once upon a time, Penguin had no compunction in continuing the worldwide publication of The Satanic Verses. I wonder what prompted the international publishers, all of whom could surely afford legal fees, to withdraw certain books. These publishing houses are owned by News Corp, Pearson Inc and Bloomsbury Group, firms listed on the NYSE, London Stock Exchange and NASDAQ, respectively. These three, and OUP, also own and publish various books, textbooks and journals that social scientists write or contribute to. These same publishers spent money to pay lawyers who argued, without legal precedent or unanimity on the interpretation of relevant Indian laws, for the regulation of photocopying services in Indian universities. Authors and researchers should rethink the nature and character of academic publishing and its relationship with the freedom of expression.