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Routledge Handbook of Autocratization in South Asia
Details
This handbook offers a comprehensive analysis of the processes and actors contributing to autocratization in South Asia, providing an understanding of the interconnectedness of the states in the region. It is an important reference work for students and researchers of South Asian Studies, Asian Studies, Area Studies, and Political Science.
The essays of this handbook dissect the trends towards creeping authoritarianism in South Asia. Even India, long a poster boy of 'third world' democracy, appears to be catching up with its neighbours in a 'non-democratic regime convergence'. However, instead of merely confirming Huntington's deterministic pessimism regarding non-western democracy, or jumping on to wide-eyed bushy tailed advocacy, authors of this important volume follow a third trajectory, based on fine grained empirical analysis and empathy with their subject, within a comparative framework. This handbook should become an indispensable tool for the people of South Asia, as well as for outsiders, looking in. Subrata Mitra, Emeritus Professor of Political Science at Heidelberg University and Adjunct Professor, Dublin City University, Ireland. Situating South Asia's democratic trends in a broad historical context, this wide-ranging volume addresses a crucial, timely and policy-relevant question: why is democracy faltering in the world's most populous region? While authoritarianism was the twentieth century's historical norm, recent democratic improvements have faltered and even reversed. Assembling the best regional experts, this book exposes the proximate cause of regional democratic backsliding leaders invoking cultural identities to legitimate non-democratic behaviour while underscoring its deeper and more enduring institutional roots. It will serve as indispensable reading for regional experts, democracy watchers and policymakers alike. Maya Tudor, Associate Professor, Blavatnik School of Government, Fellow, St. Hilda's College, Oxford University, UK. Studies of democratic decline in South Asia tend to focus on just one country. This excellent and timely volume brings together leading scholars of Indian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan and Bangladeshi politics and society to explore, across a range of issues, what's similar and what's different about recent democratic weakening in the region. Indispensable. Steven I. Wilkinson, Henry R. Luce Director, MacMillan Center, Nilekani Professor of India and South Asian Studies, Department of Political Science, Yale University, USA.
Autorentext
Sten Widmalm is Professor in Political Science at the Department of Government, Uppsala University, Sweden. He has carried out extensive research on crisis management, political tolerance, democracy and conflicts in a global comparative perspective. His recent publications include Political Tolerance in the Global South - Images from India, Pakistan and Uganda (Routledge, 2016).
Inhalt
Introduction - Autocratization in South Asia
- Autocratization in South Asia, Sandra Grahn, Staffan I. Lindberg and Sten Widmalm
Part 1 India - Building an ethnic state?
Neo-Authoritarianism in India under Narendra Modi: Growing Force or Critical Discourse?, Devin K. Joshi
Prefiguring Alternatives to Autocratization: Democratic Dissent in Contemporary India, Amrita Basu
Autocratization in Kashmir, umit Ganguly
Re-positing Gender in the New Nationalist Paradigm, Dinoo Anna Mathew
Autocratic environmental governance in India, Anwesha Dutta and Kenneth Bo Nielsen
Living Dangerously: The Heartland Heralds the New Communal-Authoritarian Model of Indian Democracy, Zoya Hasan
Hindu Nationalist Statecraft and Modi's Authoritarian Populism, Kenneth Bo Nielsen and Alf Gunvald Nilsen
India's inexorable path to autocratization: Looking beyond Modi and the populist lens, Soundarya Chidambaram
The Social Roots of the Authoritarian Turn in India, Patrick Heller
From Hindu Rashtra to Hindu Raj? A de facto or a de jure Ethnic Democracy?, Christophe Jaffrelot
Part 2 Pakistan - The decline of civil liberties
Pakistan's Hybrid Regime: Growing Democratization, or Increased Authoritarianism?, Ian Talbot
Religious clientelism and democratic choice: Clients of God, Aiysha Varraich
Digital Autocratization of Pakistan, Rizvan Saeed
A Supreme Court or a Constitutional Jirga?, Moeen Chema
Autocratization and Religious Minorities in Pakistan, Ahmad Salim and Rizvan Saeed
CPEC, Governance, and China's Belt and Road in South Asia: The Path of Most Resistance?, Marc Lanteigne
Part 3 Bangladesh - Towards one-party rule
Bangladesh: In Pursuit of a One-Party State?, Ali Riaz
The Decline of Democratic Governance: Protests at the Phulbari and Rampal Coal Mine, Shelley Feldman
Disaster governance and autocratic legitimation in Bangladesh: Aiding autocratization?, Maren Aase
Islamist extremism in Bangladesh: A pretext for autocratization, Asheque Haque
Sheikh Hasina of Bangladesh: The making of a strongman regime, Arild Engelsen Ruud
Local Government Institutions under Authoritarian Rule in Bangladesh, Serdar Yilmaz and Syed Khaled Ahsan
Part 4 Sri Lanka - The resilience of the ethnic state
Ethnoreligious Nationalism and Autocratization in Sri Lanka, Neil DeVotta
Autocratization, Buddhist nationalist extremism and the Muslim minority in Sri Lanka, Farah Mihlar
Global Worker Protests and Tools of Autocratization in Sri Lanka: Rendering them Silent, Sandya Hewamanne
Militarization and impunity in Sri Lanka, Øivind Fuglerud
Part 5 How to comprehend autocratization in South Asia - Three broad perspectives
Autocratization and regime convergence in South Asia - An undetermined path, Sten Widmalm
Gravitational pull of authoritarian China in South Asia?, Johan Lagerkvist
Autocratization as an Ideological Project: Carl Schmitt's Anti-Liberalism in South Asia, David G. Lewis
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09780367486747
- Editor Widmalm Sten
- Sprache Englisch
- Genre Political Science
- Größe H246mm x B174mm
- Jahr 2021
- EAN 9780367486747
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 978-0-367-48674-7
- Veröffentlichung 31.12.2021
- Titel Routledge Handbook of Autocratization in South Asia
- Autor Sten Widmalm
- Gewicht 900g
- Herausgeber Routledge
- Anzahl Seiten 378