Contemporary India

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A. Premchand
andhra
Andhra Pradesh
Backward Classes
BCs
Benami Transactions
caste system dynamics
Category=JP
Central Government
Central Public Works Department
Coastal Andhra Pradesh
Commercial Banking Institutions
corruption civic impact
Creamy Layer
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Faith Based Organizations
Gdp Range
government society interaction India
Indian Penal Code
National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme
North East Frontier Agency
Police Forces
Political Parties
postcolonial governance
pradesh
Prospective Contractors
Public Interest Litigation
public policy analysis
Public Private Partnership
religion and society India
SCs
social stratification India
Tamil Nadu
Tirupati Temple
Undertook Hunger Strike
Young Man
Zamindari Abolition

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138508576
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Soon after independence, Indian political leadership decided to pursue the attainment of four self-stipulated goals: to attain an improved standard of living through higher rates of growth, to establish a functioning political democracy, to achieve social equality through social re-engineering, and to make a quick transition in making government a servant of the public than being its master as was the case during the previous colonial regime. This book describes the journey from the past to the present in the articulation of these goals and evaluates the extent to which they have been achieved.

This book is based on the belief that there is at work a principle of reciprocal causation between society and government. What society wants becomes a mandate for the government. That government is not a disinterested party and its actions, and failures to act, have an immense impact on the working of society. Premchand asserts that there is no aspect of civic life in India that is immune from governmental action. This relationship between government and society during the last six decades since independence is intensively examined.

India is a land of paradoxes and surprises. The book covers political, social, and administrative developments during the last decades to provide perspective on the changing relationship between society and governments at various levels. This is followed by studies of the various ways in which classification systems are used in India today, the urban-rural divide, non-resident Indians as neo-change agents, emerging pattern of classes, and the resurgence of religion in everyday life. The final chapters deal with the vast range of discontents in governance, corruption and its impact on civic life, the myth of law and order, and the emergence of a public voice in policymaking. The work is fair, balanced, tough minded, and revealing. It is a must read for specialists, policymakers, and people worldwide for whom India is a civilization of inexhaustible interest.