Why India Votes? offers a fascinating account of the Indian electorate through a series of comprehensive ethnographic explorations conducted across the country — Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Rajasthan. It probes the motivations of ordinary voters, what they think about politicians, the electoral process, democracy and their own role within it. This book will be useful to scholars and students of political science, anthropology and sociology, those in media and politics, and those interested in elections and democracy as also the informed general reader
International audienceElection studies (which are here defined as scholarly work focusing on the maj...
In this paper I present findings from Chapter 2 of the forthcoming book by Alfred Stepan, Juan J. Li...
Elections are episodic; governance is routine. This book studies patterns in public opinion on polit...
As voting begins in national elections in the world’s largest democracy, LSE academics Mukulika Bane...
This paper is a preliminary attempt to understand a simple puzzle about the Indian voter: Why does a...
This volume explores how the Bharatiya Janta Party (BJP) won the 2014 Parliamentary elections with s...
Abstract The study of voting behaviourur is of profound significance in democratic countries. It is...
With the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) riding a second victory wave in India in the 2019 Lok Sabha el...
In the study of electoral politics and political behavior in the developing world, India is often co...
This special issue of Studies in Indian Politics draws from such an analytical exercise that has bee...
Last Wednesday Why India Votes? a book by Mukulika Banerjee, Associate Professor of Anthropology at ...
Most observers of India have an implicit model of how Indians vote. They assume that voters in India...
In this chapter, I examine aspects of democracy in its various settings of everyday politics and at ...
This article offers a comprehensive set of explanations for why people vote. Based on evidence from ...
LSE’s Dr Mukulika Banerjee introduces a new interdisciplinary research project that will examine ele...
International audienceElection studies (which are here defined as scholarly work focusing on the maj...
In this paper I present findings from Chapter 2 of the forthcoming book by Alfred Stepan, Juan J. Li...
Elections are episodic; governance is routine. This book studies patterns in public opinion on polit...
As voting begins in national elections in the world’s largest democracy, LSE academics Mukulika Bane...
This paper is a preliminary attempt to understand a simple puzzle about the Indian voter: Why does a...
This volume explores how the Bharatiya Janta Party (BJP) won the 2014 Parliamentary elections with s...
Abstract The study of voting behaviourur is of profound significance in democratic countries. It is...
With the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) riding a second victory wave in India in the 2019 Lok Sabha el...
In the study of electoral politics and political behavior in the developing world, India is often co...
This special issue of Studies in Indian Politics draws from such an analytical exercise that has bee...
Last Wednesday Why India Votes? a book by Mukulika Banerjee, Associate Professor of Anthropology at ...
Most observers of India have an implicit model of how Indians vote. They assume that voters in India...
In this chapter, I examine aspects of democracy in its various settings of everyday politics and at ...
This article offers a comprehensive set of explanations for why people vote. Based on evidence from ...
LSE’s Dr Mukulika Banerjee introduces a new interdisciplinary research project that will examine ele...
International audienceElection studies (which are here defined as scholarly work focusing on the maj...
In this paper I present findings from Chapter 2 of the forthcoming book by Alfred Stepan, Juan J. Li...
Elections are episodic; governance is routine. This book studies patterns in public opinion on polit...