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A royal republic? Deciphering the multiple lineages of popular sovereignty in India

By: Dhabhai, Garima.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Economic & Political Weekly Description: 59(31), Aug 3, 2024: p.26-28.Subject(s): Popular Sovereignty in India, Liberal-Constitutional Framework, Populist Democracy, Political Anthropology, Indian Political Traditions, Idioms of Power, Eurocentric Norms, Democratic Representation, Political Lineages, Royal Republic, Indian Democracy, Sovereignty Practices In: Economic & Political WeeklySummary: Despite the dominance and centrality of a liberal-constitutional framework to understand democracy in India, it is not enough to decipher its populist renditions. The myriad ways in which the “popular” is represented today in the Indian democratic context call for a thicker analysis, excavating India’s many political pasts and their corresponding idioms of power. The anthropological turn in the study of Indian politics offers a way forward to decipher the lineages of popular sovereignty and its practices in India, which is not limited by the presumptions of a Eurocentric normative framing of democracy.- Reproduced https://www.epw.in/journal/2024/31/commentary/royal-republic.html
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
59(31), Aug 3, 2024: p.26-28 Available AR132826

Despite the dominance and centrality of a liberal-constitutional framework to understand democracy in India, it is not enough to decipher its populist renditions. The myriad ways in which the “popular” is represented today in the Indian democratic context call for a thicker analysis, excavating India’s many political pasts and their corresponding idioms of power. The anthropological turn in the study of Indian politics offers a way forward to decipher the lineages of popular sovereignty and its practices in India, which is not limited by the presumptions of a Eurocentric normative framing of democracy.- Reproduced

https://www.epw.in/journal/2024/31/commentary/royal-republic.html

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