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Full Description
In August 2017 India and Pakistan celebrated the seventieth anniversary of their independence from British imperial rule. Yet in spite of the core institutional developments introduced by the British Raj, such as functional local governments, judicial autonomy and private property rights, India and Pakistan are, today, very different states. To shed light onto this, Ilhan Niaz here explores British imperial rule through the lens of the institutions it helped to erect, and the ways in which the development of these have shaped Pakistan and India's political landscape ever since. Niaz demonstrates that both India's constitutional democracy and Pakistan's unstable democratic system have their roots in the state organisations - the military, the civil service, the judiciary and education - that evolved under British rule, and that the impact of the Raj will continue to shape India and Pakistan's future prosperity for the foreseeable future. Niaz revisits a wide range of official archival documents, memoranda and reports, to present a fresh structural analysis of contemporary problems of governance in South Asia.This detailed re-examination of the Raj is an important and useful resource for students, researchers and academics of South Asian politics and imperial history.
Contents
The Wars of Timurid Imperial SuccessionSoldiers of the EmpireEvolution of the British Indian MilitaryThe New Mansabdars: Civilian Bureaucracy and Meritocracy in British IndiaOrder for All: The British Indian Police ApparatusJustice for Some: The Judiciary and Implementation of the Rule of LawEnlightenment for a Few: Selective Assimilation, Metropolitan Centers, and Education PolicyCollaborators, Reformers, and Rebels: Responses to the Empire