1st Edition

Justice, Democracy and State in India Reflections on Structure, Dynamics and Ambivalence

By Amarnath Mohanty Copyright 2011
    406 Pages
    by Routledge India

    406 Pages
    by Routledge India

    This book explores how the liberal conception of justice with all its ideological underpinnings is reflected in the framing and working of the Constitution of India, in the adoption of broader socio-economic objectives, in the functioning of judicial and state institutions, and in the formulation and implementation of development strategy. It analyses the dynamics of the relationship between justice, democracy and the state.





    The book studies the liberal conception of social justice and its sufficiency, and interrogates its performance and adequacy within the structural parameters and cultural conditions of postcolonial India. It provides an analytical exposition of how the borrowed and inadequate conception of liberal justice and democracy inherited from colonial past, and the espousal of the derivative developmental pattern based on modernist and constructivist paradigm, have together failed to achieve the modest target of justice enshrined in the Constitution.





    Interlinking justice, democracy and state, the book examines their operational dynamics in an integrated framework which has relevance for other Third World countries also because of socio-economic and cultural commonalites.

    List of Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- 1. Liberal Conception of Justice: Structure and Limits -- 2. The Constitution of India, Dominant Political Discourse and Conception of Social Justice -- 3. Supreme Court of India: Its Governing Ideology and Views on Social Justice -- 4. Discourse of Democracy and its Role in Promoting Social Justice -- 5. State in India: Structure and Role -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- About the Author -- Index.

    Biography



    Amarnath Mohanty is Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi.