توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب India's First Dictatorship: The Emergency, 1975-1977
نام کتاب : India's First Dictatorship: The Emergency, 1975-1977
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : اولین دیکتاتوری هند: وضعیت اضطراری، 1975-1977
سری :
نویسندگان : Christophe Jaffrelot, Pratinav Anil
ناشر : HarperCollins Publishers India
سال نشر : 2021
تعداد صفحات : 679
ISBN (شابک) : 9789390351602 , 9789390351534
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 5 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
List of Tables
Abbreviations
Glossary
Preface
Introduction
The Consequences of Ahmedabad and Allahabad
Making Sense of the Emergency
PART ITHE VARIETIES OF AUTHORITARIANISM: WHAT KINDOF REGIME WAS THE EMERGENCY?
1. A Constitutional Dictatorship
Disciplining Democracy
A Decimated Opposition: Imprisonment and Torture
The Media: Prior Restraint and Propaganda
2. The Political Economy of the Emergency: Looking for an Ideology
The Twenty-Point Programme and its Contradictions
What Land Reform?
In the Name of the Poor
Dirigiste Corporatism
3. Subverting Institutions: Remnants of Democracy
The Façade of Parliamentarism
What Rule of Law? The Decline of the Judiciary and the Making of a Police State
Nepotism, Arbitrariness, and State Capture
4. An Era of Sultans: Sanjay’s Emergency
The Making of a Parallel Power Structure
Family Planning and Gentrification; or, Sterilisations and Deportations
From Family Planning to Man-Hunt
Bulldozing the Poor
5. The Uneven Geography of Tyranny
Another North–South Divide
The Hindi Epicentre
Gujarat and Tamil Nadu: The Holdout States
The Southern Satrapies Hold Their Own
Conclusion to Part I
PART IICAUSES AND BEYOND: WHAT MADE THE EMERGENCY “NECESSARY” AND POSSIBLE?
6. Immediate Causes: The JP Movement and the Allahabad Judgment in Perspective
The JP Movement: A Symptom of Larger Threats
Gujarat: The Crucible of Protest
Bihar Takes Over: The Rise of JP
The Sangh Parivar: The Subtext of the JP Movement?
A National Movement
The Political Economy of the JP Movement
The Social Crisis of the 1970s
The Limits of Promissory Politics
Indira Gandhi’s War on the Judiciary and the Judges’ Response
7. Mrs Gandhi’s Personalisation of Power, 1966–1975
Indira Gandhi: Predisposed to Tyranny or Working Towards Survival?
Facets of an Authoritarian Personality
The Uncertain Making of a Dynast Born to Rule
The Deinstitutionalisation of the Congress and the Centralisation of Power
The Consequences of 1967
The Leftist Card
The Making of an All-Powerful Executive
An Authoritarian Personality under Threat
From Populism to Authoritarianism
Mrs Gandhi’s Calculus in 1975
8. An Incongruous Coalition
The Initial Phase: For the Emergency or Against the JP Movement?
Communists and the Congress: A Contingent Alliance
Maharashtrian Partners: The Shiv Sena and the RPIs
Businessmen and the Congress: A Convergence of Interests
The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie
The Janus-like Intelligentsia
The Bureaucracy: The Primacy of Institutional Survival
Conclusion to Part II
PART IIIRESISTANCE AND ENDGAME
9. An Uneven Resistance
The Media: A Landscape of Contrasts
The Judiciary: Ambivalent to the Core
The RSS and the LSS: Between Resistance and Compromise
The CPI(M): Underground and in Parliament
Mainstream Politicians, Fence-sitters and the Making of the Janata Party
Direct Action Underground: The Limits of Limited Violence
10. Lifting the Emergency: What Return to Democracy?
Elections as an Antidote to Escalation: A Return to Normal Political Life?
What International Pressures?
Fighting to Win—At Any Cost
The 1977 Polls
The Unmaking of the Emergency—How to Punish the Culprits?
Conclusion: Interpreting the Emergency
The What and Why of the Emergency
A Parenthesis? A Turning Point? Or More of the Same?
Differences of Degree—and Nature
Notes
Select Bibliography
Index
About the Book
About the Author
Copyright