Fr. 116.00

Democracy and Dictatorship in South Asia - Dominant Classes and Political Outcomes in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh

English · Hardback

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Description

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In reaction to British imperialism during the 19th and 20th centuries, Indian Muslims and Hindus imagined and invented their separate and distinct religious communities and communal nationalisms. These were institutionalized in the subcontinent's political systems by the British government in collaboration with Indian politicians. Stern argues that this production of communalism has been crucial in structuring the composition and organization of South Asia's politically dominant classes, and that they, in turn, have been crucial in determining parliamentary democracy's growth or atrophy on the subcontinent.

In what became India, the overwhelmingly Hindu National Congress formed a coalition of professionals and landed peasants, later joined by industrialists, that was friendly to the development of parliamentary democracy. In its western provinces, Pakistan's legacy from British government was a ruling coalition of landlords and civilian and military bureaucrats that has continued to impede the development of parliamentary democracy. Until 1971, this coalition equated parliamentary democracy with the loss of their dominance to Pakistan's Bengali majority. Only among them, in Pakistan's eastern province, now Bangladesh, was there a politically dominant coalition of classes that was friendly to the development of parliamentary democracy. It had the ironic effect in Pakistan of entrenching the west's anti-democratic coalition. Dogged by the legacies of twenty-four years as Pakistan's subordinate province, disorganization among its dominant classes and a vanished rural base, the development of parliamentary democracy in Bangladesh has been slow and uneven.

List of contents










Dominant Class Coalitions: The Argument and Its Historical Contexts
"Communalism" and Coalitions of Dominant Classes
Punjab and Bengal
Democracy in India
Pakistan and Bangladesh
Does Parliamentary Democracy Matter?
Index


About the author










ROBERT W. STERN is a Senior Research Fellow at Macquarie University in Sydney. For more than thirty years his professional life has centered on the study of modern South Asia. He is the author of four books, including Changing India (1993) and a number of articles.

Product details

Authors Robert Stern, Robert W. Stern
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.11.2000
 
EAN 9780275970413
ISBN 978-0-275-97041-3
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

POLITICAL SCIENCE / General, Politics & government, Politics and government, World History: Politics and Government

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