India After Independence: 1947-2000 (89 page)

13. Pranab Bardhan: (i)
The Political Economy of Development in India
, Delhi, 1998 (expanded edition). (ii)
Dominant Proprietory Classes and India’s Democracy
, in Atul Kohli, ed., India’s Democracy, Princeton, 1988.

14. Ralph Miliband, Marxism and Politics, Oxford, 1977.

15. Sudipto Mundle, ‘State Characters and Economic Policy,’
Social Scientist
, May 1974.

16. Ajit Ray,
Political Power in India
, Calcutta, 1981 edition.

17. B. Berberoghi,
Class
,
State and Development in India
, New Delhi, 1992.

Chapter 37 (In addition to books in the General List)

1. Sudipto Kaviraj, ‘On the Crisis of Political Institutions in India,’
Contributions to Indian Sociology
, N.S., Vol.18, no.2, 1984.

2. Rajni Kothari, (i) ‘The Crisis of the Moderate State and the Decline of Democracy,’ in Peter Lyon and James Manor, eds.,
Transfer and Transformation
, Leicester, 1983. (ii)
State Against Democracy: In Search of Humane Governance
, Delhi, 1988.

3. C.P. Bhambri,
The Indian State: Fifty Years
, Delhi, 1997.

4. Atul Kohli, Democracy and Discontent:
India’s Crisis of Governability
, Cambridge, 1991.

5. Myron Weiner, (i)
The Indian Paradox: Essays in Indian Politics
, Chapter 3, New Delhi, 1988. (ii) ‘The Wounded Tiger: Maintaining India’s Democratic Institutions,’ in Peter Lyon and James Manor, eds.,
Transfer and Transformation
, Leicester, 1983.

6. Henry C. Hart, ‘The Indian Constitution: Political Development and Decay,’
Asian Survey
, Vol.XX, no.4, April 1980.

7. A. Surya Prakash,
What Ails Indian Parliament
, New Delhi, 1995.

8. S.C. Kashyap, ‘Parliament: A Mixed Balance Sheet,’ in Hiranmay Karlekar,
Independent India: The First Fifty Years
, Delhi, 1998.

9. N.S. Saxena,
Law and Order in India
, New Delhi, 1987.

10. P.C. Alexander, ‘Civil Service: Continuity and Change,’ in Hiranmay Karlekar, ed.,
Independent India: The First Fifty Years
, Delhi, 1998.

11. David H. Bayley, ‘The Police and Political Order in India,’
Asian Survey
, Vol.XXIII, no.4, April 1983.

12.
Indian Police Journal
, Special Issue on Police Reforms, Vol.XLVI, no.1, January-March 1999.

13. Stephen P. Cohen, ‘The Military and Indian Democracy,’ in Atul Kohli, ed.,
India’s Democracy: An Analysis of Changing State-Society Relations
, Princeton, 1988.

14. Lt. General S.L. Menezes,
Fidelity and Honour: The Indian Army from the 17th to 21st Century
, New Delhi, 1993.

Chapter 38

1. Rajni Kothari, (i)
Politics in India
, Chapter IX, New Delhi, 1970. (ii)
Democratic Polity and Social Change in India
, Bombay, 1976.

2. Arend Lipjhart, ‘The Puzzle of Indian Democracy: A Consociational Interpretation,’
American Political Science Review
, Vol.90, no.2, June 1996.

3. Daniel Thorner,
The Shaping of Modern India
, pp. 138-147.

4. Tarlok Singh, ‘Paths of Social Change in a Period of Transition,’ in Upendra Baxi, Alice Jacob and Tarlok Singh, eds.,
Reconstructing the Republic
, New Delhi, 1999.

5. Atul Kohli,
The State and Poverty in India: The Politics of Reform
, Cambridge and Bombay, 1987.

6. Myron Weiner,
The
Indian Paradox: Essays in Indian Politics
, Chapter 12, New Delhi, 1989.

7. Ghanshyam Shah, ‘Grass-Roots Mobilization in Indian Politics,’ in Atul Kohli, ed.,
India’s Democracy
, Princeton, 1988.

8. Bipan Chandra, (i) ‘Transformation from a Colonial to an Independent Economy: A Case Study of India,’ in his
Essays on Colonialism
, New Delhi, 1999. (ii) ‘India from 1947 to the 1990’s and The Real Danger of Foreign Domination: Peripheralization,’ in
his Essays on Contemporary India
, Revised edition, New Delhi, 1999.

9. Aditya Mukherjee and Mridula Mukherjee, ‘Imperialism and the Growth of Indian Capitalism in the Twentieth Century,’
EPW
, Vol.XXIII, no. 11, 12 March 1988.

10. V.M. Dandekar and N. Rath, ‘Poverty in India: Dimensions and Trends,’
EPW
, 2 and 9 January 1971.

11. S.D. Tendulkar, ‘Economic Inequality in an Indian Perspective,’ in A. Beteille ed.,
Equality and Inequality
, Delhi, 1983.

12. Amartya Sen, (i) ‘Indian Development: Lessons and Non-Lessons,’
Daedalus
, Vol.118, 1989. (ii) ‘How is India Doing,’
New York Review of Books
, reprinted in
Mainstream
, 26 January 1983.

13. Amartya Sen, ‘The Doing and Undoing of India,’
EPW
, 12 February 1983.

14. Jean Dreze and Amartya Sen,
India: Economic Development and Social Opportunity
, Delhi, 1995.

15. Kirit S. Parekh, ed.,
India Development Report 1999-2000
, New Delhi, 1999.

16. United Nations Development Programme (UNDP),
Human Development Report 1999
, New Delhi, 1999.

17. Abusaleh Shariff, National Council of Applied Economic Research,
India Human Development Report
, New Delhi, 1999.

18. Government of India, Ministry of Finance,
Economic Survey 1998-99
, New Delhi, 1999.

19. Ashutosh Varshney, ‘The Self-Correcting Mechanisms of Indian Democracy,’
Seminar
, 425, January 1995.

20. Tapas Majumdar, ‘Education: Uneven Progress, Difficult Choices,’ in Hiranmay Karlekar,
Independent India: The First Fifty Years
, Delhi, 1998.

A Note on Style

In order to ensure the continuity of the book’s narrative, the authors of the various chapters are mentioned here and nowhere else in the volume. Chapters 1-3, 6-11, 13-19, 22-24, 33, 37 and 38 have been written by Bipan Chandra, Chapters 4, 5, 12, 20, 21, 32, 34, 35 by Mridula Mukherjee, and Chapters 25-31, and 36 by Aditya Mukherjee.

Acknowledgements

In the making of this book, we have benefitted immensely from our long term interaction with and support of our colleagues at the Centre for Historical Studies at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Many friends—Mohit Sen, Kewal Varma, V. P. Dutt, Barun De, Girish Mathur, Girish Mishra, Gopi Arora, S. Gopal, Romila Thapar, Irfan Habib, V.N. Datta, Ravinder Kumar, C.P. Bhambri, Darshan and Shiela Bhalla, Amit Bhaduri, Arjun Sengupta, Shireen Mooswi, Arun Kumar, Arjun Dev, K.P. Jain, G.M. Telang, Swadesh Mahajan, Madhu Kishwar, Shekhar Singh, Shantha Sinha, Narinder Bedi and Bodh Prakash—have over the years helped us grapple with the contemporary world, often through a great deal of polemics and many heated discussions and disagreements.

A large number of colleagues and students—D.N. Gupta, Mohinder Singh, Sucheta Mahajan, Visalakshi Menon, Antony Thomas, Sudhir Mathur, Neerja Singh, Salil Mishra, Rakesh Batabyal, Bikash Chandra, Vikram Menon, Gyanesh Kudaisya, John Zavos, Amit Mishra, Tulika Sharan, Kalyani and Amman Madan—have contributed to evolving our ideas and have also been of assistance in several other ways, and have helped us keep our optimism alive.

The Japan Foundation enabled us (Aditya Mukherjee and Mridula Mukherjee) to be at the Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo, for a year since March 1999. A considerable part of the drafting and research for the book was done in Japan. Professor Asis Datta, Vice Chancellor, JNU, very kindly made it possible for us to avail of this opportunity to complete our book. A large number of friends and colleagues made our visit in Japan extremely fruitful intellectually and otherwise. They include Professors Nariaki Nakazato, Haruka Yanagisawa, Tsukasa Mizushima, Shingo Einoo, Toru Matsui, Nobuko Nagasaki, Takako Hirose, Hiroko Hara, Shigeru Akita, Fumiko Oshikawa, Mr Takashi Oishi, Dr Shuji Uchikawa, Mr Shusaku Matsumoto, Professor and Mrs Hisashi Nakamura, Mrs Emiko Kothari, Dr Kyoko Inoue, Umesh and Ruby Pawankar, Dr Malavika Karlekar, Chieko Mizushima, Dr Jaishankar and Professor B.R. Tomlinson, Mr Shin’ichiro Horie of Japan Foundation, Tokyo, enabled us to take time off from Japan and present many aspects of this book in several universities in the US. Manuela Albuquerque, Catherine Harned, Abha and Anil Pandya, Mohan Sood, Tom Metcalfe,
Vasudha Dalmia, Blair Kling, Arjun Appadurai, Bernard Cohn and Carol Breckenridge were critical in making the US visit very rewarding.

We would like to thank the staff of the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, Jawaharlal Nehru University Library, India International Centre Library in New Delhi and the Institute of Oriental Culture Library and Institute of Developing Economies Library in Tokyo.

Luxmi and Om Prakash shared a great deal of the burden of typing a large part of the manuscript. Colleagues at the Academic Staff College, JNU, particularly Savitri Bisht, Ajay Sharma and S.C. Sharma went beyond the call of duty to help the authors write the book situated thousands of miles from each other, using information technology.

As usual Usha Chandra has contributed in multiple ways to the making of this book.

We are very thankful to Raj Kamini Mahadevan of Penguin India for undertaking the arduous task of editing the manuscript and thus vastly improving it and also for seeing to it that we didn’t fall too far behind schedule. We are also very thankful to David Davidar for encouraging us to undertake the writing of this work and then giving us great deal of latitude in terms of time.

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First published in Viking by Penguin Books India 1999
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