India After Independence: 1947-2000 (87 page)

3. Howard L. Erdman, (i)
The Swatantra Party and Indian Conservatism,
Cambridge, 1967. (ii) ‘India’s Swatantra Party,’
Pacific Affairs,
Vol.36, no.4, Winter 1963-64.

4. Bhabani Sengupta,
Communism in Indian Politics,
New York, 1971.

5. Mohit Sen,
Glimpses of the History of the Indian Communist Movement,
Madras, 1997.

6. B.D. Graham,
Hindu Nationalism and Indian Politics: The Origins and Development of the Bharatiya Jan Sangh,
Cambridge, 1990.

7. Hari Kishore Singh,
A History of the Praja Socialist Party,
Lucknow, 1959.

8. Mohan Ram,
Indian Communism,
Delhi, 1969.

9. D.R. Goyal,
Rashtriya Swayam Sewak Sangh,
New Delhi, 1979.

10. Craig Baxter,
The Jan Sangh,
Philadelphia, 1969.

11. Achin Vanaik, ‘The Indian Left,’
New Left Review,
no.159.

12. Madhu Dandavate,
Evolution of Socialist Policies and Perspective 1934-1984,
Bombay, 1986.

13. E.M.S. Namboodiripad,
Conflicts and Crisis: Political India—1974,
Bombay, 1974.

14. Haridev Sharma, et. al.,
Fifty Years of Socialist Movement in India,
New Delhi, 1984.

Chapters 16 to 19

1. Inder Malhotra, Indira Gandhi:
A Personal and Political Biography,
London, 1989.

2. Zareer Masani,
Indira Gandhi—A Biography,
London, 1975.

3. Pupul Jayakar,
Indira Gandhi—A Biography,
New Delhi, 1992.

4. Mary C. Carras,
India Gandhi: In the Crucible of Leadership,
Bombay, 1979.

5. Morarji Desai,
The Story of My Life,
Vol.2, Delhi, 1974.

6. C.P. Srivastava,
Lal Bahadur Shastri,
Delhi, 1995.

7. Tariq Ali,
The Nehrus and the Gandhis,
London, 1985.

8. S.S. Gill,
The Dynasty; A Political Biography of the Premier Ruling Family of Modern India,
New Delhi, 1996.

9. Sudipto Kaviraj, ‘Indira Gandhi and Indian Politics,’
EPW,
20-27 September 1986.

10. Rajni Kothari,
Politics in India,
Chapter V, New Delhi, 1970.

11. Rabindra Ray,
The Naxalites and Their Ideology,
Delhi, 1988.

12. Mahendra Prasad Singh,
Split in a Predominant Party: The Indian National Congress in 1969,
New Delhi, 1981.

13. Krishan Bhatia,
Indira: A Biography of Prime Minister Gandhi,
London, 1974.

14. W.H. Morris-Jones, ‘India Elects for Change—and Stability,’
Asian Survey,
Vol.XI, no.8, August 1971, Berkeley. Also in his
Politics Mainly Indian,
Bombay, 1978.

15. Norman D. Palmer, ‘India’s Fourth General Elections,’
Asian Survey,
Vol.VII, no.5, May 1967.

16. Ashis Nandy, ‘Indira Gandhi and the Culture of Indian Politics,’ in his
At the Edge of Psychology: Essays in Politics and Culture,
Delhi, 1980.

17. Harry W. Blair, ‘Mrs. Gandhi’s Emergency, The Indian Elections of 1977, Pluralism and Marxism: Problems with Paradigms,’
Modern Asian Studies,
Vol.14, no.2, 1980.

Chapter 18
A. J. P. Movement

1. Ghanshyam Shah,
Protest Movements in Two Indian States: A Study of the Gujarat and Bihar Movements,
Delhi, 1977.

2. Bimal Prasad,
Gandhi, Nehru and J.P.: Studies in Leadership,
Delhi, 1985.

3. Minoo Masani,
Is J.P. The Answer,
Delhi, 1975.

4. John R. Wood, ‘Extra-Parliamentary Opposition in India: An Analysis of Populist Agitations in Gujarat and Bihar,’
Pacific Affairs,
Vol.XLVIII, no.3, Fall 1975.

5. Ajit Bhattacharjea,
Jayaprakash Narayan: A Political Biography,
Delhi, 1975.

B. The Emergency

1. Henry C. Hart, ed.,
Indira Gandhi’s India,
Boulder (Colorado), 1976.

2. Max Zins,
Strains on Indian Democracy,
New Delhi, 1988. Also in Zoya Hasan, S.N. Jha, Rasheeduddin Khan,
The State, Political Processes and Identity,
New Delhi, 1989.

3. V. P. Dutt, ‘The Emergency in India: Background and Rationale,’
Asian Survey,
Vol.XVI, no. 12, December 1976, Berkeley.

4.
Seminar,
March 1977, New Delhi.

5. Balraj Puri, ‘Fuller Views of Emergency,’
EPW,
15 July 1995.

6. Kuldip Nayar,
The Judgement: Inside Story of the Emergency in India,
New Delhi, 1977.

7. W.H. Morris-Jones, ‘Creeping but Uneasy Authoritarianism: India 1975-6,’
Government and Opposition,
Vol.12, no.1, Winter 1977.

8. David Selbourne,
An Eye to India: The Unmasking of a Tyranny,
London, 1977.

C. Janata Government

1. C.P. Bhambri,
The Janata Party: A Profile,
New Delhi, 1980.

2. Janardan Thakur,
All the Janata Men,
New Delhi, 1978.

3. J. Das Gupta, ‘The Janata Phase: Reorganization and Redirection in Indian Politics,’
Asian Survey,
Vol.XIX, no.4, April 1979.

4. Iqbal Narain, ‘India 1977: From Promise to Disenchantment,’
Asian Survey,
Vol.XVIII, no.2, February 1978.

5. Robert L. Hardgrave, Jr. and Stanley A. Kochanek,
India: Government and Politics in a Developing Nation,
Fifth Edition, pp.276-82.

6. L.I. Rudolph and S.H. Rudolph,
In Pursuit of Lakshmi: The Political Economy of the Indian State,
Chapter 5, Bombay, 1987.

Chapter 20

1. Bhabani Sen Gupta,
Rajiv Gandhi: a Political Study,
New Delhi, 1989.

2. Mohan Ram,
Sri Lanka: The Fractured Island,
New Delhi, 1989.

3. Minhaz Merchant,
Rajiv Gandhi: The
End of a Dream,
New Delhi, 1991.

4. Nicholas Nugent,
Rajiv Gandhi: Son of a Dynasty,
New Delhi, 1991.

5. Ved Mehta,
Rajiv Gandhi and Rama’s Kingdom,
New Haven and London, 1994.

6. S.S.Gill,
The Dynasty: A Political Biography of the Premier Ruling Family of India,
New Delhi, 1996.

7. Raju G.C. Thomas,
Indian Security Policy,
Princeton, 1986.

8. R. Venkataraman,
My Presidential Years,
New Delhi, 1994.

9. Ramesh Thakur,
The Politics and Economics of India’s Foreign Policy,
London, 1994.

Chapter 21

1. Seema Mustafa,
The Lonely Prophet: V. P. Singh, A Political Biography,
New Delhi, 1995.

2. David Butler, Ashok Lahiri and Prannoy Roy,
India Decides: Elections 1952-1995,
New Delhi, 3rd edition, 1995.

3. Paul R. Brass,
The New Cambridge History of India, IV.I, The Politics of India Since Independence,
Cambridge, 2nd. edition, 1994.

4. R. Venkataraman,
My Presidential Years,
New Delhi, 1994.

5. M.N.Srinivas, ed.,
Caste: Its Twentieth Century Avatar,
New Delhi, 1996.

6. Yogendra Yadav, et al, ‘The Maturing of a Democracy,’ in
India Today,
vol. xxi, No. 16, 1996.

7. Yogendra Yadav, ‘Reconfiguration in Indian Politics: State Assembly Elections, 1993-96,’ in
EPW,
Vol.32 Nos. 2-3, 1996.

8. Thomas Blom Hansen and Christopher, Jaffrelot,
The BJP and the Compulsions of Politics in India,
Delhi, 1998.

9. V. P. Dutt,
India’s Foreign Policy in a Changing World,
New Delhi, 1999.

10. Lalit Mansingh, et al,
Indian Foreign Policy: Agenda for the 21st Century,
New Delhi, 1997.

11. Air Commodore Jasjit Singh, ed.,
Nuclear India,
New Delhi, 1998.

12. Amitabh Mattoo, ed.,
India’s Nuclear Deterrent: Pokhran II and Beyond,
New Delhi, 1999.

Chapter 22
A. Tamil Nadu

1. S.N. Balasundaram, ‘The Dravidian (Non-Brahmin) Movements in Madras,’ and C. Annadurai, ‘D.M.K. As I See It,’ in Iqbal Narain, ed.,
State Politics in India,
Meerut, 1967.

2. Pandav Nayak, ‘Politics of Pragmatism,’ in Iqbal Narain, ed.,
State Politics in India,
Meerut, 1976.

3. Marguerite Ross Barnett,
The Politics of Cultural Nationalism in South India,
Princeton, 1976.

4. David Washbrook, ‘Caste, Class and Dominance in Modern Tamil Nadu: Non-Brahmanism, Dravidianism and Tamil Nationalism,’ in Francine R. Frankel and M.S.A. Rao, editors,
Dominance and State Power in Modern India: Decline of a Social Order,
Vol.I, Delhi, 1989.

5. Urmila Phadnis, ‘The Dravidian Movement and Tamil Ethnicity in India,’ in her
Ethnicity and Nation-Building in South Asia,
New Delhi, 1989.

B. Andhra Pradesh

1. Hugh Gray, (i) ‘The Demand for a Separate Telengana State in India,’
Asian Survey,
Vol.XI, no.5, May 1971. (ii) ‘The Failure of the Demand for a Separate Andhra State,’
Asian Survey,
Vol.XIV, no.4, April 1974.

2. G. Ram Reddy, ‘Andhra Pradesh: The Citadel of the Congress,’ Iqbal Narain, ed.,
State Politcs in India,
Meerut, 1976.

3. Mohit Sen, ‘Showdown in Andhra’,
EPW,
23 December 1972.

4. Dagmar Bernstorff, ‘Region and Nation: The Telengana Movement’s Dual Identity,’ in Taylor and Yapp,
Political Identity in South Asia,
London, 1979.

D. Assam

1. Sanjib Baruah, (i) ‘Immigration, Ethnic Conflict, and Political Turmoil-Assam, 1979-1985,’
Asian Survey,
Vol.XXVI, no.11, November 1986. (ii) ‘Ethnic Conflict or State-Society Struggle,’
Modern Asian Studies,
Vol.28, no.3, 1994.

2. Myron Weiner,
Sons of the Soil: Migration and Ethnic Conflict in India,
Princeton, 1978.

3. Hiren Gohain, ‘Ethnic Unrest in the North-East,’
EPW,
22 February 1997.

4. J. Das Gupta, ‘Ethnicity, Democracy and Development in India: Assam in a General Perspective,’ in Atul Kohli, ed.,
India’s Democracy,
Princeton, 1988.

Chapter 23
A. West Bengal

1. Atul Kohli, (i) ‘West Bengal: Parliamentary Communism and Reform from above,’ in Atul Kohli,
The State and Poverty in India,
Cambridge, 1987.

(ii)
Democracy and Discontent,
Chapters 6, 10, 13, Cambridge, 1991.

(iii) ‘Parliamentary Communism and Agrarian Reform: The evidence from India’s Bengal,’
Asian Survey,
Vol.23, no.7, July 1983.

(iv) ‘From Elite Activism to Democratic Consolidation: The Rise of Reform Communism in West Bengal,’ in Francine R. Frankel and M.S.A. Rao, eds.,
Dominance and State Power in Modern India: Decline of a Social Order
, Vols.I and II, Delhi, 1989, 1990.

B. Jammu and Kashmir

1. S. Gopal,
Jawaharlal Nehru—A Biography
, Vols.2 and 3, London and New Delhi, 1979 and 1984.

2. Balraj Puri, ‘Jammu and Kashmir,’ in Myron Weiner,
State Politics in India
, Princeton, 1968.

3. Ajit Bhattacharjea,
Kashmir—The Wounded Valley
, New Delhi, 1994.

4. B.G. Verghese, ‘Fourth Option: Towards a Settlement in Jammu and Kashmir,’ in Upendra Baxi, Alice Jacob and Tarlok Singh,
Reconstructing the Republic
, New Delhi, 1999.

5. Roop Krishen Bhatt, ‘Politics of Integration,’ in Iqbal Narain, ed.,
State Politics in India
, Meerut, 1976.

Chapter 24

1. Baldev Raj Nayar, (i)
Minority Politics in the Punjab
, Princeton, 1966. (ii) ‘Sikh Separatism in the Punjab,’ in Donald E. Smith, ed., South Asian Politics and Religion, Princeton, 1966.

2. Rajni A. Kapur,
Sikh Separatism: The Politics of Faith
, London, 1986.

3. K.P.S. Gill,
The Knights of Falsehood
, New Delhi, 1997.

4. Amarjit Kaur, et. al.,
The Punjab Story
, New Delhi, 1984.

5. Satyapal Dang,
Genesis of Terrorism: An Analytical Study of Punjab Terrorists
, New Delhi, 1988.

6. Amrik Singh, ed.,
Punjab in Indian Politics
, Delhi, 1985.

7.
Seminar
, February, 1984.

8. Pramod Kumar, et. al.,
Punjab Crisis: Context and Trends
, Chandigarh, 1984.

9. Sucha Singh Gill and K.C. Singhal, ‘The Punjab Problem: Its Historical Roots,’
EPW
, April 1984.

10. Bikash Chandra,
Punjab Crisis—Perceptions and Perspectives of the Indian Intelligentsia
, New Delhi, 1993.

Chapters 25-31

1. A.M. Khusro, ‘Land Reforms since Independence,’ in V.B. Singh, ed.,
The Economic History of India
,
1857-1956
, Delhi, 1965.

2. A. Vaidyanathan, ‘The Indian Economy Since Independence (1947-70),’ in Dharma Kumar, ed.,
The Cambridge Economic History of India
, Delhi, 1984, reprint.

3. Aditya Mukherjee,
Imperialism
,
Nationalism and the Development of Indian
Capitalism: The Making of the Indian Capitalist Class 1920-47
, New Delhi, forthcoming.

4. Aditya Mukherjee and Mridula Mukherjee. ‘Imperialism and the growth of Indian capitalism in the Twentieth Century,’
EPW
, 12 March 1988.

5. Amartya Sen, ‘How is India Doing?,’
New York Review of Books
, 1982, reprinted in
Mainstream
, 26 January 1983.

6. Amartya Sen, ‘Social Commitment and Democracy,’
New Thinking Communist
, 1 November 1998.

7. Atul Kohli, ‘Politics of Economic Liberalization in India,’
World Development
, Vol.17, No.3, 1989.

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