ID | 140463 |
Title Proper | Commissioning representation |
Other Title Information | the Misra report, deliberation and the government of the people in modern India |
Language | ENG |
Author | Viswanath, Rupa |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Commissions of inquiry are unique tools of modern governance that represent ‘the people’, but in a manner quite unlike parliaments and other forms of elected political representation. Using as its example the 2007 Misra Report, this paper reveals how, in the production of a commission report, scores of non-state actors—‘stakeholders’ from a wide range of social strata—are enlisted to produce the policies that will then redound upon those very stakeholders. In thus consulting the people and eliciting their speech, commissions serve to publicly enact, in a controlled setting, the deliberative ideal of democracy that is otherwise absent in India. In this particular instance, the problematic status of Dalits is subsumed under the normative religious identity of the post-colonial Indian nation, a conclusion whose emergence through reasoned debate is publicly enacted in the form of the commission. |
`In' analytical Note | South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 38, No.3; Sep 2015: p.495-511 |
Journal Source | South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol: 38 No 3 |
Key Words | Minorities ; Religion ; Deliberation ; Dalits ; Indian Democracy ; Political Representation ; Commissions of Inquiry ; The People |