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Indian Conceptions of Order and Justice: Nehruvian, Gandhian, Hindutva, and Neo-Liberal
Title: | Indian Conceptions of Order and Justice: Nehruvian, Gandhian, Hindutva, and Neo-Liberal
| Author: | Kanti Bajpai | Publication: | Order and Justice in International Relations / OSO Monographs | Enumeration: | vol. 1, no. 9, pp. 236-262/ February 2003 | Abstract: | Bajpai begins by examining these four dominant traditions of thought and compares the attitudes of the four traditions towards state sovereignty, the use of force, the utility of rules and institutions, and inequality. The author shows the degree of compatibility between these four perspectives and the Westphalian concept of order and justice as well as with more solidarist approaches. He concludes by outlining what a just world order would look like from the four perspectives, and notes that a three-way conversation on this topic is taking place between the Nehruvians, the increasingly influential Hindutvas, and the nascent neo-liberals. Source of Abstract: Provided by Publisher | Tools: |
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