This is the gripping story of India's democracy in the early 21st century. The ninth LokSabha election of November 1989 marked the beginning of a new political era and since then the nation's political landscape has been dramatically transformed by the rise of regional parties and leaders. Sumantra Bose illuminates the roots, significance and challenges of this bottom up federalization driven by the will of the people and the transition to a de-centered democracy. The principal personalities, events and turning points of the pre-1990 and post-1990 eras come to life in the pages of Transforming India.
The vitality of Indian democracy derives from the enthusiastic participation of hundreds of millions of ordinary Indians the demos. But its transformation into a polity of by and for the people awaits solutions to great problems of poverty, inequality and alienation. Bose provides riveting accounts of the long-term challenges posed by the Maoist insurgency and the unresolved issue of Kashmir.
Transforming India: Challenges to the World's Largest Democracy combines lucid writing with incisive analysis and masterly command of detail with unwavering attention to the big picture. Bose finds the story of Indian democracy profoundly inspiring, but never loses sight of its flaws and warts, challenges and contradictions. This book is the essential guide to understanding the present and the future of India's politics.
About the Author Sumantra Bose is Professor of International and Comparative Politics at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). The author of five previous books, he was born and raised in Kolkata and received his doctorate in Political Science from Columbia University in New York in 1998. He lives between London and India.