Theorizing Interactions
Anushree
DEMOCRATIC DYNASTIES: STATE, PARTY AND FAMILY IN CONTEMPORARY INDIAN POLITICS by By Kanchan Chandra Cambridge University Press, 2016, 279 pp., 5691.00
October 2016, volume 40, No 10

‘Dynastic politics is a termite that eats away the foundation of democracy,’ asserted the Prime Minister of India,Narendra Modi, addressing an election rally in Sangai Mandli area of Billawar constituency, in December 2014, in the run-up to the State assembly elections in Jammu and Kashmir.1 This was not the first time that the issue of dynastic politics found mention during the electoral battle in India. In fact, the BJP leadership had made it one of the core issues during the 2014 Lok Sabha elections to target its principal opponent, the Congress. While the Congress led by the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty is one of the most prominent political dynasties in India, there are several others at the national and regional level, spread across parties with an increasing number in the Indian legislature.

It is in this context that there has been a growing interest in academic circles in the last few years over the issue and some serious research has been taken up to investigate the phenomenon of dynasticism in democracy and the interactions between these two. Democratic Dynasties, State, Party and Family in Contemporary Indian Politics edited by Kanchan Chandra is one such work that makes an attempt to create ‘a foundation for theorizing about, and testing for, these interactions between institutions, democracy, and dynasty’

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