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India's political economy 1947-1977 : The gradual revolution

By: Contributor(s):
Publication details: New Delhi Oxford University Press 2014Edition: 7th ImpDescription: 819p xviiISBN:
  • 9780195683790
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.954 FRA FRA
Contents:
CONTENTS 1. Introduction: The paradox of accommodative politics and radical social change; 2. Class conciliation and the class struggle: competitive patterns of mass mobilization in Indian nationalism; 3. Growth and democratic social transformation: multiple goals of economic planning; 4. The contradiction of rapid industrialization and gradual agrarian reform; 5. Failures of implementation; 6. Attack on socialist principles of planning; 7. Retreat from the social goals of planning: domestic constraints and foreign pressures; 8. Crisis of national economic planning; 9. Crisis of political stability; 10. The Congress split and the radicalization of Indian politics; 11. Reprise: class accommodation or class struggle?; 12. Impasse; 13. Emergency and beyond; 14. Toward two economies: macroeconomic reforms without redistributive change; 15. Political fragmentation, social conflict, and challenges to India's democracy; 16. The challenge of Hindu nationalism to India's constitutional democracy.
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BOOKs BOOKs National Law School Library Compactors 338.954 FRA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31180

CONTENTS
1. Introduction: The paradox of accommodative politics and radical social change;
2. Class conciliation and the class struggle: competitive patterns of mass mobilization in Indian nationalism;
3. Growth and democratic social transformation: multiple goals of economic planning;
4. The contradiction of rapid industrialization and gradual agrarian reform;
5. Failures of implementation;
6. Attack on socialist principles of planning;
7. Retreat from the social goals of planning: domestic constraints and foreign pressures;
8. Crisis of national economic planning;
9. Crisis of political stability;
10. The Congress split and the radicalization of Indian politics;
11. Reprise: class accommodation or class struggle?;
12. Impasse;
13. Emergency and beyond;
14. Toward two economies: macroeconomic reforms without redistributive change;
15. Political fragmentation, social conflict, and challenges to India's democracy;
16. The challenge of Hindu nationalism to India's constitutional democracy.

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