In the recent decade, a sea change from Nehruvian India i.e. liberal, secular and democratic state, to the rise of far-right and illiberal democracy can be discerned after Narendra Modi‟s triumph in two successive Indian elections – the last one in 2019 returning him to power with a thumping two-third majority. Though, Narendra Modi‟s staggering success is the upshot of procedural democracy or political democracy in India, yet his campaign was ridden with right-wing rhetoric and demagogy, and witnessed the rise of jingoism, majoritarian nationalism, marginalisation of minorities and squeezing civil liberties. In the West, development between state and society has been dialectical – that is, through interaction between state and ...