Odnos Hindu nacionalizma i demokratskog nazadovanja u Indiji
Ključne reči:
Hindu nacionalizam, Indija, demokratsko nazadovanje, autoritarizam, Narendra ModiApstrakt
Nakon Drugog svetskog rada i povlačenja Britanske imperije iz regiona Južne Azije kroz proces dekolonizacije, nastali su Indija i Pakistan kao nezavisne države. Od svoje nezavisnosti, pa do početka 21. veka, Indiju je karakterisao demokratski politički poredak, po čemu je u kontinuitetu bila izuzetak u regionu Južne i Jugoistočne Azije, gde su države većinski u kontinuitetu pod vlašću različitih vrsti autoritarnih režima. Međutim, rapidan porast Hindu nacionalizma u ovoj državi javio se u prethodnim godinama u svojoj izrazito naglašenoj formi. U korelaciji sa ovim procesom, Indija je zabeležila i postepeno povlačenje demokratije i rast autoritarnih tendencija, što se može videti u izveštajima organizacije Freedom House iz godine u godinu. Ovaj rad će pokušati da utvrdi da li su ova dva procesa u uzročno posledičnoj vezi i da li uspon Hindu nacionalizma koji je počeo u prethodnoj deceniji ima uticaja i na sve vidljivije demokratsko nazadovanje u Indiji.
Reference
[1] Abhimanyu C., Hindu Nationalism and Authoritarianism: Narendra Modi’s Second – And Third – Term, Blog London School of Economics. Available from: https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/religionglobalsociety/2019/06/hindu-nationalism-and-authoritarianism-narendra-modis-second-and-third-term/ (Accessed: August 5, 2024).
[2] Akturk S. (2015). Religion and Nationalism- Contradictions of Islamic Origins and Secular Nation-Building in Turkey, Algeria and Pakistan, The Social Science Quarterly, Volume 96, pp. 778–806.
[3] Aiyar A. S. S. (2020). Despite Modi, India Has Not Yet Become a Hindu Authoritarian State, The Cato Institute, 1–20.
[4] Bose S. (2013). Transforming India – Challenges to the World’s Largest Democracy, Harvard University Press, pp. 11–23.
[5] Bremmer I. (2018) – Us vs them – The Failure of Globalism, Penguin Random House, 86–87.
[6] Britannica (2023) – Bharatiya Janata Party, Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc, Edinburgh, Available from: https://www.britannica.com/topic/Bharatiya-JanataParty (Accessed: August 5, 2024).
[7] Freedom House, Freedom in the World 2021, Freedom House, Washington D.C. Available from: https://freedomhouse.org/country/india/freedom-world/2021 (Accessed: August 5, 2024).
[8] India Votes, Indian Election Data and Results, India votes, New Delhi, Available from: https://www.indiavotes.com/ (Accessed: August 5, 2024).
[9] Khan R., Why the West lost India’s culture wars, Unherd, London, Available from: https://unherd.com/2021/04/the-culture-wars-of-post-colonial-india/ (Accessed: August 5, 2024).
[10] Mourya R. and Mittal J. P. (2020). Partition of India – cause, and effect, Universe International Journal of Interdisciplinary Research, Vol. 1, Issue 8, pp. 19–24.
[11] Nielsen B. K. and Nielsen G. A. (2021). Hindu nationalist statecraft and Modi’s authoritarian populism, Routledge Handbook of Autocratization in South Asia, Routledge, pp. 92–98.
[12] Nielsen G. A. (2021). India’s Trajectories of Change, 2004–2019. In: Williams M. and Satgar V. (Eds.), Destroying Democracy Neoliberal Capitalism and the Rise of Authoritarian Politics. Wits University Press, pp. 131–139.
[13] Philip B. Calkins and Frank Raymond Allchin, India – Government and politics, Britannica, London. Available from: https://www.britannica.com/place/India/ Government-and-politics (Accessed: August 5, 2024).
[14] Sing K. P., Prime Ministers of India List From 1947 to 2022, Sarkari List, New Delhi, Available from: https://sarkarilist.in/prime-ministers-of-india/ (Accessed: August 5, 2024).
[15] Sinha S. (2021). ‘Strong leaders’, authoritarian populism and Indian developmentalism: The Modi moment in historical context, Geoforum, Volume 124, pp. 320–333.
[16] Sruthi Radhkakrishnan, Presidents of Congress past: A look at the party’s presidency since 1947, Hindu, New Delhi, Available from: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/presidents-of-congress-past-a-look-at-the-partys-presidency-since-1947/article21639174.ece (Accessed: August 5, 2024).
[17] Sud N. (2020) – The Actual Gujarat Model: Authoritarianism, Capitalism, Hindu Nationalism and Populism in the Time of Modi, Journal of Contemporary Asia, Volume 52, pp. 125–126.
[18] The Wire Staff, India Is No Longer a Democracy but an ‘Electoral Autocracy’: Swedish Institute, The Wire, New York, Available from: https://thewire.in/rights/india-no-longer-democracy-electoral-autocracy-v-dem-institute-report-bjp-narendra-modi (Accessed: August 5, 2024).
