1st Edition

Political Mobilisation and Democracy in India States of Emergency

By Vernon Hewitt Copyright 2008
    240 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    240 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book addresses the paradox of political mobilization and the failings of governance in India, with reference to the conflict between secularism and Hindu nationalism, authoritarianism and democracy.

    It demonstrates how the Internal Emergency of 1975 led to increased support of groups such as the BJS and the RSS, accounting for the rise of political movements advocating Hindu nationalism - Hindutva - as a response to rapid political mobilization triggered by the Emergency, and an attempt by political elites to control this to their advantage. Vernon Hewitt argues that the political disjuncture between democracy and mobilization in India is partly a function of the Indian state, the nature of a caste-class based society, but also - and significantly - the contingencies of individual leaders and the styles of rule. He shows how, in the wake of the Emergency, the BJP and the RSS gained popularity and power amid the on-going decline and fragmentation of the Congress, whilst, at the same time, Hindu nationalism appeared to be of such importance that Congress began aligning themselves with the Hindu right for electoral gains. The volume suggests that, in the light of these developments, the rise of the BJP should not be considered as remarkable – or as transformative – as was at first imagined.

    Introduction  1. Emergencies, States and Societies: The Study of Indian Politics  2. State-Society Relations 1947-1950: A Democratic Polity?  3. Political Mobilisations: 1963-1971  4. The State and Political Crisis 1971-75  5. The State As Political Impasse: 1975-1980  6. Political Mobilisations: 1980-1996  7. Hindutva as Crisis: 1996-2004.  Conclusions

    Biography

    Vernon Hewitt is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Politics at the University of Bristol, UK. He is the author of The International Politics of South Asia (1992), Reclaiming the Past: Jammu and Kashmir (1996) and numerous articles and chapters on ethnicity and the post-colonial state, development, and colonial history.

    "The book joins a rising tide of recent studies that attempt to provide a new perspective on democratic politics in India and will be of considerable interest to comparative politics scholars and Indian specialists." - S. A. Kochanek, CHOICE August 2008 Vol. 45 No. 11