Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £26.59 GBP
Regular price £31.99 GBP Sale price £26.59 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

How India Became Democratic
Citizenship and the Making of the Universal Franchise

Uncovers the greatest experiment in democratic history: the creation of the electoral roll and universal adult franchise in India.

Ornit Shani (Author)

9781107673540, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 7 December 2017

296 pages, 5 b/w illus. 3 maps
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm, 0.44 kg

'… a clear glimpse into the integrity, passion and commitment with which the republic's first generation went about creating its institutions.' Mihir Sharma, Business Standard

How India Became Democratic explores the greatest experiment in democratic human history. It tells the untold story of the preparation of the electoral roll on the basis of universal adult franchise in the world's largest democracy. Ornit Shani offers a new view of the institutionalisation of democracy in India, and of the way democracy captured the political imagination of its diverse peoples. Turning all adult Indians into voters against the backdrop of the partition of India and Pakistan, and in anticipation of the drawing up of a constitution, was a staggering task. Indians became voters before they were citizens - by the time the constitution came into force in 1950, the abstract notion of universal franchise and electoral democracy were already grounded. Drawing on rich archival materials, Shani shows how the Indian people were a driving force in the making of democratic citizenship as they struggled for their voting rights.

Introduction
1. Designing for democracy: rewriting the bureaucratic colonial imagination
2. The pursuit of citizenship in the making of the electoral roll: registering partition refugees
3. The roll as 'serialised epic' and the personalisation of the universal franchise
4. Disciplining the federal structure
5. Shaping the constitution from below and the role of the Secretariat
6. The limits of inclusion
Conclusion: a 17 crore and 220 yard democracy.

Subject Areas: Political structures: democracy [JPHV], Asian history [HBJF]

View full details