Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKs | National Law School | 954.604 HIN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 36080 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Foreword
By Upendra Baxi
The Indian sub-continent under the British colonial rule
Partition of the Indian sub-continen
I.Partition of the Indian sub-continen
II.Princely Indian States and Kashmir
Reference to the people -- Britain, Kashmir and reference to the United Nations
United Nations and the reference
Territorial status quo
Kashmir and the United Nations
Inadequacies of the current proposals to resolve the Kashmir issue
Resolving the Kashmir problem
Resolving the Kashmir problem: Reference to the International Court of Justice
Resolving the Kashmir issue: Regaining moral authority in Kashmir
I.Resolving the Kashmir issue: Regaining moral authority in Kashm
II.Resolving the Kashmir issue: Regaining moral authority in Kashmi
III.Epilogue.
"This book challenges the current discourse on the Kashmir issue, both nationally and internationally. It explains how the Kashmir issue was the inevitable result of the ruthless British policies to satisfy their imperial interests in the Indian sub-continent, and of the utter ineptitude and political naiveté of eminent Indian leaders of undivided India in rising to the challenge. The book describes the British politics during the freedom struggle in colonial India that culminated in the partition of the sub-continent to create a 'Pakistan' friendly to the British. The book details how it was in line with such politics that the Kashmir problem was deliberately created and sustained by the British, and intended by the British to remain the end product of the British Raj. The Kashmir issue later assumed its present dimensions due to Pakistan's persistent efforts, India's habitual bungling as also the political expediency of the UNSC and the international community. In the process, it is the people across the Indian sub-continent who continue to be taken for a ride. While the festering Kashmir issue has contributed immensely to the rise in international terrorism, it was the British, and later American, policy on Kashmir that created a conducive environment for such terrorism"--Provided by publisher.
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