India has generally been credited with maintaining the constitutional regime established since independence. In this successful political experiment, the procedural values of democracy, free and fair elections, judicial integrity and activism and paradigm-shifts in politics and the economy with a reasonable degree of consensus, stand out as major areas of relative achievements. Elections have become particularly more frequent since 1989. There have been four Lok Sabha elections, three in rather quick succession. This is because of the transformation of the party system from one of Congress dominance to a multi-partisan system configuration reflecting the instability of minority and/or coalition governments and hung parliaments. Elections in this phase have been both the cause and consequence of a paradigm-shift in Indian politics from a predominantly parliamentary tenor of politics to a more federalised regime within the overall parameters of what Ronald Watts has characterised as ‘parliamentary federal systems’. Since 1989, a certain measure of proportionality of representation is evident under the plurality or first-past-the-post electoral system because of the increased social fragmentation along ethnic, regional and class lines. This has enormously increased the political influence of regional parties in the system. In such a political matrix, coalition governments would appear to be an expected outcome. And unless coalitional governance becomes subject to certain consensual rules with a stable pursuit of purposive governance, elections would continue to be more frequent than desirable. This book takes a close look at the last three Lok Sabha elections—those of 1996, 1998 and 1999.
India at the Polls: Parliamentary Elections in the Federal Phase
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR M P Singh
Dr. M.P. Singh, Head of the Department of Forest Sciences, Birsa Agricultural University, Ranchi (Jharkhand) earned his mater's degree in Botany with specialization in Taxonomy and after his PH.D degree in Floristic from Patna University and Diploma in Forestry from Forest Research Institute, Indian Council of Forestry Research & Education, Dehradun. He is a fellow in Life Sciences of Mendelian Society of India, Patna. Besides teaching Dr. Singh has been engaged with independent research in Project of Government of India as Principal investigator. He is noted Taxonomist of the country and have about twenty one years of long experiences. He is an advisor to the Government of India for whole Eastern Region on Horistic research and member of FLORA INDIA. He is the Editor of Journal "New Botanist" for forestry sector. He has published eight books in Botany, Forestry and on Environmental Sciences and also published eighty five research papers in National/International Journals. He has also guided a number of Scholar for award of Ph. D. degree in Botany as well as in Forestry. He is one of the member of Botanical Survey of India in a Research Selection Committee. He has extensively travelled in India and abroad in conection to floristic studies.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Rekha Saxena
Rekha Saxena teaches Political Science in Janaki Devi Memorial College, University of Delhi. She was awarded Shastri-Indo Canadian Institute's Doctoral (1999-2000) and Faculty Research Fellowship (2003) to visit Canada where she was affiliated with the Department of Political Studies and Institute of Intergovernmental Relations at the Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario.
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Bibliographic information
Title
India at the Polls: Parliamentary Elections in the Federal Phase
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8125023283
Length
xx+324p., Tables.
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