HINDU NATIONALISM AND GOVERNANCE Edited by John McGuire& Ian Copland,OUP,
2007, Rs.695, pp.476.

This book is a significant contribution to the study of BJP in power. With
the BJP making a determined effort to return to power in the next general
elections, scholarly interest on how the BJP governed the country from 1998
to 2004 should naturally focus on whether the initial apprehensions in the
media when BJP formed its first durable Government in 1998 were justified.

Although the stability of the BJP-led NDA Government was in doubt every time
when it was formed - first in 1996, (when it formed Government for 13 days)
then in 1998, and in 1999 - the Vajpayee Government survived the multi-party
coalition experiment successfully. Along with the stability question with
which it was concerned throughout its tenure, the NDA Government was also
accountable for its omissions and commissions, especially for its pursuit of
the so-called hidden agenda of the Sangh Parivar. That is why the decisions
taken by the various Ministries during those six years must receive
scholarly scrutiny, beyond the superficial journalistic account, in order to
make an assessment of what an ideological party can do or cannot do while in
power.

John McGuire, Professor of Modern Indian History, Curtin University of
Technology, Australia, and Ian Copland, Associate Professor of History and
School of Historical Studies, Monash University, Australia have edited this
volume. Contributors include Prabhat Patnaik (Economic Policy), Douglas Hill
(Food Security, Governance, and Rural Development), Greg Bailey (Rewriting
of Indian History), Salim Lakha (sifting economic agenda), Mushirul Hasan
(Text Books), Edwina Mason (Politics of Hindu nationalism), Brian Shoesmith
and Norel Mecklai (Hindu Rashtra), Robin Jeffrey (media revolution), Rita
Manchanda (Hindu public discourse), and Achin Vanaik (foreign policy
perspectives). There are separate essays on Kashmir, Pakistan and Bangladesh
as well.

While these independent essays by these specialists will most certainly
offer the much-needed insights into the functioning of the Government, there
is indeed need for a chronologically backed scholarly account of the BJP in
power, focusing on the issues of governance, that is, the legislative output
in Parliament, the controversies and compromises which marked the executive
decisions, and the state of independent institutions such as judiciary and
election commission, apart from the dynamics of party-Government
relationship. The book has no chapters on these themes, which only shows
there is a void which can be filled by interested scholars.

-- 
Bobby Kunhu
http://community.eldis.org/myshkin/Blog/

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