Politics and Society in India

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1947
Ahl Al Hall Wa
Basic Democracies
British government
British policy impact on India
Caste Loyalties
caste system dynamics
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Category=JP
colonial legacy analysis
comparative government
Congress Policy Statements
democratic system
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Eternal Law
Frank Moraes
Gandhian Constitution
Good Life
Hindu
Hindu Muslim political thought
Holy Law
independent India
Indian National Congress
Indian Political Life
Indian politics
Indian Science Congress
indigenous
Inside Story
Kisan Sabhas
List Account
Modern Language
Montagu Declaration
Montagu Declaration of 1917
Panchayat Samitis
Political Parties
politics and society
Praja Socialist Party
Provincial Legislative Councils
Round Table Group
South Asian governance
Taluka Panchayat
traditional authority structures
traditional systems
Ultimate Self-government
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032153988
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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India inherited a system of representative and responsible government from Britain, a large part of which was incorporated in the new constitution of independent India. But in the early 1960s it was already becoming clear that this political system could not long continue without change; and the probability is that the change would be considerable. A system deriving its inspiration from a homogenous, tight little nation-state like Britain could scarcely fit a sub-continent of heterogeneous elements like India.

Already, under a deceptively smooth surface, important changes in the nature of Indian political life were taking place. Originally published in 1963, the purpose of these collected studies was to explore, in the rapidly changing situation, the intimate relationship of Indian politics and society and to indicate the ways in which the deeper social and political currents were moving. As an aid in assessing the degree of change in the modern political life of India, several studies of traditional attitudes towards politics in the Hindu and Muslim empires are included, along with an assessment of the central meaning of the fundamental British statement of policy in the Montagu Declaration of 1917. Against this background, the greater part of the volume discusses the practices and trends of the previous few years.

C. H. Philips