Federalism, Nationalism and Development: India and the Punjab EconomyRoutledge, 19/02/2008 - 256 من الصفحات This book throws new light on the study of India's development through an exploration of the triangular relationship between federalism, nationalism and the development process. It focuses on one of the seemingly paradoxical cases of impressive development and sharp federal conflicts that have been witnessed in the state of Punjab. The book concentrates on the federal structure of the Indian polity and it examines the evolution of the relationship between the centre and the state of Punjab, taking into account the emergence of Punjabi Sikh nationalism and its conflict with Indian nationalism. Providing a template to analyse regional imbalances and tensions in national economies with federal structures and competing nationalisms, this book will not only be of interest to researchers on South Asian Studies, but also to those working in the fields of politics, political economy, geography and development. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 86
India and the Punjab Economy Pritam Singh. India's subnationalisms come draped in discourses of culture but Pritam Singh's thesis is that the paramountcy of the project of Indian nationbuilding has forced individual states to play ...
India and the Punjab Economy Pritam Singh. FEDERALISM,. NATIONALISM. AND. DEVELOPMENT. This book throws new light on the study of India's development through an exploration of the triangular relationship between federalism, nationalism and ...
India and the Punjab Economy Pritam Singh. PREFACE. AND. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. My intellectual interests in this area of study were triggered by a convergence of several forms of theoretical and political crises in the 1980s and 1990s. The ...
... economy of the relations between the central government in India and Punjab, as an arena of contest between the project of Indian nationalism and the politicoeconomic aspirations of regional Punjabi nationalism. This study has evolved ...
India and the Punjab Economy Pritam Singh. Khan, Jesse Kharbanda, Iftikhar Malik, Tapan Raychaudhuri and Rajeswari Sunder Rajan. I have benefited also from discussions with Robert Cassen, the late Sanjay Lal, Neville Maxwell and Frances ...