In the context of Narendra Modi’s recent electoral victory, Moiz Tundawala questions the widespread belief that India’s Constitution can impose checks and balances on power. A version of this article first appeared on Kafila
The institutional experience of the Indian Union is quite underestimated by European legal scholars ...
In the recent decade, a sea change from Nehruvian India i.e. liberal, secular and democratic state, ...
The type of federalism followed in India is one of its kind and can be said to be quasi-federal in n...
Many concerned citizens, including judges, bureaucrats, politicians, activists, journalists, and aca...
At the second LSE India Summit Madhav Khosla took part in the Constitution Panel, which explored Ind...
Purpose – This paper examines the decline of the largest working parliamentary democracy in India ov...
Twenty-first-century elected right-wing regimes share many similarities apart from being led by “aut...
India or Indian governmental issues same word for whom who dont know about the political arrangement...
The question of nation building has been the issue nresolved since antiquity. But in Indian context,...
The Oxford India Short Introductions are concise, stimulating, and accessible guides to different as...
Borooah reviews the major developments in Indian politics from Independence in 1947 till the latest ...
A Consociational democracy is a model of governance that uses power sharing to cope with societal di...
As a nation of over one billion people and the world’s largest democracy, India is sometimes confron...
All nations in the modern era embraced democratic political systems and welfare state ideologies, gi...
Harish Alagappa and Sonali Campion report from the second day of India @ 70: LSE India Summit 2017, ...
The institutional experience of the Indian Union is quite underestimated by European legal scholars ...
In the recent decade, a sea change from Nehruvian India i.e. liberal, secular and democratic state, ...
The type of federalism followed in India is one of its kind and can be said to be quasi-federal in n...
Many concerned citizens, including judges, bureaucrats, politicians, activists, journalists, and aca...
At the second LSE India Summit Madhav Khosla took part in the Constitution Panel, which explored Ind...
Purpose – This paper examines the decline of the largest working parliamentary democracy in India ov...
Twenty-first-century elected right-wing regimes share many similarities apart from being led by “aut...
India or Indian governmental issues same word for whom who dont know about the political arrangement...
The question of nation building has been the issue nresolved since antiquity. But in Indian context,...
The Oxford India Short Introductions are concise, stimulating, and accessible guides to different as...
Borooah reviews the major developments in Indian politics from Independence in 1947 till the latest ...
A Consociational democracy is a model of governance that uses power sharing to cope with societal di...
As a nation of over one billion people and the world’s largest democracy, India is sometimes confron...
All nations in the modern era embraced democratic political systems and welfare state ideologies, gi...
Harish Alagappa and Sonali Campion report from the second day of India @ 70: LSE India Summit 2017, ...
The institutional experience of the Indian Union is quite underestimated by European legal scholars ...
In the recent decade, a sea change from Nehruvian India i.e. liberal, secular and democratic state, ...
The type of federalism followed in India is one of its kind and can be said to be quasi-federal in n...