1st Edition

Inside India Today (Routledge Revivals)

By Dilip Hiro Copyright 1976
    348 Pages
    by Routledge

    348 Pages
    by Routledge

    Events in the Indian sub-continent during the 1970s, where, in the summer of 1975, the ruling party engineered a ‘constitutional’ coup by declaring a national emergency, re-emphasised the need for a fuller understanding of India’s social system and people. First published the following year, in 1976, Inside India Today attempted to fulfil that need. Drawing on personal interviews, conducted during his two years’ travels throughout the country collecting a mass of first hand evidence, and on various surveys and studies published in the press, the author sketches a broad portrait of Indian life in the villages and cities. Hiro relates this research to the existing socio-political structure of the time: the constitutional framework, the electoral system, the performance of the Indian National Congress and the Communist system. Written in an accessible, engaging style and containing a wealth of information and insight, Inside India Today is a major contribution towards the scholarship surrounding this complex and fascinating country.

    Preface;  Introduction;  Part I: Life in India: A Report  1. Village India  2. Urban India  3. A Corrupt Society;  Part II: Politics and Economics of Centrism  4. Present political-administrative structure  5. Electoral politics  6. The Congress Party: facing both ways  7. The Congress Government: the unfulfilled plans  8. Agrarian relations: the half-hearted reform  9. Industrial policies: ‘socialistic’ capitalism  10. Trade unions: divide and rule; Part III: Leftist Forces  11. The Communist movement: before 1964  12. The Communist movement: after 1964  13. Extra-parliamentary Communists  14. West-Bengal: revolution and counter-revolution;  Part IV: Rightist Forces  15. Rightest forces: political 16. Rightist forces: institutional; Part V: Resilience of the System  17. The internal strains  18. Internal strength and external support  19. A ‘constitutional’ coup: an act of desperation  20. The future: a leftist advance ahead;  Postscript;  Notes;  Select Bibliography;  Index.

    Biography

    Dilip Hiro