000 01537nam a22001577a 4500
999 _c521874
_d521874
008 230228b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aPattnaik, Ayesha
_937783
245 _aLoyalty, liberty, and the law: Analysing the juxtaposition of nation and citizen in the Indian sedition law
260 _aSocial and Legal Studies
300 _a31(6), Dec, 2022: p.829-846
520 _aThis article examines the Indian sedition law laid out in Section 124(A) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) which criminalises expression of disaffection towards the government. It analyses the functions of the sedition law in colonial and constitutional India. Rather than taking a legal approach to examine whether the sedition law is inimical to democracy, this socio-legal analysis studies the media and political discourse around sedition cases to evoke an underlying pattern of the use of the law across time and political regimes. It reveals how the law has been used in contemporary India to weave a narrative of the nation-state and national interests, often pitted against human rights and individual liberties. It goes on to argue that in post-colonial India, the law has simultaneously been critical in building a binding national identity while also enabling nationalism to be used as a political instrument that can subversively monitor and discipline citizens. – Reproduced
650 _aSedition, Citizenship, India, Distant, Nationalism, Democracy.
_936134
773 _aSocial and Legal Studies
906 _aSEDITION
942 _cAR