key texts in political thought-i course no. ps- 01 -cr of

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1 Key Texts in Political Thought-I Course no. PS-01-CR COURSE OBJECTIVE: This Course is a first part of the two Core courses designed to train students in interpreting major classical texts of Political Philosophy. The structure of the course is a schema of key texts with an intention to introduce students to the original texts and make them aware of different ways of interpreting the texts. The part of the objective is to guide them towards understanding the major theoretical puzzles that engaged the philosophers and theorists of the world particularly the West. The students are expected to read the selected texts and in some cases selected excerpts of the texts wherever specified. Unit I: Introduction 1.1Political Philosophy: Nature and Significance 1.2 Interpretation of Texts: Theoretical and Contextual Unit II: The Ancient Greeks (1) 2.1 Plato: The Republic Unit III:The Ancient Greeks (2) 3.1 Aristotle: The Politics Unit IV: Towards Modern-Secular Thought 4.1 Machiavelli: The Prince 4.2Thomas Hobbes: Leviathan [Parts 1 & 2, ch. 46 of Part 4 & Conclusion]

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Page 1: Key Texts in Political Thought-I Course no. PS- 01 -CR of

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Key Texts in Political Thought-I

Course no. PS-01-CR

COURSE OBJECTIVE: This Course is a first part of the two Core courses

designed to train students in interpreting major classical texts of Political

Philosophy. The structure of the course is a schema of key texts with an intention

to introduce students to the original texts and make them aware of different ways

of interpreting the texts. The part of the objective is to guide them towards

understanding the major theoretical puzzles that engaged the philosophers and

theorists of the world particularly the West. The students are expected to read the

selected texts and in some cases selected excerpts of the texts wherever specified.

Unit I: Introduction

1.1 Political Philosophy: Nature and Significance

1.2 Interpretation of Texts: Theoretical and Contextual

Unit II: The Ancient Greeks (1)

2.1 Plato: The Republic

Unit III:The Ancient Greeks (2)

3.1 Aristotle: The Politics

Unit IV: Towards Modern-Secular Thought

4.1 Machiavelli: The Prince

4.2 Thomas Hobbes: Leviathan [Parts 1 & 2, ch. 46 of Part 4 & Conclusion]

Page 2: Key Texts in Political Thought-I Course no. PS- 01 -CR of

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Indian Political System

Course No. PS-02-CR

Unit I: Invention of Modern India

1.1 Constitution as a mirror of Indian Identity;

1.2 Approaches to study of Indian political System----- Political economy;

Humane Governance.

1.3 State----Democratic and Coercive dimensions; Nature of autonomy of Indian

state.

Unit II: Federal India

2.1 Concept and Models in Federalism;

2.2 Nature of Federalism in India;

2.3 Asymmetrical Federalism with reference to Art, 370.

Unit III:Society and Politics

3.1 Secularism and rise of Hindtva;

3.2 Nature of Naxalite/Maoist movement;

3.3 Minorities and Marginalization.

Unit IV: Political Economy

4.1 Nation-State and Economy;

4.2 Regional and Social Disparities;

4.3 Working of Democracy---------- Judiciary and Political parties.

Page 3: Key Texts in Political Thought-I Course no. PS- 01 -CR of

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International Politics

Course no. PS-03-CR

Unit:I

1.1 Scope, Significance and Changing Nature of International Politics.

1.2 International Politics during the Cold War Era.

1.3 Post Cold War Politics: Changing Pattern of present International order

Unit:II

2.1 Decolonization and Emergence of Third World.

2.2 Non-Alignment: Its Contemporary Relevance and Indian Perspective.

2.3 Neo-Colonialism and North South Dialogue.

Unit:III:

3.1 U.N and International Order, Issues of Peace and Development,

Collective Security.

3.2 Need for Reform in the UN; Different Perspectives.

3.3 Transnational Actors in World Politics; Issues of Environment and

Terrorism

.

Unit: IV

4.1 International Political Economy in the Study of International Relations and

Role of WTO

4.2 Globalization: Different Perspectives.

4.3 Regional Integration: EU, SAARC

Page 4: Key Texts in Political Thought-I Course no. PS- 01 -CR of

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Government and Politics in Jammu and Kashmir

Course No. PS-O4-(CR)

Unit I: State of Jammu and Kashmir: An introduction

1.1 Jammu and Kashmir State: Geo-Politics and Historical Background.

1.2 Formation of the State, a Critical Overview

1.3 Ideological Orientation of the Freedom Movement and its legacies

Unit II: Post Colonial Political Developments.

2.1 Partition of the Sub-Continent and Accession of the J & K State; Diverse

Perspectives.

2.2 Special status: Its Erosion and Debate for its restoration.

2.3 State Constitution: Ideological Structure and Features

2.4 Political Economy of the Land Reforms

Unit III: Democracy and the Decentralization.

3.1 Democracy in the J & K: Challenges and Concerns.

3.2 Panchayat Raj: Theory and Practice.

3.3 Party System: changing Contours and coalition Politics.

Unit IV: Conflict and Resolution Mechanism.

4.1 Debates on self determination and Secessionism.

4.2 Models of Regional and sub-Regional Autonomy.

4.3 Cross LOC-Trade: Problems and Potentials.

4.4 State Human Rights Commission: Powers and Its Role.

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POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES-1

Course No. PS-05-DCE

Unit I: Introducing Liberalism

1.1 Liberalism: Nature, Foundation and Principles

1.2 Classical Liberalism and Modern Liberalism

Unit II: Positions of Classical and Modern Liberalism On

2.1 State

2.2 Liberty

2.3 Justice and Equality

Unit III: Anarchism

3.1 Anarchism: Nature and Foundation

3.2 Individualist Anarchism and Socialist Anarchism

Unit IV:Position of Anarchists On

3.1 State

3.2 Liberty

3.3 Justice and Equality

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Human Rights

Course No. PS-O6-(DCE)

Unit – I

1.1 Human Rights: Meaning, Concept and Historical Development, Magna

Carta, British Bill of rights, French and American Declaration

1.2 Philosophical perspectives: Liberal, Marxist

1.3 Human Rights: Classification and Types: Three generations of Rights;

Civil and Political, Economic, Social and Cultural, Right to Self

Determination.

Unit – II

2.1 Human Rights of Specific Groups: Women and Children

2.2 Human Rights of Disadvantaged Groups: Refugees.

2.3 Human Rights of People affected by War and Armed Conflicts.

Unit – III:

3.1 Social Problems: Hierarch, population explosion.

3.2 Economic problems: poverty, unemployment, corruption and privatisation.

3.3 Political Problem: Terrorism.

Unit – IV:

4.1 Human Rights Regime in India: Constitutional Provisions: Fundamental

Rights and Directive Principles of State Policy.

4.2 National Human Rights Commission: Formation, Functions and Role.

4.3 Non-Governmental Organizations and Human Rights

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Development Administration

Course No. PS-O7-DCE

Unit :

1.1 Concept of Development and Development Administration.

1.2 Democracy and Development Administration

1.3 Policies of Development

Unit II:

2.1 Concept of Development and Modernization.

2.2 Concept of Political Development.

2.3 Concept of Economic Development

Unit III:

3.1 Development Planning and Administration: Experience and Prospects.

3.2 Policy Planning and Administration in Developing Counties.

3.3 Development Planning at:

i) National Level

ii) State Level

Unit IV :

4.1 People-Centered Development

4.2 Tribal Development Administration

4.3 Regulatory Administration and Development

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India and the World

Course No. PS-08-OE

UNIT - I

1.1 Evolution of Indian Foreign Policy: Determinants, Principles, Objectives and

Challenges.

1.2 India and the Global South.

1.3 India’s Look-East Policy- imperatives, challenges and perspectives with

special focus on ASEAN

UNIT - II

2.1 India and United Nations, India’s Policy on Reforming the UN.

2.2 The problems and prospects of Indian Ocean as a zone of peace, its growing

Importance in recent decades

2.3 India’s Nuclear Policy and the question of nuclear weapons: NPT and

CTBT

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Contemporary International Issues and Processes

Course No. PS-09-GE

Unit-I Introduction: Changing Context and Dynamics of International

Relations

1.1 Environmental issues

1.2 Terrorism: from transnational to global phenomenon

1.3 Nuclear proliferation

Unit-II

2.1 Globalisation : different perspectives

2.2 Dimensions of Human Security

2.3 Gender in world politics

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Semester 2nd

Key Texts in Political Thought-II

Course no. PS-10-CR

COURSE OBJECTIVE: This Course is a second part of the two Core courses

designed to train students in interpreting major classical texts of Political

Philosophy. The structure of the course is a schema of key texts with an intention

to introduce students to the original texts and make them aware of different ways

of interpreting the texts. The part of the objective is to guide them towards

understanding the major theoretical puzzles that engaged the philosophers and

theorists of the world particularly the West. The students are expected to read the

selected texts and in some cases selected excerpts of the texts wherever specified.

Unit I:

1.1 John Locke: The Second Treatise of Government

1.2 Rousseau: Social Contract

Unit II:

2.1 Jeremy Bentham: Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation

[Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 11]

2.2 J.S.Mill: Essay On Liberty

Unit III:

3.1 Hegel: Philosophy of Right (excerpts)

Introduction: Para 1, 4-7, 29, 33

Abstract Right: Para 33-37, 41-45, 49-51, 53, 65-67, 71-75, 82-83, 93-94,

96, 102-104 Morality: Para 105-107, 113-114, 115-121, 124R, 126-128,

130-132, 135, 137, 141 Ethical Life: Para 142, 146-147, 149, 155, 157, 158,

161-163, 165-166, 170-171,

Unit IV:

4.1 Marx & Engels:

a. (excerpts from Prefaceto A Contribution to the Critique of Political

Economy);

b. The Communist Manifesto

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Modern Indian Political Thought

Course no. PS-11-CR

Unit – I

1.1 Overview of Indian Political Thought.

1.3 The Indian Renaissance with reference to the contributions of:

a) Raja Ram Mohan Roy

b) Sir Syed Ahmad Khan

Unit – II

2.1 The Debate between the Liberal Moderates and Radical Nationalists; with

the contributions of :

a. Gokhle

b. B. G. Tilak

2.2 Contributions of Hindu and Muslim Nationalists.

a. V. D. Sawarkar and Arbindo Gosh

b. Moulana Azad

2.3 Emergence of Muslim Nationalism: M.A.Jinnah.

Unit – III

3.1 Gandhian Thought: Swaraj; Critique of Modernity; Ahimsa and Satyagraha

3.2 Beyond Nationalism: R. N. Tagore, Muhammad Iqbal

3.3 Emancipatory Thought: B.R.Ambedkar

3.4

Unit – IV

4.1 Communist Movement and Issues.

4.2 M. N. Roy : Radical Humanism

4.3 Socialism with reference to Ram ManoharLohia.

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Theories of International Relations

Course No. PS-12-CR

Unit – I International Relations; Debating Discipline and Methodology

1.1 Diversity and Disciplinarily in International Relations Theory.

1.2 Debates over Scientific Methodology in the Discipline of IR.

1.3 System Theory in International Relations

Unit – II Explanatory International Relations Theories

2.1 Realism and Neo-realism.

2.2 Liberalism and Neo-Liberalism

2.3 Marxism and Neo-Marxism

Unit – III Constitutive International Relations Theories:

3.1 Critical Theory,

3.2 Social Constructivism,

3.3 Feminism

Unit – IV: Contemporary Perspectives

4.1 Post-Colonialism

4.2 International Ethics: Cosmopolitanism

4.3 Human Security.

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International Law

Course No. PS-13-(DCE)

Unit – I

1.1 International Law: Definition, Nature and Development

1.2 Sources of International Law

1.3 Recognition

Unit – II

2.1 Intervention

2.2 Treaty Obligation

2.3 Extradition

Unit – III:

3.1 Nationality

3.2 Settlement of disputes

a) Peaceful

i. Negotiation

ii. Good-offices and Mediation

iii. Conciliation

iv. Arbitration

b) Coercive:

i. Retortion

ii. Reprisals

iii. Embargo

iv. Intervention

3.3 Diplomatic Agents

Unit – IV:

4.1 International Court of Justice: Structure and Role

4.2 Crimes against Humanity:

a) Apartheid

b) Torture

c) Genocide

d) Traffic in Persons

4.3 Asylum

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Foreign Policy US, China and India

Course No. PS-14- (DCE)

Unit I

1.1. Nature and Scope of Foreign Policy

1.2. Foreign Policy Analysis: an overview

1.3. Foreign Policy Decision making: an overview

Unit II: US Foreign Policy

2.1. Main Features

2.2. Policy of Continuity and Change

2.3. U.S threat perceptions and Security Interests

2.4. Foreign Economic Policy

Unit III: Foreign Policy of China:

3.1. Main Features

3.2. Relations with Regional and Major Powers

3.3. Foreign Economic Policy

Unit IV: Foreign Policy of India:

4.1. Main Features and Determinants

4.2. Relations with her Neighbours

4.3. Foreign Economy Policy

4.4. Look East Policy

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Indian Politics and Institutions

Course No. PS-15- (DCE)

Unit 1

Introduction

1.1 Legacy of Indian National Movement

1.2 Approaches to economic development

a) Nehruvian

b) Gandhian

1.3 Constitution of India as an agency of social change

Unit II

Old Institutions and new challenges

2.1 Federalism: New Dimensions

2.2 Political Parties: Congress and BJP

2.3 Media and Public Policy

Unit III

Development and Deprivation

3.1 Middle class in India

3.2 Human Development

3.3 Regional Imbalances and Migration

Unit IV

Emerging ideas and Challenges

4.1 Role of National Institution for Transforming India

4.2 Election Commission: emerging Challenges

4.3 Military-Civil relations

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Violence in south Asia

Course No. PS-16-GE

Unit-I

1. Religion and Violence :The Case of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh

2. Ethnicity and Violence: The case of Pakistan and Sri Lanka

3. Caste and violence: the Case of India and Nepal

Unit-II

1. Patriarchy and Violence against women

2. Sex Trafficking

3. Child Labour and Child Abuse

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Semester 3rd

Comparative Politics

Course No. PS-17-CR

Unit – I

1.1 Comparative Method: An Overview of the field of comparative analysis.

1.2 Approaches to Comparative Political analysis” i. Political Systems and Structural Functional Approach

ii. Political Economy

Unit – I I: State in Comparative Framework

2.1 Liberal and Welfare State

2.2 Authoritarian State

2.3 Post-colonial state

Unit – III: Comparative Development Experience

3.1 Issues of modernization

3.2 Underdevelopment and Dependency

3.3 Development and Democracy

Unit – IV: Democracy and Democratization

4.1 Class and Elite—Elitist Theory of Democracy

4.2 Electoral Systems, Parties and Representation

4.3 State and Civil Society: Evolving Patterns

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Modern Political Theory

Course no. PS-18-CR

Unit – I

1.1 Nature, Growth and Evolution of Political Theory; Classical, Modern and

Contemporary Political Theory

1.2 Positivism and its impact on Political Theory.

1.3 Debates on decline and resurgence of Political Theory

1.4 Behaviouralism and Post-behaviouralism.

Unit – II

2.1 Scientific Method, Critique of Scientific Method.

2.2 Approaches of Thomas Kuhn and Karl Popper

2.3 Modernism and Post-modernism

Unit – III: Ideologies

3.1 Ideology—Liberalist and Marxist Perspectives.

3.2 Liberalism—Classical, Modern and Neo-Liberalism.

3.3 Marxism

3.4 Feminism

Unit – IV

4.1 Frankfort School of Thought: Critical Theory with special reference to

Marcuse and Habermas

4.2 Debates on End of Ideology and End of History

4.3 Clash of Civilizations and its critique

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Major Ideas and Issues in Public Administration

Course no. PS-19-CR

Unit – I

1.1 Development of Public Administration as a Discipline, its Nature and

Scope.

1.2 Scientific Management: F.W.Taylor

1.3 Ecological Approach: Fred Riggs.

Unit – II

2.1 Rational Decision-Making Approach: Herbert Simon.

2.2 Personal Administration: Recruitment, Training and Morale.

2.3 Theories of Motivation: Maslow and Herzberg.

2.4 Leadership: It’s Role in Decision Making.

Unit –III

3.1 Role of Pressure Groups and Public Opinion in the Process of Policy

Formation.

3.2 Crisis Management.

3.3 Good Governance: Problems of Administrative Corruption, Accountability

Unit – IV:

4.1 Impact of Information Technology on Public Administration.

4.2 Transparency and Right to Information

4.3 Neutral V/s Committed Bureaucracy

4.4 Impact of Globalization on Bureaucracy.

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State Politics in India

Course No. PS-20- (DCE)

Unit I [Theory):

1.1 State Politics in India: A theoretical frame work

1. 2 Federalization of India.

1.3 Class Formation in Indian States

Unit II [Practice):

2.1 Emergence of Regional Parties and their impact.

2.2 Ethnicity in State Politics: North-East India and Kashmir.

2.3 Caste in State Politics: UP

Unit III Liberal Political Economy:

3.1 Problems of Uneven Economic Development and Regional

Disparities

3.2 Impact of Liberalization and Globalization on Developmental

Pattern in Indian States.

3.3 Politics of Land Reforms with reference to West Bengal, Jammu and

Kashmir.

Unit IV Limits of Liberal Political Economy:

4.1 Naxalite Movement and its Impact on Politics of, Chattisgarh,

Jharkhand and Orissa.

4.2 Agrarian Crisis and its Impact on State Politics.

4.3 Flow of Foreign Direct Investment in Indian States: Issues and

Concerns.

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CRITICAL TRADITIONS IN POLITICAL THEORY

Course No. PS-21- (DCE)

Unit I: Introduction

1.1 Interrogating tradition

1.2 What is a critique?

1.3 The importance of a critical tradition

Unit II: Marxism

2.1 Debates on Historical Materialism

2.2 Critique of Capitalism: Alienation, Exploitation

2.3 Theories of Revolution and non-western Marxism

Unit III: Beyond Marxism I

3.1 Philosophical encounters:

a. Psychoanalysis,

b. Postmodernism

3.2 Feminism:

a. Theories of knowledge, critiques of science and rationality

b. Theories of the Public/Private, Equality/Difference

Unit IV: Beyond Marxism II

4.1 Development of the sex/gender distinction

4.2 Gender and Sexuality

4.3 Beyond Class: Race and Caste as alternate Variables

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POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES- II

[Marxism]

Course No. PS-22- (DCE)

Unit I:

1) Dialectical Materialism: Assumptions and Application

2) Historical Materialism: method and basic tenets

Unit II:

1) Critique of Capitalism: Alienation and Exploitation

2) Class and Class-consciousness

Unit III:

1) State and Power

2) Vision of Human Emancipation

Unit IV:

1) Spheres of Injustice in contemporary world

2) Methods of Resistance

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India-Pakistan Relations

Course No. PS-23- (DCE)

Unit – I

1.1. Partition: Divergent Narratives; Legacy.

1.2. Division and Diplomatic Contestations in the United Nations.

1.3. Water Politics: Indus Water Treaty: Kashmiri Perspective

Unit – II

2.1. Cold War and its impact on India and Pakistan.

2.2. Post-Cold war scenario and shifting alliances.

2.3. CPEC and Indian Response

Unit – III:

3.1. Pan-Islamic factor in the Pakistan Policy and its impact.

3.2. Arms Race: Nuclear Politics and Post-Nuclear Strategic Scenario.

3.3. Composite Dialogue: Issues, Problems and Prospects

Unite IV

4.1. India-Pakistan trade: Potential and Problems

4.2. Lives under the shadow of gun: The case of border dwellers in India and

Pakistan

4.3. Role of Media in India-Pakistan relations.

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Political Ideas -I

Course No. PS-24-GE

Unit I: Liberty

1.1 John Stuart Mill On Liberty

1.2 Issaih Berlin Two Concepts of Liberty

1.3 Karl Marx Freedom and Human Functioning

Unit II: Equality

2.1 Equality of Welfare (Utilitarian)

2.2 Equality and Maxi-min

2.3 Karl Marx on Equality

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Democracy and Development in India

Course No. PS-25-OE

Unit I:

1.1. Democracy and Development in India: Theoretical Framework

1.2. Ghandhian Political economy: Role and Relevance

1.3. Democratic Socialism in India

Unite II

2.1. Economic Reforms in India: Basic Features

2.2. Post-Liberalization phase:

a) Poverty

b) Agrarian crisis

c) Development and Displacement

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Semester 4th

Methods In Social Science

Course no. PS-26-CR

Unit I: The Idea of Social Science

1.1 Approaching the Difference between Natural and Social Science

1.2 Conceptions of Science: From Verification to Falsification

1.3 Objectivity and Value-neutrality

Unit II: Empirical Research in Social Sciences

2.1 Identification of Research Problem, Formulation of Hypothesis, Use of

Concepts, Operationalization of Variables

2.2 Quantitative and Qualitative Methods

2.3 Research Design

Unit III: Quantitative Research Method

3.1 Measurement: Issues of Reliability, Validity and Levels of Measurement.

3.2 Data Collection: Methods of Data-collection, Observation, Questionnaires

and Interviews

3.3 Sampling Techniques: Probability and Non-probability Techniques

3.4 Data Processing: Establishing Categories and Coding Data

3.5 Data Interpretation: Descriptive Statistics and Inferential Statistics

3.6 Preparation of Research Report

Unit IV: Qualitative Research

4.1 Depth Interviews

4.2 Ethnography

4.3 Content Analysis

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South Asia: State and Society

Course No. PS-27-CR

UNIT: I

1.1 The Contemporary Significance of South Asia as a Region.

1.2 Colonialism and Growth of Nationalism.

a. Nature and impact of colonialism

b. Growth of Nationalism: India, Pakistan and Bangladesh

UNIT: II

2.1 Pattern of Politics and Political Processes:

a. Evolving Pattern of Democracy

b. Role of Military

c. Violence

UNIT: III

3.1 South Asian Political Economy:

a. Poverty and Human Development in South Asia

b. Globalization and Liberalization in South Asia

c. Famine, Hunger and Food Security

UNIT: IV

4.1 Development and People’s Movements

a. People’s Movements with reference to Environment, Human Rights

and Globalization

b. Politics of Identities: Ethnicity, Regional and Gender

4.2 Peace and Conflict Resolution in South Asia.

4.3 Regional Cooperation and Challenges to South Asia

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Contemporary Political Theory

Course No. PS-28-CR

UNIT: I

1.1 Contemporary Political Theory: Nature, Shifts and Issues

1.2 Contemporary Liberalism:

a. Rawls: Justice

b. Dworkin: Equality

c. Amartya Sen: Development and Freedom

UNIT: II:

2.1 Libertarianism: Robert Nozick

2.2 Communitarianism: MichealSandel, MichealWalzer

2.3 Multiculturalism: Will Kymlicka, BhikhuParekh

UNIT: III:

3.1 Feminism: Judith Butler

3.2 Post-Colonialism: Edward Said, Frantz Fanon,

3.3 Post-Modernism: Michel Foucault, Lyotard

UNIT: IV:

4.1 Neo-Marxism: Gramsci, and Habermas

4.2 Nationalism: Anderson,Partha Chatterjee

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Peace And Conflict Studies

Course No. PS-29- (CR)

UNIT I Introduction to Peace and Conflict Studies:

1.1 Nature, Scope and Evolution of Peace and conflict Studies ( PACS)

1.2 Conceptual foundations with reference to John Galtung

1.3 Understanding Conflict and Violence

Unit II: Approaches to Study Peace

2.1 Feminist Approach

2.2 Political Economy Approach

2.3 Gandhian Approach

UNIT: III: Conflict Analysis: Structure and Processes

3.1 Types of Conflict: International Conflict (Changing Nature of Inter-

State War, Irregular and Proxy Warfare); Intra-State Conflict

(Ethnic and Identity conflicts); Transnational Conflict 9/11 and War

on Terror and Responses)

3.2 Conflict Resolution: Methods of Peaceful Settlement of Disputes.

3.3 Peacemaking, Peacekeeping and Peace building

UNIT: IV Case Study of:

4.1 Sri Lanka

4.2 Northern Ireland

4.3 Kashmir

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FEDERALISM IN INDIA

Course No. PS-30- (DCE)

UNIT-I Introduction

1.1 Theories of Federalism

1.2 Evolution of federalism in India.

1.3 Changing Nature of Indian Federalism.

UNIT-II Federalism in a democratized polity

2.1 Role of Judiciary and Federalism in India.

2.2 Coalition Politics and Federal system in India

2.3 Ethnicity and Federalism in India.

UNIT-III Globalization and Federalism

3.1 Neo-Liberal state and Localization of politics

3.2 Regional disparities, inequality and growth of federal politics

3.3 Treaty-making power (article 253) and new Federal ferment

UNIT-IV Asymmetrical Federalism

4.1 Asymmetry in Indian Constitution

4.2 Demands for Autonomy

4.3 Tensions in Centre-State Relations.

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Social and Political Movements in South Asia

(India and Pakistan)

Course No. PS-31- (DCE)

Unit I

Introduction

1.1 Social Movements: Meaning, causes and Significance

1.2 Approaches to study of social movements

a) Post-modern

b) Marxian

1.3 Marginality and New Social Movements

Unit II

Contemporary Socio-political order

2.1 Changing nature of social movements in India and Pakistan

2.2 Globalization and Social movements

2.3 State, Religious Right and Social Movements

Unit III

Margins and Movements

3.1 Women’s Movements in India and Pakistan

a) Environment

b) Agrarian

c) Tribal

Unit IV

Political Context and Contestation

4.1 Movements for the formation of New States

a) Autonomy

b) Human Rights

c) Identity- based movements

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Political Ideas II

Course No. PS-33-GE

Unit I: Justice

1.1 Plato’s Theory of Justice

1.2 Marx’s Theory of Justice

1.3 John Rawls’s Justice as Fairness

Unit II: Democracy

2.1 Robert Dahl on Democracy

2.2 Amartya Sen on Development and Democracy

2.3 JurgenHabermas on Public Sphere and Democracy

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Suggested Readings

Key Text in Political Thought-1 (Course no. PS-01-CR)

1. Ackril, JI, Aristotle, The Philosopher, Oxford, O.U.P., 1983

2. Dunning, W. B, A History of Political Theories (3 Parts)

3. Ebenstein, W., Political Thought Perspective.

4. F. M. Salt Ed., Masters of Political Theory

5. G. Catlin, A History of Political Philosophers, London, George Allen and Unwin 1950.

6. Hare, Plato

7. J. A. Dunning, History and Political Theories, New York, Macmillan 1902.

8. J. Bronowski & B. Mazlish, Western Intellectual Tradition, Harmondsworth, Penguins,

1960.

9. J. G. A. Pocock, The Machiavellian Movement: Florentine Republic Thought and The

Atlantic Republican Tradition, Princeton NJ, Princeton University Press, 1971.

10. M. B. Foster, W. T. Jones and L.W.Lancaster, Masters of Political Thought 3 Vols, London,

George G. Harrap and Co. Ltd., 1942, 1947 and 1959.

11. M. Curtis, The Great Political Theories, 2 Vols. New York, Avon, 1961.

12. Maxey, Chester C, Political Philosophies, New York: McMillan, 1938.

13. Popper Karl, Open Soceity and its Enemies ( Vols.), London; Routledge 1945.

14. R. B. Lavinson, In Defense of Plato, Cambridge Massachusetts, Harvard University Press,

1953.

15. R. Crossman, PlatoL Today, Allen and Unwin, 1939

16. R. G. Gettel, History of Political Thought, New York Novell and Co. 1924.

17. R. G. Muglan, Aristotle Political Theory: An Introduction for Political Theory, Oxford, the

Calaredon Press 1977.

18. R. L. Nettleship,Lectures on Plato’s Republic, London Macmillan 1967.

19. R. N. Berki, The History of Political Thought: A Short Introduction, London Dent, 1977.

20. Russel, Bertrand, A History of Western Philosophy

21. S. Mukherjee and S. Ramaswamy, A History of Political Thought: Plato to Marx, New

Delhi, Prentice Hall, 1999.

22. Sir E. Barker, Greek Political Theory: Plato and his predecessors, New Delhi, B. I.

Publications 1964.

23. Sir E. Barker, The Political Thought of Plato and Aristotle, New York, Dover

Publications, 1958.

24. Sir E. Barker, The Politics of Aristotle Translated with Introduction, Notes and Appendix,

Oxford University Press, 1995.

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34

25. W. Ebenstein, Great Political Thinkers, New Delhi, Oxford & IBH, 1969.

26. Wayper, Political Thought; New York: English University Press; 1954.

Indian Political System (Course no. PS-02-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. Khan, Mohammad Abbas, Indian Political System, Delhi, Anmol Publications, 2006.

2. Johari, J. C. Indian Polity, New Delhi, Lotus Press, 2004.

3. Abbas Hoveyda, Ranjay Kumar, Mohammad Aftab Alam, Indian Government and

Politics, New Delhi, Dorling Kindersley, 2011.

4. Singh, M. P and Rekha Saxena, Indian Politics: Contemporary Issues and Concerns,

New Delhi, Prentice Hall, 2008.

5. Mahajan Gurpreet, Multicultural Path: Issues of Diversity and Discrimination in

Democracy, New Delhi, Sage Publications, 2002.

6. Khilnani Sunil, The Idea of India, London, Hamish Hamilton, 1997.

7. Chandra Bipan, In the Name of the Democracy: JP Movement and the Emergency, New

Delhi, Penguin Books, 2003.

8. Kothari Rajni, Rethinking Democracy, New Delhi, Zed Books, 2008.

9. Frankel Francine,Zoya Hasan, Rajeev Bhargava, Balveer Arora (eds.) Transforming

India: Social and Political Dynamics of Democracy, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 2000.

10. Dua, B. D. and M.P. Singh (eds.), Indian Federalism in the New Millennium, New Delhi,

Manohar, 2004.

11. Singh Ujjwal Kumar, The State, Democracy and Anti-Terror Laws in India, New Delhi,

Sage, 2007.

12. Chatterjee Partha, The Nation and its Fragments: Colonial and Post-Colonial Histories,

New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 1995.

13. Hasan Zoya (eds.), Politics and the State in India, New Delhi, Sage Publications, 2000.

14. Nariman, Fali. S, India's Legal System: Can It Be Saved?,New Delhi, Penguin Books,

2006.

15. Shurmer-Smith, Pamela, India: Globalization and Change, London, Arnold, 2000.

16. Saxena Rekha, Situating Federalism: Mechanisms of Intergovernmental Relations in

Canada and India, New Delhi, Manohar, 2006.

17. Akhtar Majeed (eds.), Federalism within the Union: Distribution of Responsibilities in

the Indian System, New Delhi, Manak Publications, 2004.

18. Singh, M. P and Rekha Saxena (eds.), Ideologies and Institutions in Indian Politics,

New Delhi, Deep & Deep Publications, 1998.

19. Chakrabarty Bidyut, Forging Power: Coalition Politics in India, New Delhi, Oxford

University Press, 2006.

20. Singh, M. P. and Anil Mishra (eds.), Coalition Politics in India: Problems and Prospects,

New Delhi, Manohar, 2004.

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35

21. Mitra Chandan, The Corrupt Society: The Criminalization of India from Independence

to the 1990s, New Delhi, Viking Penguin, 1998.

22. Singh, M.P. and Rekha Saxena (eds.), Indian Judiciary and Politics: The Changing

Landscape, New Delhi, Manohar, 2006.

23. Mathew George, Panchayati Raj: From Legislation to Movement, New Delhi, Concept

Publishing Company, 1994.

24. Saez Lawrence, Federations Without a Centre: the Impact of Political and Economic

Reform on India’s Federal System, New Delhi, Sage, 2002.

25. Dua, B.D. and M.P. Singh (eds.), Indian Federalism in the New Millennium, New Delhi,

Manohar, 2003.

26. ChatterjeePartha (eds.), State and Politics in India, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 1997.

27. Austin Granville, Working a Democratic Constitution: A History of

the Indian Experience, New Delhi,Oxford University Press, 1999.

28. Basu, D.D. ,Introduction to the Constitution of India,New Delhi, Prentice Hall, 2008.

29. Bhargava Rajeev (eds.), Politics and Ethics of the Indian Constitution,New Delhi,

Oxford University Press, 2008.

30. Kashyap Subash (eds.) , Constitutional Reforms: Problems, Prospects and

Perspectives, New Delhi, Radha Publications, 2004.

31. Sathe, S.P. ,Judicial Activism in India: Transgressing Borders and Enforcing Limits,

New Delhi,Oxford University Press, 2000.

32. Bhagat, A.K. ,Elections and Electoral Reforms,New Delhi,Vikas Publications, 1996.

33. Arora Balveer, and, Douglas Verney (eds.) Multiple Identities in a Single State: Indian

Federalism in Comparative Perspective, New Delhi, Konark Publishers, 1995.

34. Hasan, Zoya (eds.), Parties and Party Politics in India, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 2002.

35. WeinerMyron, Sons of the Soil: Migrations and Ethnic Conflict in India, New Delhi,

Oxford University Press, 1988.

36. Jenkins Rob (eds.), Regional Reflections: Comparing Politics Across India’s States, New

Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2004.

37. Bhambhri, C.P., Bureaucracy and Politics in India, New Delhi, Vikas, 1971.

38. Kohli Atul, State-Directed Development: Political Power and Industrialization in the

Global Periphery, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2004.

39. Kashyap Subhash, Our Political System, New Delhi, National Book Trust, 2008.

40. Kashyap Subhash, Our Parliament, New Delhi, National Book Trust, 2004.

41. Brass Paul ,The Politics of India since Independence, Cambridge, Cambridge

University Press, 1994.

42. Jenkins Rob ,Democratic Politics and Economic Reform in India, Cambridge,

Cambridge University Press, 1999.

43. Adeney Katherine and Saez Lawrence (eds.), Coalition Politics and Hindu

Nationalism, Routledge, London, 2005.

44. Kohli Atul ,The Success of India’s Democracy,Cambridge, Cambridge University Press,

2001.

45. Ratnaparkhi, M.S., The Grey Areas in the Indian Political System,Atlantic Publishers &

Distributors, 2008.

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36

46. Noorani A.G., Constitutional Questions in India: The President, Parliament and the

States, New Delhi,Oxford University Press, 2000.

47. Mohanty Manoranjan (eds.), Caste, Class and Gender, New Delhi, Sage, 2000.

48. Sathyamurthy, T.V. (eds.), Region, Religion, Caste, Gender and Culture in India, Oxford

University Press, 1998.

49. Dreze Jean and Amartya Sen ,India: Development and Participation, New Delhi,

Oxford University Press, 2002.

50. SharmaVeena, President in Indian Political System, New Delhi, Rawat Publications,

2001.

51. Khan, Abbas M., Indian Political System, New Delhi, Anmol Publications, 2006.

52. Verma B.K. ,Modern Indian Political System: Problem and Prospects, New Delhi,

Global Vision Publishing House, 2006.

53. Wyatt Andrew and John Zavos, Decentring the Indian Nation, Routledge, 2003.

International Politics(Course no. PS-03-(CR)

Suggested Readings

1. A. Gewirth, Human Rights; Essays on Justification and Applications, Chicago and

London University of Chicago Press, 1982.

2. A. Giddens, The Consequences of Modernity, Cambridge Polity Press, 1990.

3. A. I. Melden (ed.), Human Rihts, Belmont California, Wadsworth, 1970.

4. A. M Hoogvelt, Globalization and the Post-Colonial World: The New Political Economy

of Development, Basingstoke, Macmillan, 1997.

5. A. P. Schmidt and A. J. Jongman(eds.), Political Terrorism: A New Gudie to Actors

Authors Data Bases Theories and Literature, 2nd edition Amsterdam, North Holland

Publishing Co., 1988.

6. B. Nelson and C. N. Chowdhary(ed.), Women and Politics Worldwide, Delhi Oxford

University Press, 1997.

7. Baylis John, Smith Steve and Owens Patricia (ed). The Globalization of World

Politics: An Introduction to International Relations (5th edition), Oxford University

Press, 2011.

8. Brown, Chris, Understanding International Relations,(2nd edition), Palgrave, 1997.

9. Calvocoressi Peter; World Politics-1945-2000, Pearson.

10. Cammack Paul, Pool David and Tordaff William (2nd edition). Third World Politics; A

Comparative Introduction, Palgrave Macmillan, 2002

11. Cassels Alan; Ideology & International Relations in the Modern World, Routledge,

2006

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37

12. Dasgupta Samir & Kiely Ray (ed), Globalization and After, Sage Publications, New

Delhi, 2006

13. Dockrill, Saki R and Hughes, Geraint (ed), Advances in Cold War History, Palgrave,

Macmillan, 2006.

14. Gilpin Rabert; Global Political Economy: Understanding the International Economic

Order, Orient Longman, 2003

15. Goldstein, Joshua. S, International Relations, Pearson, 2009.

16. H. Asfah (ed.), Women and Politics in the Third World, London, Routledge, 1996.

17. Holton, Globalization and the Nations State, Basingstoke, Macmillan, 1998.

18. I. Brownlie(ed.) Basic Documents on Human Rights 2nd Edition, New Delhi, Oxford,

The Clarendon Press, 1992.

19. J. A. Tickner, Gendering World Politics: Issues and Approaches in the Post Cold War

Era, New York, Columbia University Press, 2001.

20. J. Donnelly, The Concept of Human Rights, London, Croom Helm, 1985.

21. J. Fisher, The Road from Rio: Sustainable Development and Non Governmental

Movement in the Third World, Westport Connecticut, Praegar, 1993.

22. J. Gelb, Feminism and Politics: A Comparative Perspective, Berkeley, University of

California Press, 1989.

23. J. J. Waldron (ed.), Theories of Right, Oxford, Oxford University, Press, 1984.

24. J. M. Bystdzeinski (ed.), Women Transforming Politics: Worldwide Strategies for

Empowerment, Bloomington, Indiana, University Press, 1992.

25. J. MeCormick, The Global Environment Movement, Belmont California, Wadsworth,

1970.

26. Lawson,Stephanie, International Relations, Pality Press, 2004.

27. M. Albrow and E. King (eds.), Globalization, Knowledge and Society, London, Sage,

1990.

28. M. Albrow and E. King (eds.), The Colonial Age, Cambridge, Polity, 1996.

29. M. Bowker and R. Brown (eds.), From Cold War to Collapse, Cambridge, Cambridge

University Press, 1993.

30. M. Cranston, What are Human Rights? London, Bodley Head, 1973.

31. M. Ignatieff, Human Rights as Politics as Idolatry, Princeton NJ, Princeton University

Press, 2001.

32. Moore Jonh Allphin, Pubantz Jr Jerry; The New United Nations, International

Organization in the Twenty First Century, Pearson, 2006

33. N. O. Sullivan (ed.), Terrorism Ideology and Revolution: The Origins of Modern

Political Violence, Brighton, Wheatsheaf, 1986.

34. Nyl, Joseph. S. Jr, Understanding International Conflicts: An Introduction to Theory

and History, Pearson, 2008.

35. O. Dunleavy and B. O. Leary Theories of Liberal Democratic State, London Macmillan,

1987.

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38

36. Oatley Thomas; International Political Economy; Pearson, 2004

37. P. Allan and K. Goldman (eds.), The End of the Cold War, Dorecht. Mortinus Nijhoff,

1992.

38. Papp Daniel S; Contemporary International Relations; Frameworks for

Understanding, Macmillan Publishing Company, New York, 1988

39. R. Aron, Peace and War, London, Weidnfeld and Nicholson, 1966.

40. R. Bur Bach, O, Nunez and B. Kagatlitsky, Globalization and Its Cisconetnets: The Rise

of Postmodern Socialism, London, Pluto, 1997.

41. R. Clutterbuck, Terrorism and Gureilla Warfare, London, Routledge, 1990.

42. R. Cohen and P. Kennedy, Global Sociology, London, St. Martin Press, 1999.

43. R. Dalton and M. Koehler, Challenging the Political Order: New Social and Political

Movement in Western Democracies, Cambridge, Polity, 1990.

44. R. Dalton, The Green Rainbow: Environment Groups in Western Europe, New Heaven

CT, Yale University Press, 1994.

45. R. E. Goodin, Green Political Theory, Cambridge, Polity Press, 1992.

46. R. Eatwell (ed.), European Political Cultures Conflict or Convergence? London and

New York, Routledge, 1997.

47. R. L. Sivard, Women: A World Survey Washington DC, World Priorities, 1985.

48. R. Tuck, Natural Rights Theories, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1979.

49. R. Viotti Paul & Kauppi Mark V; International Relations and World Poltics; Security,

Economy, Identity (3rd edition), Pearson, 2007.

50. Rosking, Michael. G and Berry, Nicholas. O, The New World of International Relations,

Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi, 2002.

51. Rothermund, Dietmar, The Routledge Companion to Decolonisation, Routledge, 2006.

52. S. E. M. Charlton, J. Everett and K. Staudt (eds.), Women, the State and Development,

Albany, State University of New York, 1989.

53. S. P. Huntington, The Third Wave; Democratisation in the Late Twentieth Century,

Norman, University of Oklahoma Press, 1991.

54. Saull, Richard, The Cold War and After, Captialism, Revolution and Superpower

Politics, Pluto Press, London, 2007.

55. Shimko Keith L. International Relations (Perspective and Controversies; Houghton

Mifflin Company, Boston, New York, 2005.

56. Stiglitz Joseph E; Globalization and Its Discontents, Penguin, 2002

57. Sutch Peter and Elias Junaita, International Relations: The Basis, Routledge, London.

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Government and Politics in Jammu and Kashmir Course No. PS-O4-(CR)

Suggested Readings

GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS OF JAMMU AND KASHMIR

1. Akbar M.J, “Kashmir Behind the Vale”, Lotus Publication, New Delhi, 2002.

2. Anand A.S (Justice), “The Constitution of Jammu and Kashmir: Its Development and

Comments” ,Universal Law Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd, New Delhi, 2004.

3. Bazaz Prem Nath, “Democracy Through Intimidation and Terror” The Untold Story of

Kashmir” Heritage, New Delhi, 1978.

4. Bazaz Prem Nath, “Kashmir in Crucible”Pamposh Publications New Delhi, 1967.

5. Bazaz Prem Nath, “The History of the Freedom Struggle in Kashmir,Cultural and

Political:From the Earliest Times to the Present Day”,Pamposh Publications,New

Delhi,1954.

6. Bhattarcharjea Ajit, “Kashmir: The Wounded valley” UBSDP Pubs, New Delhi.

7. Birdwood Lord, “Two Nations and Kashmir”, Robert Hale Ltd, London, 1956.

8. Bose Sumantra “The Challenge in Kashmir: Democracy, Self Determination and a

Just Peace”, New Delhi: Sage Publications,1997.

9. Bose Sumantra, “Kashmir- Roots of Conflict,Paths to Peace”, Vistaar Publication, New

Delhi, 2003.

10. Chandhoke Neera, “Contested Successions: Rights, Self-determination, Democracy

and Kashmir” OUP,New Delhi,2003.

11. Chowdhary Rekha, “Identity Politics in Jammu and Kashmir”,Paperback, New Delhi,2010.

12. Ganguly Summit, “The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War,Hopes of Peace” WWCP

and CUP,UK,1997.

13. Ganguly, Sumit and Bajpai, Kanti. “India and the Crisis in Kashmir.” Asian Survey, 1994.

14. Gupta Siser, “Kashmir: A Study in India- Pakistan Relations”, Asia Publishing House,New

Dehli,1966.

15. Jagmohan, “My Frozen Turbulence in Kashmir”, Allied Publishers, New Delhi, 1991.

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40

16. Kaur Ravinder Jit, “Political awakening in Kashmir”, Ashish publication corporation, New

Delhi, 1996.

17. Khan G. H, “Freedom Movement in Kashmir (1931-1939)”,Light and Life Publishers,New

Delhi,1980.

18. Khan, Gh. Hassan, “Government and Politics of Jammu and Kashmir”, Srinagar, 1988.

19. Korbel Joseph, “Danger in Kashmir”, Princeton University Press, USA, 1968.

20. Lamb Alastair, “Crisis in Kashmir (1947-1966)”, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1966.

21. Lamb Alastair, “Incomplete Partition-The Genesis of the Kashmir Dispute (1947-

1948)”Roxford ,Books Hertingfordbury U. K, 1997.

22. Lamb Alastair, “Kashmir: A Disputed Legacy(1846-1990)”,RoxfordBooks,UK,1991.

23. Noorani A. G, “Article 370: A constitutional History of Jammu and Kashmir”, Oxford

University Press, 2011.

24. Puri Balraj, “Jammu and Kashmir--Triumph and Tragedy of Indian Federalization”,New

Delhi, 1981.

25. Puri Balraj, “Kashmir Towards Insurgency” Orient Longman, New Delhi, 1993.

26. Rai, Mridu. “Hindu Rulers, Muslim Subjects: Islam, Rights, and the History of

Kashmir” Princeton University Press,Permanent Black,2004.

27. Saraf Mohammad Yousuf, “Kashmiris Freedom Struggle (Volume I-II), Ferozsons

Ltd.,Lahore Pakistan,2009.

28. Schaffer, Howard B “The Limits of Influence: America's Role in Kashmir”, Brookings

Institution Press, Viking Penguin, 2009.

29. Schofield, Victoria, “Kashmir in conflict: India, Pakistan and the unending war”, I. B.

Tauris.2010.

30. Scohfield Victoria, “Kashmir in the Crossfire”, I.B. Tauris, 1996.

31. Wani Gull Mohd, “Kashmir Politics: Problems and Prospects”, Ashish Publishing House,

New Delhi, 1993.

32. Zutshi, Chitralekha, “Language of belonging: Islam, regional identity, and the

making of Kashmir”, Oxford University Press, Permanent Black,2003.

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41

POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES-1 ( PS 05-DCE)

Suggested Readings:

1. Anne Philips (1991). Engendering Democracy, Cambridge: Polity Press.

2. David Held (1996). Models of Democracy, Cambridge: Polity Press.

3. Gurpreet Mahajan (ed.) (1998). Democracy, Difference and Social Justice, Delhi:

Oxford University Press.

4. John Gray (1989). Liberalisms: Essays in Political Philosophy, London: Routledge.

5. John Gray (1998). Liberalism, Delhi: Worldview Publications.

6. John Rawls (1971). A Theory of Justice, Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.

7. John Stuart Mill (1991). On Liberty and Other Essays, Oxford: Oxford University

Press.

8. Karl Marx & F. Engels (1848, & 1967). The Communist Manifesto, New York: Penguin.

9. Will Kymlicka (1989). Liberalism, Community, and Culture, Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Human Rights(Course No. PS-06-DCE)

Suggested Readings

1. Anil Bhuimali, Globalisation and human rights, Serials Publications, New Delhi, 2006

2. Ashirbani Dutta, Development-Induced Displacement and Human Rights, Deep and

Deep Publications, New Delhi, 2007

3. Bani Borgohan, Human Rights (Social Justice & Political Challenge),Kanishka

Publications 1999

4. Bertrand G. Ramcharan, Contemporary Human Rights Ideas, Routledge Publications,

USA, 2008

5. Chandra Lekha Sriram,Olga Martin, War, Conflict And Human Rights, Routledge

Publications, USA, 2010

6. Dar Arish Kumar, Mohanty P.K, Human Rights in India, Sarup Publications, New

Delhi, 2007

7. Daren J.O. Byrne, Human Rights, Pearson Publications, 2004

8. Dr. Ashwani Kant, Human Rights and Justice System, APH. Publisher, 2001

9. Dr. S. Mehrataj Begum, Human Rights in India, APH Publications 2000

10. Dr. U.Chandra, Human Rights, Allahabad Law Agency, 1999

11. Eric Engle, Marxism, Liberalism And Feminism(Leftist Legal Thought) Serials

Publication, New Delhi, 2010

12. Fareed Kazmi, Human Rights: Myth & Reality, Intellectual Publication 1987.

13. G.S. Bajwa, Human Rights in India, Anmol Publications, 1995

14. H. Lautespacht, Sir Lauterpacht, International Law & Human Rights, Arcon

Publications, 1998

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42

15. H.O. Aggarwal, International Law and Human Rights, CentralLaw Agency, 1987

16. J.C. Johari, Human Rights & New World Order, Anmol Publications, 1996

17. Janusz Symonides, Human Rights (Concepts and Standards), Rawat Publications,

2002

18. Justice Rajinder Sachar, Human Rights Perspectives & Challenges, Gyan Publications,

2004

19. Line Gonsalves, Women & Human Rights, APH Publications, 2001

20. M.P. Tandon, International Law and Human Rights, APH,Publications, 2002

21. Michael Freeman, Human Rights, Polity Publishers, 2003.

22. N. Jayapalan, Human Rights, Atlantic Publishers, 2001.

23. Narsimhan R., Human Rights and Social Justice, Efficient Publications, 1999

24. Paras Diwan, Human Rights & Law, Deep & Deep Publications, 1998

25. Priyam Manisha, Human Rights, Gender and the environment, Dorling Kindersley

Publications, New Delhi, 2009

26. R. S Verma, Human Rights Burning Issues of World, Indian Publications, 2000

27. R.S Sharma, Perspectives in Human Rights & Development, Common Wealth, 1996

28. R.S Verma, Human Rights, Indian Publishers Distribution, 2000

29. Ranjani K. Murthy, Lakshmi Sankaran, Denial and Distress: Gender, Poverty and

Human Rights in Asia, ZED Books Publications, U.K, 2003

30. Richard Pierre Cluade, Burns H. Weston, Human Rights in the world Community:

Issues And Action, Pennsylvania Press, USA, 2006

31. Richard Wilson, Human Rights in the ‘War on Terror’, Cambridge University Press,

2005

32. S. Subramanium, Human Rights, International Challenges, Manas Publications, 1997

33. S.K .Khanna, War & Human Rights, Dominant Publications, 1999

34. S.K. Kapoor, International Law and Human Rights, Central Law Agency, 2002

35. Sarkar Sen, Human Rights in a Developing Society, Efficient Offset Publications, 1996

36. Sen Sailendra Nath, An Advanced History of Modern India, Macmillan Publications,

New Delhi, 2007

37. Singh Brinder Nath, Human Rights in India: Problems and Perspectives, Deep & Deep

Publications, New Delhi, 2008

38. Stephen Castles,, Ethnicity and Globalization: From Migrant Worker to Transnational

Ctizen, Sage Publications London, 2000

39. Steven R. Ratner, Jason S. Abrams, Accountability For Human Rights in Atrocities in

International Law, Oxford University Press, 2001

40. T.S.N. Sastry, India and Human Rights: Reflections, Concept Publications New Delhi,

2005

41. Thomas Buergental, Human Rights and International Law, Allied Publishers, 1979.

42. V.V. Devasia, Women Social Justice & Human Rights, APH Publications 2000

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43

43. Vistar Publications, Human Rights in India, Amnesty International Publications,

1993

Development Administration (Course No. PS-O7-DCE)

Suggested Readings

1. Mandal, U.C, Development and Public Administration, New Delhi; Sarup and Sons,

1997.

2. Nath, V., Administration and Development Planning in India, New Delhi, Concept

Publishing Company, 1974.

3. Mohit Bhattachartya, Bureaucracy and Development Administration, New Delhi,

Uppal Publishing House , 1979.

4. Dubhashi, Essays in Development Administration, New Delhi, Archives Publishers,

Distributors, 1987.

5. Ramesh K. Arora, Sangeeta Sharma, Comparative and Development Administration,

New Delhi, Arihant Publisher, 1992.

6. Raiman Pattanagar, Dynamics of Development Administration, New Delhi, Anmol

Publications, 2002.

7. Sapru, R. K, Development Administration, New Delhi, Deep and Deep Publications,

8. Sinha, P. S. N. Studies in Development Administration: Challenges and Change. Volume

3, New Delhi, Commonwealth Publishers, 1991.

9. Sinha, P. S. N. Studies in Development Administration: Challenges and Change. Volume

5, New Delhi, Commonwealth Publishers, 1991.

10. Srivastava S. P. The Development Debate: Critical Perspectives, New Delhi, Rawat

Publications.

11. Niraj Gopal Jayah, Amit Prakash, Pradeep K. Sharma, Local Governance in India, New

Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2006,.

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44

India and the World (Course No. PS-08-OE)

Suggested Readings

1. Dixit, J. N, India’s Foreign Policy and Its Neighbors, New Delhi, Gyan,

2. Gupta, K. R & Shukla, Vatssola, Foreign Policy of India, New Delhi, Atlantic, 2009.

3. Nautiyals Annupurna, Challenges to India’s Foreign Policy in the New Era, New Delhi,

Gyan, 2006.

4. Nayar, Baldev Raj and Paul, T.V, India in the World Order; Searching for Major Power

States, London, Cambridge, 2004.

5. Phadnis Urmila and Rajat Ganguly, Ethnicity and Nation-building in South Asia, SAGE

Publications, 2001.

6. 42.Behera Navnita Chadha, International Relations in South Asia, Sage Publications,

2008.

7. Rafiq Dossani, Daniel C. Sneider and Vikram Sood,Does South Asia Exist?: Prospects

for Regional Integration, Asia-Pacific Research Center, 2010.

8. BarlasAsma, Democracy, Nationalism, and Communalism: The Colonial Legacy in

South Asia, Westview, 1995.

9. Pant Harsh, Indian Foreign Policy in a Unipolar World (War and International Politics

in South Asia),Routledge, 2009.

10. SUMIT GANGULY, India's Foreign Policy , Oxford University Press,2012.

11. V N Khanna, Foreign Policy of India, Vikas Publishing House Pvt Ltd, 2010

12. KANTI P. BAJPAI, HARSH V. PANT, India's Foreign Policy: A Reader , OXFORD

UNIVERSITY PRESS-NEW DELHI,2013

13. S.D.Muni, India's Foreign Policy: The Democracy DimensionsCAMBRIDGE

UNIVERSITY PRESS-NEW DELHI,2009

14. Reetika Sharma, Ramvir Goria, Vivek Mishra, India and the Dynamics of World

Politics : A book on Indian Foreign Policy, Related events and International

Organizations, Pearson India,2010.

15. Radharaman Chakrabarti, The Political Economy of India's Foreign Policy

16. K W Publishers Pvt Ltd,2014.

17. J. N. Dixit, Indias foreign policy challenges of terrorism, Gyan Book Pvt Ltd,2004.

18. K. R. Gupta, Vatsala Shukla, Foreign Policy of India , Atlantic,2009.

19. N. Subramaniam, India's Foreign Policy, Academic Publication,2013.

20. Santosh Kumar, Rajiv Kumar, n the National Interest: A Strategic foreign policy for

India , BS Books,2010.

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45

Contemporary International Issues and Processes

Course No. PS-09-GE

Suggested Readings

1. Baylis John, Smith Steve and Owens Patricia (ed). The Globalization of World

Politics: An Introduction to International Relations (4th edition), Oxford University

Press.

2. Burchill Scott, Devetak Richard (ed), Theories of International Relations (2nd edition),

Palgrave.

3. C.O. Lerghe and A. A. Said, Concept of International Politics, New Delhi, Prentice Hall,

1972.

4. D. G. Brennan (ed.), Arms Control, Disarmament and National Security, New York,

George Braziller, 1961.

5. Dunne Tim, Kurki Milija and Smith Steve (ed.), International Relations Theories,

Discipline and Diversity, Oxford University Press, 2006.

6. E. Ostrom, Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action,

Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1990.

7. F. Haliday, Rethinking International Relations, Basingstoke, Macmilan, 1994.

8. F. S. Northedge, The International Political System, London, Faber and Faber, 1976.

9. Gilpin Rabert; Global Political Economy: Understanding the International Economic

Order, Orient Longman, 2003

10. Goldstein, Joshua. S, International Relations, Pearson, 2009.

11. H. Bull, The Control of the Arms Race, New York, Praeger, 1961.

12. H. J. Morgenthau, W. Thompson, Politics Among Nations, 6th Edition, Revised by K.

New York Alfred Knopf, 1985.

13. Halliday, Fred, Rethinking International Relations, Palgrave, 2002.

14. I Rownile (ed.), Basic Documents on Human Rights, 2nd Edition, Oxford , The

Calarendon Press, 1981.

15. J. N. Rosenau, International Studies and the Social Sciences, Beverly Hills California,

Sage 1973.

16. J. A. Tickner, Gendering World Politics: Issues and Approaches in the Post Cold War

Era, New York, Columbia University Press, 2001.

17. J. Donnelly, The Concept of Human Rights, London, Croom Helm, 1985.

18. Nyl, Joseph. S. Jr, Understanding International Conflicts: An Introduction to Theory

and History, Pearson, 2008.

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Key Text in Political Thought( Course no. PS-10-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. A. Ascraft, Locke’s Two Treatises of Government, London, Unwin and Hyman, 1987.

2. A. Ascraft, Revolutionary Politics and Locke’s Two Treatises of Government, London,

Allen and Unwin, 1986.

3. A. Avineri, The Social and Political Thought of K. Marx, New Delhi S. Chand and Co.,

1979.

4. A. Cobban, Rousseau and the Modern State, London Unwin University Books, 1964.

5. C. Brinton, English Political Thought in the Nineteenth Century, London Allen Lane,

1983.

6. Colletti, From Rousseau to Lenin: Studies in Ideological and Society, Translated by J.

Merrington and J. White, New Delhi, Oxford University Press 1969.

7. D. Germino, Modern Western Political Thought: Machiavelli to Marx, Chicago,

University of Chicago Press, 1972.

8. D. McLellan, Karl Marx: The First 100 Years, London Fobntana, 1983.

9. E. Cassier, The philosophy o f the Englightment, Princeton University Press 1932.

10. F. Chahbod, Machiavelli and the Renaissance, Translated by D. Moore, New York,

Harper and Row, 1958.

11. G. Catlin, A History of Political Philosophers, London, George Allen and Unwin 1950.

12. H. Butterfield, The Statecraft of Machiavelli, New York Collier, 1962.

13. H. J. Laski, Political Thought from Locke to Bentham, Oxford, Oxford University Press

1920.

14. I. W. Hampsher – Monk, Modern:Political Thought from Hobbes to Marx, Oxford, Basil

Blackwell, 1992.

15. J. A. Dunning, History and Political Theories, New York, Macmillan 1902.

16. J. B. Morall, Political Thought in Medieval Times, New York Harper, Torchbooks,

1958.

17. J. Bronowski & B. Mazlish, Western Intellectual Tradition, Harmondsworth, Penguins,

1960.

18. J. G. A. Pocock, The Machiavellian Movement: Florentine Republic Thought and The

Atlantic Republican Tradition, Princeton NJ, Princeton University Press, 1971.

19. J. H. Burns (ed.), The Cambridge History of Political Thought, 1450-1700. Cambridge

University Press 1991.

20. J. W. Allen, A History of Political Thought in the Sixteenth Century, London, Methuen,

1967.

21. J. W. Chapman, Rousseau—Totalitarian or Liberal, New York Columbia University

Press 1956.

22. K. C. Brown (ed.), Hobbes’ Studies Cambridge Massachusetts, Harvard University

Press 1965.

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47

23. K. R. Minogue, Hobbes’ Leviathan, New York, Everyman’s Library 1977.

24. M. B. Foster, W. T. Jones and L.W.Lancaster, Masters of Political Thought 3 Vols,

London, George G. Harrap and Co. Ltd., 1942, 1947 and 1959.

25. M. Cornforth, The Open Philosophy and the Open Society: A Reply to Sir Karl Popper’s

Refutation of Marxism, London Lawrence and Wishart, 1968.

26. M. Curtis, The Great Political Theories, 2 Vols. New York, Avon, 1961.

27. P. Laslett, John Locke’s Two Treaties of Government, Cambridge, Cambridge

University Press, 1960.

28. R. Crossman, Plato Today, London, Allen and Unwin, 1939

29. R. G. Gettel, History of Political Thought, New York Novell and Co. 1924.

30. R. G. Muglan, Aristotle Political Theory: An Introduction for Political Theory, Oxford,

the Calaredon Press 1977.

31. R. Harrison, Bentham, London Routeledge.

32. R. L. Nettleship,Lectures on Plato’s Republic, London Macmillan 1967.

33. R. N. Berki, The History of Political Thought: A Short Introduction, London Dent,

1977.

34. Russel, Bertrand, A History of Western Philosophy

35. S. DeGrazia, Machiavelli in Hell, Princeton NJ, Princeton University Press, 1989.

36. S. Mukherjee and S. Ramaswamy, A History of Political Thought: Plato to Marx, New

Delhi, Prentice Hall, 1999.

37. Sir. I. Berlin, Karl Marx: His Life and Environment, Oxford, Oxford University Press

1963.

38. Sir. Barker, Greek Political Theory: Plato and his predecessors, ,New Delhi, B.I.

Publications 1964.

39. Sir. Barker, The Political Thought of Plato and Aristotle, New York, Dover

Publications, 1958.

40. Sire. Barker, The Politics of Aristotle Translated with Introduction, Notes and

Appendix, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1995.

41. W. Ebenstein, Great Political Thinkers, New Delhi, Oxford & IBH, 1969.

42. W. H. Bluhmn, Politics and Opinion in the Century: A Historical Introduction, London,

Jonathan Cape, 1954.

43. W. H. Bluhmn, Theories of Political Thought and Modern Political Analysis,

Englewood Cliffis NJ, Prentice Hall, 1965.

44. W. L. Davidson, Political Thought in England: The Utilitarian from Bentham to Mill,

Oxford University Press, 1957.

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Modern Indian Social and Political Thought (Course no. PS-11-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. A. Tripathi, The Extremist Challenge, Bombay, Allied, 1967.

2. Appadorai, Documents on Political Thought in Modern India, 2 Vols., Bombay Oxford

University Press, 1970.

3. B. Parekh, Colonialism, Tradition and Reform: Analysis of Gandhi’s Political Discourse,

New Delhi, Sage, 1989.

4. B. Parekh, Colonialism, Tradition and Reforms Analysis of Gandhi’s Political Discourse,

New Delhi, Sage, 1989.

5. ChakrabartyBidyut Rajendra Kumar Pandey,Modern Indian Political Thought: Text

and Context,Sage Publications, 2009.17. Bhattacharya Sabyasachi, Development of

Modern Indian Thought and the Social Sciences: Volume X, Part 5 (History of Science,

Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization), Oxford University Press, 2007.

6. Chandra Bipan, Nationalism and Colonialism in Modern India, Delhi, Orient Longman,

1979.

7. Chaterjee Partha ,Nationalist Thought and the Colonial World: A Derivative Discourse,

New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 1986.

8. Chaterjee Partha, Nationalist Thought and the Colonial World: A Derivative Discourse,

Delhi, Oxford University Press, 1986.

9. Devy G.N. and Fred Dallymayr (eds.), Between Tradition and Modernity: India's

Search for Identity: A Twentieth Century Anthology, New Delhi, Sage, 1996.

10. Dirks Nicholas, Castes of Mind: Colonialism and the Making of Modern India, New

Delhi, Permanent Black, 2002.

11. Frankel Francine, Zoya Hasan, Rajeev Bhargava and Balveer Arora, (eds.),

Transforming India: Social and Political Dynamics of Democracy, New Delhi, Oxford

University Press, 2000.

12. J. Nehru, Discovery of India, London, Meridian Books, 1956.

13. K. Jones, Socio Religious Reform Movement in British India, Cambridge, Cambridge

University Press, 1984.

14. K. P. Karunakaran, Indian Politics from Dadabhai Naoroji to Gandhi: A Study of

Political Ideas of Modern India, New Delhi, Gitanjali, 1975.

15. K. P. Karunakaran, Modern Indian Political Tradition, New Delhi Allied Publishers,

1962.

16. Khilnani Sunil ,The Idea of India, New Delhi, Penguin, 1997.

17. M. J. Kanethar, Tilak and Gandhi: A Comparative Study, Nagpur, Author, 1935.

18. Mehta V.R. and Thomas Pantham (eds.), Political Ideas in Modern India, Delhi, Sage,

2006.

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49

19. Mehta, V.R. and Thomas Pantham (eds.), Political Ideas in Modern India, New Delhi,

Sage, 2006.

20. Nandy Ashis ,Traditions, Tyranny and Utopia, New Delhi, Oxford University Press,

1987.

21. Pantham Thomas and Kenneth Deutsch Social and Political Thought in India,

NewDelhi, Sage, 1984.

22. Parekh Bhikhu and Thomas Pantham (eds.), Political Discourse: Exploration in Indian

and

23. Parekh Bhikhu, Gandhi's Political Philosophy: A Critical Examination, Delhi, Ajanta

Publication, 1986.

24. Raju Raghuram, Debating Gandhi, New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2006.

25. S. Ghose, Modern Indian Political Thought, Delhi, 1984.

26. S. Ghose, Socialism, Democracy and Nationalism in India, Bombay, Allied Publishers,

197

27. S. Ghose, The Renaissance to Militant Nationalism, Bombay Allied Publishers, 1969.

28. S. Hay, Sources of Indian Tradition: Modern India and Pakistan, India, Penguin Books,

1991.

29. T. De. Bary, Sources of Indian Tradition, New York, Columbia University Press, 1985.

A. T. Embreed (ed.), Sources of Indian Tradition: From the Beginning to 1800,

India, Penguin Books, 1991.

30. T. N. Jagdisan (ed.), Wisdom of a Modern Rishi: Writings and Speeches of Mahadev

Gobind Ranade, Madras, Rouchbuse, 1969.

31. T. Pantham, and Deustch (eds.), Political Thought in Modern India, New Delhi, K.

Sage, 1986.

32. Tagore Rabindranath, Nationalism, London, Macmillan, 1950.

33. U. Kaura, Muslims and Indian Nationalism, New Delhi, Manohar, 1977.

34. U. N. Ghosal, A History of Indian Political Ideas, London, Oxford University Press,

1959.

35. V. B. Karnik, M. N. Roy: Political Biography, Bombay, Jagriti 1978.

36. V. Geeth and V, Raja Durai, Thass to Periyar Calcutta Samya, 1998.

37. V. R. Mehta, Foundations of Indian Political Thought, New Delhi, Manohar, 1992.

38. V. S. Narayan, Prison Dairy, Bombay, Popular Prakashan, 1977.

Theories of International Relations (Course no. PS-12-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. A. A. Columbis and J. H. Wolf, Introduction to International Relations: Power and

Justice, New York, Praeger, 1989.

2. A. Appadorai, National Interest ad Non-Alignment, New Delhi, Kalinga Publications,

1999.

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3. A. Roberts, The UN and International Security, Survival, Vol. 35, No. 1, Spring.

4. Bajpai Kanti and Mallavaraphu, Siddarth, International Relations in India: Bringing

Back Home, Orient Long Man, 2004.

5. Baylis John, Smith Steve and Owens Patricia (ed). The Globalization of World

Politics: An Introduction to International Relations (4th edition), Oxford University

Press.

6. Burchill Scott, Devetak Richard (ed), Theories of International Relations (2nd edition),

Palgrave.

7. C.O. Lerghe and A. A. Said, Concept of International Politics, New Delhi, Prentice Hall,

1972.

8. D. G. Brennan (ed.), Arms Control, Disarmament and National Security, New York,

George Braziller, 1961.

9. Dunne Tim, Kurki Milija and Smith Steve (ed.), International Relations Theories,

Discipline and Diversity, Oxford University Press, 2006.

10. E. Ostrom, Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action,

Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1990.

11. F. Haliday, Rethinking International Relations, Basingstoke, Macmilan, 1994.

12. F. S. Northedge, The International Political System, London, Faber and Faber, 1976.

13. H. Bull, The Control of the Arms Race, New York, Praeger, 1961.

14. H. J. Morgenthau, W. Thompson, Politics Among Nations, 6th Edition, Revised by K.

New York Alfred Knopf, 1985.

15. Halliday, Fred, Rethinking International Relations, Palgrave, 2002.

16. I Rownile (ed.), Basic Documents on Human Rights, 2nd Edition, Oxford , The

Calarendon Press, 1981.

17. J. N. Rosenau, International Studies and the Social Sciences, Beverly Hills California,

Sage 1973.

18. J. N. Rosenau, The Scientific Study of Foreign Policy, Princeton NJ, Princeton

University Press, 1980.

19. J. N. Rosenau, World Politics: An Introduction, New York, the Free Press, 1976.

20. Jackson, Robert and Sorensen, George, Introduction to International Relations:

Theories and Approaches, (3rd edition), Oxford University Press.

21. K. J. Holsti, International Politics: A framework of Analysis, Eaglewood Cliffs NJ,

Prentice Hall, 1967.

22. K. N. Jha (ed.), India’s Foreign Policy in a Changing World, New Delhi South Asia

Publishers 2000.

23. K. N. Waltz, Theory of International Politics, Readings Massachusetts, Addison-

Wesley, 1970.

24. M. S. Rajan, Non-Alignment and the Non-Alignment Movement in the Present World

Order, Delhi, Konark, 1994.

25. Margenthau Hans. J (Revised by), Thompson, Kenneth W, Politics among Nations:

The Struggle for Power and Peace (6th edition), Kalyani Publishers, New Delhi,

Ludhiana.

26. Mingst, Karen, Essentials of International Relations, W.W. Norton’s Company, New

York, London, 1998.

27. P. Gillbert, Terrorism Security and Nationality, London and New York, Routledge,

1995.

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51

28. Puchala, Donald J., Theory and History in International Relations, Routledge, London,

2003.

29. R. Allan and Goldman(eds.), The End of the Cold War, Dodrecht Matinus K. Nijhoff,

1992.

30. R. Aron, Peace and War: A Theory of International Relations, London Fontana, 1966.

31. R. Cohen and P. Kennedy, Global Sociology, London St. Martin Press, 1999.

32. R.L.Jaackson, The Nonaligned, The United Nations and the Superpowers, New York,

Praeger, 1987.

33. Rengger, N. J, International Relations, Political Theory and the Problem of Order:

Beyond International Relations Theory, Routledge, London, 2000.

34. S. Burchill et. Al., Theories of International Relations, Hampshire Macmillan, 2001.

35. Schuurman Frans. J. (ed), Globalization and Development Studies: Challenges for the

21st Century, Vistaar Publication, New Delhi, 2005.

36. Sutch Peter and Elias Junaita, International Relations: The Basis, Routledge, London.

37. V. Van Dyke, International Politics, Bombay, Vakils, Feffer and Simson, 1969.

38. Waltz, Kenneth N, Theory of International Politics, Random House, New York. 1979.

39. Young Robert, J.C, Postcolianlism; An Historical Introduction, Blackwell Publishing,

2006.

International Law (Course No. PS-13-DCE)

Suggested Readings

1. Anthony Aust, Handbook of International Law, Cambridge University Press, New

York, 2010

2. Arie Trouwborst, Precautionary Rights And Duties of States, Brill Academic Press, UK,

2006

3. C de Visscher, Theory and Reality in Public International Law, Princeton University

Press, 1967

4. C. G Fenwick, International Law, The Clarendon Press, 1939

5. C.C.K Okolie, International Law Perspective of the Developing Countries, Cambridge

University Press, 1973

6. Christopher C. Joyner, International Law in the 21st Century: Rules for Global

Governance, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, UK, 2005

7. D.P.O Connell, International Law, 20 Vols., London Stevens, 1970

8. David P. Forsythe, Human Rights in International Relations, Cambridge University

Press, New York, 2006

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52

9. E.D Dickinson, What is Wrong with International Law? Berkeley, James J. Gillick and

Company, 1947

10. Francis Anthony Boyle, World Politics and International Law, Duke University Press,

1995

11. G.W Keeton, National Sovereignty and International Order, Peace Book Company,

London, 1939

12. H. Kelson, Principles of International Law, Reihart Publication, New York, 1952

13. H. Kelson, The Law of the United Nations, New York, Reihart and Co. 1952

14. Hans Kelsen, Principles of International Law, Rinehart Publication, New York, 2003

15. J. Dore, International Law and Superpowers: Normative Order in a Divided World

16. J. L Briely, The Law of Nations, 4th edn The Clarendon Press, UK, 1944

17. J. L Briely, The Outlook for International Law, The Clarendon Press, UK, 1944

18. J. Stone, Aggression and World Order, University of California Press, 1958

19. J.B. Starke, Introduction to International Law, Butterworth & Company, London,

1947

20. J.G Merrills, International Dispute Settlement, Cambridge University Press, 2001

21. K Deutsch, S Hoffman(ed.) The Relevance of International Law, The Calrendon

Press, 1995

22. L. Brownline, Principles of Public International Law, Oxford University Press,

London, 1973

23. L. Duguit, Law in the State, New York, B. W. Huebsch, 1919

24. L. Oppenheim, International Law, Vol.II, Cambridge University Press, 1969

25. Linda Malone, International Law, Aspen Publication, New York, 2007

26. M. Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars, New York, Basic Books, 1977

27. M.A Kaplan, The Political Foundations of International Law, John Wiley Publication,

New York, 1961

28. Malcoln N. Shaw, International Law, Cambridge University Press, UK, 2003

29. Marlies Glasius, The International Criminal Court: A Global Civil Society Achievement,

Routledge Publications USA, 2006

30. N. Bentwitch, International Law, London Royal International Affairs, 1945

31. P.C. Jessup, Modern Law of Nations, Macmillan, New York, 1948

32. P.E Corbell, Law and Society in the Relations of States, New York, Harcourt Brace,

1995

33. R Vermon, Sovereignty at Bay, Basic books, New York, 1971

34. R. Falk, Legal Order in a Violent World, Princeton University Press, 1968

35. Ramaa Prasad Dhokalia, The Codification of Public International Law, Manchester

University Press, UK, 1970

36. S.D Bailey, Prohibition and Restraint in War, London and New York Oxford

University Press, 1972

37. S.K. Verma, An Introduction to Public International Law, Indian Publishers, 2000

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53

38. Samuel Totten, The Prevention and Intervention of Genocide: An Annotated

Bibliography, Routledge Publication, New York, 2007

39. Sir Hersch Lauterpacht, International Law: Disputes, War and Neutrality, Longmans

Publication, 1952

40. Sir J.F. Williams, Aspects of Modern International Law, Oxford University Press, 1939

41. W. Fenwick, International Law, The Clarendon Press, 1939

Foreign Policy US, China and India (Course No. PS-14-DCE)

Suggested Readings

1. Bajpai, Kanti & Mallevarapu, Siddarth, International Relations in India; Bringing

Theory Back Home, New Delhi, Orient Longman, 2005.

2. Beasley, Ryan, Foreign Policy in Comparative Perspective, ICQ Press

3. Bergsten, C. Fred, The United States and the World Economy: Foreign Economic Policy

for the next decade, New Delhi, Viva, 2006.

4. Chan Gerald, Chinese Perspective on International Relations, New Zealand,

Houndsmill, Macmilan University Press, 1999.

5. Clarke, Michael and White, Brian (ed), Understanding Foreign Policy, England,

Edward Elger, 1989.

6. David Harvey, The New Imperialism, Oxford University Press, New York, 2003.

7. Dixit, J. N, India’s Foreign Policy and Its Neighbors, New Delhi, Gyan,

8. Dumbrell, John, American Foreign Policy: Carter to Clinton, Houndsmill, Macmillan,

1997.

9. Epstein Willaim, The Last Chance: Nuclear Proliferation and Arms Control, New York,

Free Press, 1976.

10. Gaddis Johan Lewis, Strategies of Containment: A Critical Appraisal of Post War

American National Security Policy, Oxford University Press, 1990.

11. Gupta, K. R & Shukla, Vatssola, Foreign Policy of India, New Delhi, Atlantic, 2009.

12. Hanrieden Wolfram F. (ed), Comparative Foreign Policy, N. Y. The Free Press, 1971.

13. Hook, S. K., American Foreign Policy Since World War II.

14. Iftekharuz Zaman (ed)., South Asia Security, Primacy of International Dimensions,

New Delhi, Vikas, 1995.

15. John Pilger, The New Rulers of the World, Verso, 2003.

16. Kidwai, M. Saleem, U.S Policy Towards, South Asia; Focus on Sixty years, Delhi,

Academic, 2008.

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54

17. Macridis, Roy C.(ed), Foreign Policy in World Politics ,New Jersey, Prentice Hall,

1992.

18. Nautiyals Annupurna, Challenges to India’s Foreign Policy in the New Era, New Delhi,

Gyan, 2006.

19. Nayar, Baldev Raj and Paul, T.V, India in the World Order; Searching for Major Power

States, London, Cambridge, 2004.

20. Nehru, Jawaharlal, India’s Foreign Policy; Selected Speeches, Sept 1946-April, 1961.

21. Pokharna, Bhawna, India-China Relations; Dimensions and Perspectives, New Delhi,

New Century, 2009.

22. Raju, Adluri Subramanyam. (ed), IReconstructing South Asia: An Agenda, New Delhi,

Gyan Publishing, 2007.

23. Rosenau, James N., The Scientific Study of Foreign Policy, N. Y. The Free Press, 1971.

24. Storenson, Charles, IAmerican Foreign Policy Toolkit, CQ Press, 2012

25. Sutter, Robert G., Shaping China’s Future in World Affairs: The Role of U.S, Boulder,

Westview, 1996.

26. Varghese, B.G, Reorienting India; The New Geo-Politics of Asia, New Delhi, Konark,

2001.

27. Viotti, Paul, R. American Foreign Policy, Cambridge Polity Press, 2010.

28. Zwick Peter, Soviet Foreign Relations: Process and Policy, New Jersey, Prentice Hall,

1990.

Indian Politics and Institutions (Course No. PS-15- (DCE)

Suggested Readings

1. Khilnani Sunil, The Idea of India, London, Hamish Hamilton, 1997.

2. Chandra Bipan, In the Name of the Democracy: JP Movement and the Emergency, New

Delhi, Penguin Books, 2003.

3. Kothari Rajni, Rethinking Democracy, New Delhi, Zed Books, 2008.

4. Frankel Francine,Zoya Hasan, Rajeev Bhargava, Balveer Arora (eds.) Transforming

India: Social and Political Dynamics of Democracy, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 2000.

5. Singh Ujjwal Kumar, The State, Democracy and Anti-Terror Laws in India, New Delhi,

Sage, 2007.

6. Chatterjee Partha, The Nation and its Fragments: Colonial and Post-Colonial Histories,

New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 1995.

7. Hasan Zoya (eds.), Politics and the State in India, New Delhi, Sage Publications, 2000.

8. Nariman, Fali. S, India's Legal System: Can It Be Saved?,New Delhi, Penguin Books,

2006.

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55

9. Saxena Rekha, Situating Federalism: Mechanisms of Intergovernmental Relations in

Canada and India, New Delhi, Manohar, 2006.

10. Singh, M. P. and Anil Mishra (eds.), Coalition Politics in India: Problems and Prospects,

New Delhi, Manohar, 2004.

11. Mitra Chandan, The Corrupt Society: The Criminalization of India from Independence

to the 1990s, New Delhi, Viking Penguin, 1998.

12. Singh, M.P. and Rekha Saxena (eds.), Indian Judiciary and Politics: The Changing

Landscape, New Delhi, Manohar, 2006.

13. Mathew George, Panchayati Raj: From Legislation to Movement, New Delhi, Concept

Publishing Company, 1994.

14. Saez Lawrence, Federations Without a Centre: the Impact of Political and Economic

Reform on India’s Federal System, New Delhi, Sage, 2002.

15. Dua, B.D. and M.P. Singh (eds.), Indian Federalism in the New Millennium, New Delhi,

Manohar, 2003.

16. ChatterjeePartha (eds.), State and Politics in India, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 1997.

17. Kashyap Subash (eds.) , Constitutional Reforms: Problems, Prospects and

Perspectives, New Delhi, Radha Publications, 2004.

18. Sathe, S.P. ,Judicial Activism in India: Transgressing Borders and Enforcing Limits,

New Delhi,Oxford University Press, 2000.

19. Bhagat, A.K. ,Elections and Electoral Reforms,New Delhi,Vikas Publications, 1996.

20. Arora Balveer, and, Douglas Verney (eds.) Multiple Identities in a Single State: Indian

Federalism in Comparative Perspective, New Delhi, Konark Publishers, 1995.

21. Hasan, Zoya (eds.), Parties and Party Politics in India, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 2002.

22. Jenkins Rob (eds.), Regional Reflections: Comparing Politics Across India’s States, New

Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2004.

23. Bhambhri, C.P., Bureaucracy and Politics in India, New Delhi, Vikas, 1971.

24. Kohli Atul, State-Directed Development: Political Power and Industrialization in the

Global Periphery, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2004.

25. Kashyap Subhash, Our Political System, New Delhi, National Book Trust, 2008.

26. Kashyap Subhash, Our Parliament, New Delhi, National Book Trust, 2004.

27. Brass Paul ,The Politics of India since Independence, Cambridge, Cambridge

University Press, 1994.

28. Jenkins Rob ,Democratic Politics and Economic Reform in India, Cambridge,

Cambridge University Press, 1999.

29. Adeney Katherine and Saez Lawrence (eds.), Coalition Politics and Hindu

Nationalism, Rutledge, London, 2005.

30. Kohli Atul ,The Success of India’s Democracy,Cambridge, Cambridge University Press,

2001.

31. Ratnaparkhi, M.S., The Grey Areas in the Indian Political System,Atlantic Publishers &

Distributors, 2008.

32. Noorani A.G., Constitutional Questions in India: The President, Parliament and the

States, New Delhi,Oxford University Press, 2000.

33. Mohanty Manoranjan (eds.), Caste, Class and Gender, New Delhi, Sage, 2000.

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56

34. Sathyamurthy, T.V. (eds.), Region, Religion, Caste, Gender and Culture in India, Oxford

University Press, 1998.

35. Dreze Jean and Amartya Sen ,India: Development and Participation, New Delhi,

Oxford University Press, 2002.

36. SharmaVeena, President in Indian Political System, New Delhi, Rawat Publications,

2001.

37. Khan, Abbas M., Indian Political System, New Delhi, Anmol Publications, 2006.

38. Verma B.K. , Modern Indian Political System: Problem and Prospects, New Delhi,

Global

Violence in South Asia

Comparative Politics(Course No. PS-17-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. Angelo Panebianco, Political Parties; Organization and Power, Cambridge University

Press, Cambridge, 1982.

2. Ball, Alan R & Peters, B. Guy, Modern Politics and Government, N.Y Palgrave, 2005.

3. Easton, David, A Systems Analysis of Political Life, N.Y. Johnwiley, 1965.

4. Green, December and Lauro Lachrmann, Comparative Politics of the thried World,

New Delhi, Viva, 2004.

5. Harry Erckstein & Apter, David E., Comparative Politics; A Reader. New Delhi,

Surjeet, 2003.

6. Mayer, Lawrence. C, Redefining Comparative Politics; Promise versus Performance,

New Delhi, Sage, 1989.

7. Oommen, T.K, Prodest and Chargi, Studies in Social Movements, New Delhi, Sage,

1990.

8. Rod Hague & Martin Haroop, Comparative Government and Politics, N.Y Palgrave,

2004.

9. Rothamund, Dietmar, The Routledge Companion to Decolonization, London,

Routledge, 2006.

10. Wiards, Howard (ed.), New Directions in Comparative Politics, London, Westnew

Press, 1985.

11. Wilson, Graham K., Interest Groups, London, Basil Black Well, 1990.

12. Goodwin, Jett and Jasper, James, eds. The Social Movements Reading ……..,London,

Blackwell, 2003.

13. Held, David, Democracy and the Global Order: From the Modernization state to

Composition Governance, London Polity 2004.

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14. Zagarski, Paul W. Comparative Politics; Continuity and break down in the

Contemporary World, London, Routledge, 2009.

15. Droges and Orvis, Introducing Comparative Politics; Concepts and Cases in Context,

Washington, CQ Press, 2009.

16. CQ Research Editors, Issues in Comparative Politics, CQ Researcher.

17. Robinson Neil, The Sage Handbook and Landman Todd of Comparative Politics

Editors, London 2009.

Modern Political Theory(Course no. PS-18-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. A. Botwinick and W. E. Connolly (ed.), Democracy and Vision- Sheldon Wolin and the

Vicissitude of the Political, Princeton NJ, Princeton University Press, 2001.

2. A. Brecht, A Political Theory: The Foundation of Twentieth Century Political Thought,

Bombay, The Times of India Press, 1965.

3. A. Cobban, “The Decline of Political Theory”, Political Science Quarterly, 1953, LXVIII,

pp. 321-337.

4. A. Cobban, In Search of Humanity, New York, Braziller, 1960.

5. A. Dobson, Green Political Thought, London Unwin Hyman, 1990.

6. A. Hacker, Political Theory: Philosophy, Ideology and Science, New York, Macmillan,

1961.

7. A. Heywood, Political Theory: An Introduction, London, Macmillan, 1999.

8. A. Quinton (ed.), Political Philosophy, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1967.

9. A. Vincent, Political Theory: Tradition and Diversity, Cambridge, Cambridge University

Press, 1967.

10. Andrew Dobson, Green Political Thought, third edition, Routledge New York, 1994.

11. B. Axfrod, G. K. Browning, R. Huggins, B. Rosamond & J. Turner, Politics: Introduction,

London and New York, Routledge, 1997.

12. B. Barry, Democracy, Power and Justice: Essays in Political Theory, Oxford, Clarendon

Press, 1973.

13. B. Barry, Democracy, Power and Justice: Essays in Political Theory, Oxford, Clarendon

Press, 1989.

14. Bhikhu, Parekh, Rethinking Multiculturalism Cultural Diversity and Political Theory,

Second Edition, Palgrave Macmillan, 2006.

15. D. Bell, The End of Ideology, New York, The Free Press, 1960.

16. D. Easton, The Future of the Postbehavioural Phase in Political Science, in Contemporary

Empirical Political Theory, K. R. Monroe (ed.), Berkeley, University of California Press,

1997.

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58

17. D. Easton, The Political System: An Inquiry into the State of Political Science, New York,

Wiley, 1953.

18. D. Germino, Beyond Ideology: The Revival of Political Theory, New York, Harper and

Row, 1967.

19. D. Held, Political Theory Today, Cambridge, Polity Press, 1991.

20. D. Marsh and G. Stoker, Theory and Methods in Political Science, London, Macmillan,

1995.

21. D. Miller and L. Siedentop (eds.), The Nature of Political Theory, Oxford, the Clarendon

Press 1983.

22. D. Worster, Nature’s Economy: A History of Ecological Ideas, 2ndedn., Cambridge, -----

1994.

23. Daly Marry, Gyn/Ecology: The Mataethics of Radical Feminism, London, Women Press,

1979.

24. F. Fukuyama, The End of History and the Last Man, Harmondsworth, Penguins, 1992.

25. G. H. Sabine, What is Political Theory? Journal of Politics, 1939, 1(I).

26. G. Kateb, Political Theory: Its Nature and Users, New York, St. Martin’s Press,. 1968.

27. H. Eulau, The Behavioural Persuasion in Politics, New York, Random House, 1964.

28. Held, David, Democracy and the Gobal Order, Standford University Press, California

1995.

29. J. Blondel, The Discipline of Politics, London, Butterworths, 1981.

30. J. G. Gunnell, Between Philosophy and Politics: The Alienation of Political Theory,

Amherst Massachusetts, University of Massachusetts Press, 1986.

31. J. G. Gunnell, Political Theory: Tradition and Interpretation, Cambridge, Winthrop, 1979.

32. J. Hampton, Political Philosophy, USA, Westview Press, 1997.

33. J. Wolff, An Introduction to Political Philosophy, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1996.

34. John Hoffman Paul Graham, Introduction to Political Theory, Dorling Kindersley India

Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi, 2007.

35. L. Strauss, What is Political Philosophy and Other Studies. Glencoe, The Free Press,

1959.

36. Leslie Lipson, The Great Issues of Politics: An Introduction to Political Science, Ninth

edition, University of California Berkeley, Prentice Hall of India Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi,

1996.

37. M. Burns, Ideas and Conflict: The Political Theories of the Contemporary World, London,

Methuen, 1963.

38. M. Sandel, Liberalism and the Limits of Justice, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press,

1982.

39. N. Daniels (ed./), Reading Rawls, New York, Basic Books, 1975.

40. P. Kennedy, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers: Economic Change and Military

Conflict from 1500-2000, London, Fiontana, 1988.

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59

41. P. Laslett and W. G. Runciman)eds.), Philosophy, Politics and Society, Series 1-5, Oxford

Blackwell, 1956-79.

42. Q. Skinner, Meaning and Understanding in the History of Ideas, History and Theory,

1969, 8. Pp.3-53.

43. R. E. Godin and H. D. Klingemann, A New Handbook of Political Science, Oxford, Oxford

University Press, 1996.

44. R. E. Godin and P. Petit(eds.), A Companion of Contemporary Political Philosophy,

Oxford, Basil Black Well, 1993.

45. R. E. Grodin, Green Political Theory, Cambridge, Policy Press, 1992.

46. R. P. Wolff, Understanding Rawls, Princeton NJ, Princeton University Press, 1977.

47. R. Plant, Community and Ideology, London, Routledge, and Kegan Paul, 1974.

48. R. Plant, Modern Political Thought, Oxford, Blackwell, 1991.

49. S. M. Lipset, Political Man, New York, Doubleday, 1963.

50. S. Mulhall and A. Swift, Liberals and Communitarians, Oxford, Basil, Blackwell, 1992.

51. S. Wolin, Political Theory as a Vocation, American Political Science Review, 1969 LXII,

pp. 1062-82.

52. S. Wolin, Political Theory: From Vocation to Invocation, in: Vocations of Political Theory,

(eds.), J. A. Frank and J. Tambourine, Minneapolis, London, University of Minnesota

Press, 2000.

53. Sarah Joseph, Political Theory and Power, Foundation Books, New Delhi, 2004.

54. Sir I. Berlin, Does Political Theory Still Exist? In Philosophy6, Politics and Society, 2nd

Series, ed. P. Laslett and W. G. Runciman, Oxford, Blackwell, 1964.

55. T. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolution, Chicago, University of Chicago Press,

1970.

56. T. Parsons, Sociological Theory and Modern Society, New York, The Free Press, 1967.

57. V. Van Dyke, Political Theory: A Theosophical and Analysis, Stanford, CA, Stanford

University Press, 1960.

58. Vincent, Andrew, Modern Political Ideologies, Blackwell Oxford Cambridge USA, 1992.

59. W. E. Connolly, The Terms of Political Discourse, Princeton NJ, Princeton University

Press, 1983.

60. W. Kymlicka, Contemporary Political Philosophy: An Introduction, Oxford, The

Clarendon Press, 1990.

61. Young, Iris Marion, Political Theory: An Overview in R. Goodwin and H. D. Khingnam

(eds>), A New Handbook of Political Science, Oxford Press, New York, 1998.

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Major Ideas and Issues in Public Administration (Course no. PS-19-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. A. Avasthi, and N. Maheshwari, Public Administration, Agra, Laxmi N Aggarwal, 1960.

2. A. M. Levit, Disaster Planning and Recovery: A Guide for Facility Professionals New

York, John Wiley, 1977.

3. B. B. Mishra, The Bureaucracy in India: A Historical Analysis of Development up to

1947, Delhi, Oxford University Press, 1977.

4. C. M. Jain & A. Hinger (ed.), Administrative Culture: Premises and Perspectives, Jaipur,

RBSA Publications, 1996.

5. D. Waldo(ed.), Ideas and Issues in Public Administration: A Book of Readings, New

York, McGraw Hill, 1953.

6. E. N. Gladden, The Essential of Public Administration, London, Staples Press, 1958.

7. F. A. Nigro and L. S. Nigro, Modern Public Administration, New York Harper and Row,

1984.

8. F. W. Riggs, The Ecology of Administration, Bombay Asia Publishing House, 1961.

9. G. Almond and G. B. Powell, Comparative Politics: A development Approach, Boston,

Little Brown & Co., 1966.

10. J. M. Gaus, A Theory of Organization Public Administration, Chicago, University of

Chicago Press 1936.

11. J. MacGregor et.al.,Downsizing the Civil Service in Developing Counters: The Golden

Handshake Option Revisited”. Public Administration and Development, 18(1), Feb

1998, PP. 61-76.

12. J.E. Anderson, Public Policy Making, Boston, Houghton Miffin, 1990.

13. L. D. White, Introduction to the Study of Public Administration, New York, Macmillan,

1955.

14. M. La Palambara and M. Weiner (ed.), Bureaucracy and Political Development,

Princeton University Press, 1966.

15. M. Weber, The Theory of Organization: Readings in Public Administration, New York,

Harper and Row, 1983.

16. P. H. Appleby, Policy and Administration, Alabama, University of Alabama Press,

1957.

17. P. H. Appleby, Public Administration for a Welfare State, Bombay, Asia Publishing

House, 1961.

18. P. R. Dubasdhi, Recent Trends in Public Administration, Delhi, Kavery Books, 1958.

19. R. Presthus, Public Administration, New York, Ronald, 1975.

20. S. R. Maheshwari, Administrative Theories, New Delhi, Allied 1994.

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61

21. T. N. Chaturvedi (ed.), Contemporary Administrative Culture of India, New Delhi,

Mittal, 1997.

State Politics in India (Course No. PS-20- (DCE)

Suggested Readings

1. Achin Vanaik And Rajeev Bhargava (Ed.), Understanding Contemporary India, Critical

Perspectives, Orient Blackman, 2010.

2. Ashutosh Kumar (ed), Rethinking State Politis in India, Regions within Regions,

Routledge, 2011.

3. Atul Kohli (ed.), The Success of India’s Democracy, Cambridge University Press, New

Delhi, 2008.

4. Bidyut Chakraborty and Rajat Kumar Kujur, Maoism in India, Routledge, 2010.

5. Bidyut Chakraborty, Indian Politics and Society Since Independence and Events,

Processes and Ideology, Routledge. 2008.

6. Ghanshyam Shah, Protest Movements in two Indian States; A Study of the Gujrat and

Bihar Mouts, Ajanta Publications, (India), 1977.

7. Kothari Rajni, Rethinking Democracy, New Delhi, Zed Books, 2008.

8. Mohanty Manoranjan (eds.), Caste, Class and Gender, New Delhi, Sage, 2000.

9. Paranjay Guha Thakurta, Shankar Raghuraman, Divided we Stand, India in a Time of

Coalitions, Sage Publications, 2007.

10. Partha Chatterjee, Empire and Nation; Permanent Black, 2010.

11. Rajni Kothari, (ed.), James Manor (revised), Caste in Indian Politics, Orient

Blackswan, 2010.

12. Shail Nayaram, M. S. Pandias, Ajay Skaria (ed.), Muslims, Dalits and the Fabrications

of History, Permanent Black, 2005.

13. Steven I. Wilkinson, Votes and Violence, Electoral Competition and Communal Riots in

India, Cambridge University Press, 2005.

14. Sudha Pai (ed), Political Process in Uttarpradesh: Identity, Economic Reforms and

Governance, Pearson Longman, 2007.

15. Sudha Pai, State Politics: New Dimensions, Party System, Liberalization and Politics of

Identity, Shipra, 2000.

16. Sumit Ganguly, Larry Diamond, Marc F. Plattner (ed.), The state of India’s Democracy;

Oxford University Press, 2010.

17. Zoya Hasan, S. N. Jhan, Rasheeduddin Khan, The State, Political Processes and

Identity, Reflections on Mondern India, Sage Publications, 1989.

18. Iqbal Narain,, State Politics in India (ed) Meenakshi Prakashan 1976

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19. V.P.Menon, The Story of Integration of Indian States, Delhi Orient Longman’s 1961

20. Sudai Pai, State Politics in India

21. Myron Weiner, State Politics in India, Princelon University Press, 1968

22. R.Wood, State Politics in India, Crisis or Continuity, Westview Press, 198

23. F.Frankel and M.S.A Rao, Dorriance and State Power in Modern India, Oxford

University Press, Delhi 1989

24. Arora, Baldev and Douglas. V. Verney (ed) Multiple Idealistic in a single scale: Indian

Federalism inComparative perspective, Konark, Delhi 1995

25. Paul Bran, Politics of India since Independence, Orient Longman, Hyderabad, 1990

26. Sajal Basu, Regional Movements, IIAS, Shimla and manohar, Delhi 1992

27. Jenkins Rob ,Democratic Politics and Economic Reform in India, Cambridge,

Cambridge University Press, 1999.

28. Adeney Katherine and Saez Lawrence (eds.), Coalition Politics and Hindu

Nationalism, Routledge, London, 2005.

CRITICAL TRADITIONS IN POLITICAL THEORY (Course No. PS-21- (DCE)

Suggested Readings:

1. Alan Ryan (2014). On Marx—Revolutionary and Utopian, London: Liveright Publishers.

2. Alison Jaggar (1983).Feminist Politics and Human Nature, Harvester Press.

3. Eric Hobsbawm (2010). How to Change the World—Tales of Marx and Marxism,

4. Ernesto Laclau &Chantal Mouffe (1985). Hegemony and Sociaist Strategy. London: Verso.

5. Ernesto Laclau (1990). New Reflections on the Revolution of our Time, London, Verso.

6. Istvan Meszaros (1970).Marx’s Theory of Alienation, London: Merlin Press.

7. Leszek Kolakowski(1978).Main Currents in Marxism(Vol. 1-3), Oxford: Clarendon Press.

8. Lynda Nicoloson (ed.) (1990).Feminism/Postmodernism, London: Routledge.

9. Maxine Rodinson (1980).Marxism and the Muslim World, Hyderabad: Orient Longman.

10. Patricia Williams(1991).The Alchemy of Race and Rights, Harvard, MT: Harvard University Press.

11. Ronaldo Munck.A Difficult Dialogue: Marxism and Nationalism, London: Zed.

12. Terry Eagleton (2011). Why Marx was Right, London: Yale University Press.

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POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES-ii

Course No. PS-22-(DCE)

Suggested Readings:

13. Alan Ryan (2014). On Marx—Revolutionary and Utopian, London: Liveright

Publishers.

14. Alison Jaggar (1983). Feminist Politics and Human Nature, Harvester Press.

15. Eric Hobsbawm (2010). How to Change the World—Tales of Marx and Marxism,

16. Ernesto Laclau & Chantal Mouffe (1985). Hegemony and Sociaist Strategy. London:

Verso.

17. Ernesto Laclau (1990). New Reflections on the Revolution of our Time, London, Verso.

18. Istvan Meszaros (1970). Marx’s Theory of Alienation, London: Merlin Press.

19. Leszek Kolakowski (1978). Main Currents in Marxism (Vol. 1-3), Oxford: Clarendon

Press.

20. Lynda Nicoloson (ed.) (1990). Feminism/Postmodernism, London: Routledge.

21. Maxine Rodinson (1980). Marxism and the Muslim World, Hyderabad: Orient

Longman.

22. Patricia Williams (1991). The Alchemy of Race and Rights, Harvard, MT: Harvard

University Press.

23. Ronaldo Munck. A Difficult Dialogue: Marxism and Nationalism, London: Zed.

24. Terry Eagleton (2011). Why Marx was Right, London: Yale University Press.

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India-Pakistan Relations (Course No. PS-23-DCE)

Suggested Readings

1. Ahmar Moonis, Internal and External Dynamics of South Asian Security, Fazeelsons,

Karachi, 2001.

2. Ahmar Moonis, The Challenge of Confidence-Building in South Asia, Har-Anand

Publications, New Delhi, 2001.

3. Ayesha Siddiqa, Pakistan’s Arms Procurement and Military Build-up, 1979-99: In

search of a policy, Palgrave, 2001.

4. Baba, Noor ahmad, OIC and Pakistan;Foreign Policy: Indian Dimensions in Rajendra

M. Abhyankar (ed.) West Asian and the Regions: Defining India’s Role, New Delhi,

Academic Foundations, 2008, pp.669-684.

5. Baba, Noor Ahmad, Organization of Islamic Conference: Theory and Practice of Pan-

Islamic Operations.,New Delhi, Sterling, 1994.

6. Banerji Dipankar, Confidence Building Measures in South Asia, Regional Centre for

Strategic Studies (RCSS), Colombo, 1999.

7. Behera Navnita Chadha,International Relations in South Asia, Sage Publications,

2008.

8. Behera, Navnita Chadha, et al, People- to- People to contacts in South Asia: New

Delhi, Manohar, 2005.

9. Bidwai Praful and Vanaik Achin, New Nukes: India, Pakistan and Global Nuclear

Disarmament, Interlink Books, New York, 2000.

10. Blinkenberg, Lars, India-Pakistan: the History of Unsolved Conflicts, Vol. II Odense:

Odense University Press, 1998.

11. Brines, Russel, The Indo-Pak conflict, London: Pall Mall Press, 1968.

12. Burk, s. and Ziring L., Pakistan Foreign Policy: An Historical Analysis. Karachi:

Oxford University Press, 1990.

13. Chakma Bhumitra, The Politics of Nuclear Weapons in South Asia, UK, Ashgate, 2011

14. Chapman Graham,The Geopolitics of South Asia, UK, Ashgate, 2009.

15. Cohen, Stephen Philip, The Structural Dimensions of Conflict in South Asia, Colombo,

Regional Centre for Strategic Studies (RCSS), Colombo, 1997.

16. Crhistopher, Thomas, Faultline Kashmir, London: Brunnel Academic Publishers,

2000.

17. Darshan, Ajay and Behera Mathew Joseph C, eds., Pakistan in a Changing Strategic

Context, New Delhi: Knowledge world, 2004.

18. Dixit. J.N., India-Pakistan in War & Peace, London: Routledge Publication, 2002

19. Durrani, Major General Mahmud Ali, India and Pakistan: The cost of conflict and

Benefits of Peace, Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2001.

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20. Evans. Paul. M, Navnita Chadha Behera and Gowhar Rizvi (eds), Beyond Boundaries:

A Report on the State of Non-Official Dialogues on Peace, Security and Cooperation

in South Asia: Ontario, University of Toronto/York University, joint Centre for Asia-

Pacific Studies, 1997.

21. Evans. Paul. M, Navnita Chadha Behera and Gowhar Rizvi (eds), Fearful Symmetry:

India-Pakistan Crises in the Shadow of Nuclear Weapons, Seattle: University of

Washington Press, 2005.

22. Greenwood Ted Sumit Ganguly(eds), Mending Fences: Confidence and Security-

Building Measures in South Asia, Boulder, CO: West view Press, 1996.

23. Gupta Sisir., Kashmir: A Study in India-Pakistan Relations, Asia Publishing House,

1967

24. Haq Mahbubul, Reflections on Human Development, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 1999.

25. Humayun, Dr. and G. Parthasarathy, Cross-Border Talks: Diplomatic Divide, New

Delhi: Roli Books, 2004.

26. Kamath P. M. , India-Pakistan Relations Courting Peace From The Corridors Of War,

New Delhi: Bibliophile South Asia, 2005.

27. Kapur, S. Paul ,Dangerous Deterrent: Nuclear Weapons Proliferation and Conflict in

South Asia,Standard University Press, 2007.

28. Kothari, Smitu and Zia Mian, ed.s., Bridging Partition: Peoples Initiative for Peace

Between India and Pakistan, New Delhi: Orient Black Swan, 2010

29. Kux. Dennis, India-Pakistan Negotiations: is Past Still Prologue? Washington DC:

United States Institute of Peace, 2006

30. Matto, Amitabh, Kapil Kak and Happymon Jacob, eds., India and Pakistan: Pathways

Ahead, New Delhi: KW Publishers, 2007.

31. Mitchell, George J, Making Peace. New York: Knopf, 1999.

32. Monique Mokenkempo, Paul Van Tongrene and Hans Van de Veen, eds., Searching

for peace in Central and South Asia. United States: Lynne Renner publishers, 2002.

33. Pant, Harsh, indian foreign policy in a unipolar world (war and international politics

in south asia), routledge, 2009.

34. Paul, T.V. ed., The India-Pakistan Conflict: An Enduring Rivalry, Cambridge,

Cambridge University Press, 2005.

35. Rajain, Arpit. Nuclear Deterrence in Southern Asia: China, India, and Pakistan.

Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications, 2005

36. Siddiqa, Ayesha, Military Inc: Inside Pakistan’s Military Economy, London: Pluto

press, 2007.

37. Singh Gopal (eds.), South Asia; Discontent and Societal Conflicts, New Delhi:

Anamika publishers, 1998.

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Political Ideas-i

Democracy and Development in India (Course No. PS-25-OE)

Suggested Readings

1. Jayal, Niraja Gopal (Ed): Democracy in India, New Delhi Oxford University Press, 2001.

2. Varshmey, Ashutosh ; Democracy, Development, and the Countryside, New Delhi;

Cambridge University Press,1995

3. Jayal, Niraja Gopal: Democracy and the State, New Delhi, Oxford University Press,

2001.

4. Sengupta chandan: Cambridge Stuart (ED), Democracy, Development and

decentralization in India, New Delhi, Routledge (toylor and Frmcis Eiroup) 2010.

5. Cordom, Hocker Cansiono (Ed): Shapiro Ian , Democracy’s edges, United kingdom,

Cambridge University Press, 1999

6. Rajan Nalini : Secularism, Democracy, Justice : New Delhi, Sage Publications, 1998

7. Sankhdher, M. M : Democratic Politics and Governance in India: New Delhi, Deep and

Deep Publications, 2003

8. Axtmann Roland: Democracy (Problems and Perspectives), Edinburg University Press

ltd, 2007

9. Brooker Paul: Non-Democratic Regimes (Theory, Government and politics) : London,

MacMillan Press Ltd., 2000

10. Hollifield, James F & Jillson Calvin (ed): Pathways to Democracy (The Political

Economy of Democratic Transitions), New York, Routledge, 2000

11. Sisodia Yatindra Singh (ed) : Democratic Governance and Human Development, Jaipur

(India), Rawat Publications, 2013

12. Przeworski Adam, Alvarez, Michael E. : Democracy and Development (Political

Institutions and well being in the world, 1950-1990): United Kingdom, Press Syndicate

Cambridge University Press, 2000.

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Methods In Social Science (Course no. PS-26-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. A. C. Issak, Scope and Methods of Political Science, Homewood Illinois, Dorsey Press,

1985.

2. A. Ryan (ed.), The Philosophy of Social Sciences, London Macmillan, 1970.

3. Alvesson Mats, Reflexive Methodology, London Stage Publications.

4. B. Smith, Political Research Methods, Boston, Houghton Milton, 1976.

5. C. R. Kothari, Research Methodology: Methods and Techniques, New Delhi, Wishva

Publications.

6. C. Selltiz et. Al., Research Methods in Social Relations, USA, Methuea, 1965.

7. D. Marsh and G. Stoker (ed.), Theory and Methods in Political Science, Basingstoke,

Macmillan, 1995.

8. D. Miller (ed.), Pocket Popper, London, Fontana, 1997.

9. De D. A. Vaus, Surveys in Social Research 2nd , Edn., London Unwin Hayman, 1991.

10. E. Gelliner, Relativism and Social Science, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press,

1985.

11. F. N. Kerlinger, Behavioural Research, New York Hold, Rinehart and Winston 1979.

12. G. Mydral, Objectivity in Social Science, New York, Pantheon Books, 1969.

13. G. W. Snedecor, Statistical Methods, 5thedn.,Lowa State College, 1965.

14. H. J. Rubin, Applied Social Research, Columbus, North Illinois University Press, 1983.

15. H. N. Blalock (ed.), Casual Models in the Social Sciences, London Macmillan, 1972.

16. H. N. Blalock, An Introduction to Social Research, Eaglewood Cliffs, NJ Prentice Hall,

1970.

17. J. B. Johnson ad A. Joslyn, Political Science Research Methods, Washington DC, C. Q.

Press, 1986.

18. J. Galtung, Theory and Methods of Social research, New York, Columbia, University

Press, 1987.

19. Jones Terrence, Conducting Political Research, New York, Harper and Raw

Publications.

20. K. R. Hoover, The Elements of Social Scientific Thinking, New York, St. Martin’s Press,

1985.

21. M. Bulmer (ed.), Sociological Research Methods: An Introduction, London, Macmillan,

1984.

22. M. Duveger, An Introduction to the Social Sciences with Special References to their

Methods, Translated by M. Anderson, New York Fredrick A. Praeger 1964.

23. M. J. Brenner, J. Browh and D. Canter (ed.), The Research Interview: Uses and

Approaches, London Academic Press, 1985.

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68

24. N. Gilbert (ed.), Researching Social Life, London, Sage, 1993.

25. S. V. Evera, Guide to Methods for Students of Political Science, Ithaca, NY, Cornell

University Press, 1997.

26. Sir, K. R. Popper, Conjectures and Refutations: The Growth of Scientific Knowledge,

London Routledge and Kegan Paul 1963.

27. Sir, K. R. Popper, The Logic of Scientific Discovery, London, Hutchinson, 1959.

28. T. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolution, Chicago, University Press, 1970.

29. T. L. Burton and G. L. Cheery, Social Research Techniques, London, Unwin, 1989.

30. W. J. Goode and P. K. Hatt, Methods of Social Research, New York, McGraw Hill, 1952.

31. Baronov, Conceptual Foundations of Social Research Methods, Paradigm Publications,

2004.

32. Bauer Martin W. and G. Gaskell, Qualitative Researching with Text, Image and Sound,

Sage, London, 2000.

33. Beart Davit Patick, Philosophy of Social Sciences, Polity, 2005.

34. Bohrnstedt & Knoke, Statistics for Social Data Analysis, F. E. Peacock Publishers,

1988.

35. Brodbeck May ed., Readings in the Philosophy of Science, Macmillan, 1968.

36. Brown S. J. Fauvel and R. Finnegan eds., Conceptions of Inquiry, Routledge, 1981.

37. Bryman A., Social Research Method, Oxford University Press, 2001.

38. Hindess Barry, Philosophy and Methodology in the Social Sciences, Humanities Press,

1977.

39. Hoffding O., ed., Essential Readings in Logical Positivism, Basil Blackwell, 1981.

40. Keohane King & Verba, Designing Social Inquiry, Princeton University Press, 2001.

41. Kolkowski, L., Logical Positivism: From Hume to the Vienna Circle, Pelican Books,

1972.

42. Kuhn T., Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1962.

43. Kumar Ranjit, Research Methodology: A Step by Step Guide for Beginners, Pearson

Edeucation, 2005.

44. Lakatos and Musgrave ed., Criticism and the Growth of Knowledge, Cambridge Univ.

Press, 1970.

45. Marsh Cathie, The Critics of Suevey, from the Survey Method: The Contribution of

Survey to Sociological Explanation, Allen and Unwin, London, 1982.

46. Mukherjee P.N., Methodology in Social Research, Sage, 2000.

47. Nidditch P. H. ed., Philosophy of Science, Oxford University Press, 1968.

48. Phillips D. C., Philosophy, Science and Social Inquiry: Contemporary Methodological

Controversies in Social Science and Related Applied Field of Research, Pergamon

Press, 2004.

49. Popper Karl, The Logic of Scientific Discovery, Hutchinson, 1980.

50. Rabinow P. & W. H. Sullivan, Interpretive Social Science, Univ. of California Press,

1988.

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51. Ryan Alan ed., The Philosophy of Social Explanation, Oxford University Press, 1973.

52. Sapsford R., Survey Research, Sage, Delhi, 1999.

53. Seale Clive, Social Research Method: A Reader, Routledge, 2008.

54. Selltiz, Jahoda, Deutsche & Coote eds., Research Methods in Social Relations,

Methuen, London, 1965.

55. Simon J. L., Basic Research Methods in Social Science, Random House, New York 1969.

56. Srivastava VK ed., Methoidology and Fieldwork, Oxford University Press, New Delhi.

57. Taylor Charles, “Interpretation and the Sciences of Man”, Review of Metaphysics,

25/1, 1971.

58. Triggs Roger, Understanding Social Science, Blackwell, 2001.

59. Weber Max, Methodology of the Social Sciences, Free Press, 1968.

60. Weingbery Darin ed, Qualitative Research Method, Blackwell, 2000.

61. Wonacott & Wonnacott, Introductory Statistics, John Wiley & Sons, 1985.

South Asia: State and Society (Course No. PS-27-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. Ayesha Siddiqa, Pakistan’s Arms Procurement and Military Build-up, 1979-99: In search of

a policy, Palgrave, 2001.

2. Jalal Ayesha, Democracy and Authoritarianism in South Asia: A Comparative and Historical

Perspective, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.

3. Ahmar Moonis, Internal and External Dynamics of South Asian Security, Fazeelsons,

Karachi, 2001.

4. Ahmar Moonis, The Challenge of Confidence-Building in South Asia, Har-Anand

Publications, New Delhi, 2001.

5. Bajpai, Kanti,P.R Chari,Pervaiz Iqbal Cheema, Stephen P Cohen and Sumit

Ganguly,Brasstacks and Beyond: Perception and Management of Crisis in South Asia,

Manohar, New Delhi, 1995.

6. Banerji Dipankar, Confidence Building Measures in South Asia, Regional Centre for

Strategic Studies (RCSS), Colombo, 1999.

7. Bidwai Praful and Vanaik Achin, New Nukes: India, Pakistan and Global Nuclear

Disarmament, Interlink Books, New York, 2000.

8. Cohen, Stephen Philip, The Structural Dimensions of Conflict in South Asia, Regional

Centre for Strategic Studies (RCSS), Colombo, 1997.

9. Cohen, Stephen Philip, India: Emerging Power, Brookings Institution Press, Washington

D.C, 2001.

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10. Hagerty, Devin T. (ed.), South Asia in World Politics, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers,

USA, 2005.

11. Basrur, Rajesh, M., (ed.), Security in the New Millennium: Views from South Asia, New

Delhi, India Research Press, 2001.

12. Bhola, P.L., and Ramakant (ed.), Post Cold War Developments in South Asia, Jaipur, RBSA

Publisher, 1995.

13. Mitra, S. (eds), Sub-nationalism in South Asia, Boulder, West View, 1996.

14. Kothari, Smitu and Mian, Zia. (ed.), Out of the Nuclear Shadow, Delhi, Lokayan, 2001.

15. Siddiqa, Ayesha, Military Inc: Inside Pakistan’s Military Economy, London: Pluto press,

2007.

16. Pandey Gyandera and Yunus Samad, Fault Line of Nationhood, New Delhi, Roli Books,

2007.

17. KhanHamid, Constitutional and Political History of Pakistan, Karachi: OUP, 2005.

18. ManogaranChelvadurai, Ethnic conflict and reconciliation in Sri Lanka, University of

Hawaii Press, 1987.

19. Muni, S D, Understanding South Asia, New Delhi, South Asian Pub., 1994.

20. Haq Mahbubul, Reflections on Human Development, New Delhi, Oxford University Press,

1999.

21. Phadnis Urmila, S.D. Muni, Kalim Bahadur, Domestic Conflicts in South Asia, New Delhi,

South Asia Books, 1986.

22. Muni, S D, Understanding South Asia, New Delhi, South Asian Pub., 1994.

23. Paul, T.V, South Asia's Weak States: Understanding the Regional Insecurity Predicament,

Stanford, Stanford University Press, 2010.

24. Madsen, Stig Toft, Kenneth Bo Nielsen and Uwe Skoda Trysts with Democracy: Political

Practice in South Asia, UK, Anthem Press, 2011.

25. MalikYogendra, Mahendra Lawoti, Syedur Rahman, Ashok Kapur, Robert C Oberst,

Charles H Kennedy, Government and Politics in South Asia: Sixth Edition, Colorado (US),

Westview Press, 2008.

26. Ahmed Ishtiaq, The Politics of Religion in South and Southeast Asia, Routledge, 2011.

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27. ChakmaBhumitra, The Politics of Nuclear Weapons in South Asia, UK, Ashgate, 2011.

28. Ahmad Aijaz, Lineages of the Present: Ideology and Politics in Contemporary South Asia,

UK, Verso Books, 2000.

29. DesaiMeghnad, Development and Nationhood: Essays in the Political Economy of South

Asia, Oxford, 2006.

30. Mary OllapallyDeepa, The Politics of Extremism in South Asia, New Delhi, Cambridge

University Press, 2008.

31. RiazAli, Religion and Politics in South Asia, Routledge, 2010.

32. Chapman Graham , The Geopolitics of South Asia, UK, Ashgate, 2009.

33. Amita Shastri and A. Jeyaratnam Wilson, The Post-Colonial States of South Asia:

Democracy, Development and Identity, Palgrave, 2001.

34. Kapur, S. Paul , Dangerous Deterrent: Nuclear Weapons Proliferation and Conflict in

South Asia, Stanford University Press, 2007.

35. Brass Paul, Routledge Handbook of South Asian Politics: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri

Lanka, and Nepal,Routledge, 2010.

36.MalikPriyanjali, India's Nuclear Debate: Exceptionalism and the Bomb (War and

International Politics in South Asia), Routledge, 2010.

37. Anne Noronha Dos Santos , Military Intervention and Secession in South Asia: The Cases

of Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Kashmir, and Punjab, Praeger, 2007.

38. Farmer, B. H., An Introduction to South Asia, Routledge, 1993.

39. B. Rana Pradumm and John Malcolm Dowling, South Asia: Rising to the Challenge of

Globalization, World Scientific Publishing Company, 2009.

40. Gellner David, Ethnic Activism and Civil Society in South Asia (Governance, Conflict and

Civic Action), Sage Publications, 2009.

41. Phadnis Urmila and Rajat Ganguly, Ethnicity and Nation-building in South Asia, SAGE

Publications, 2001.

42.Behera Navnita Chadha, International Relations in South Asia, Sage Publications, 2008.

43. Rafiq Dossani, Daniel C. Sneider and Vikram Sood,Does South Asia Exist?: Prospects for

Regional Integration, Asia-Pacific Research Center, 2010.

44. BarlasAsma, Democracy, Nationalism, and Communalism: The Colonial Legacy in South

Asia, Westview, 1995.

45. Pant Harsh, Indian Foreign Policy in a Unipolar World (War and International Politics in

South Asia),Routledge, 2009.

46. Stern Robert, Democracy and Dictatorship in South Asia: Dominant Classes and Political

Outcomes in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh,Praeger, 2000.

47. Mitra Subrata, Political Parties in South Asia,Praeger, 2004.

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Contemporary Political Theory (Course No. PS-28-CR)

Suggested Readings

1. A. Ahmed, In Theory: Classes, Nations Literatures, London, Verso, 1992.

2. A. Gutam (ed.), Multiculturalism, Princeton NJ, Princeton University Press, 1994.

3. A. Philips, Engineering Democracy, Oxford and Cambridge, Polity Press, 1991.

4. B. Ashcroft, The Post Colonial Studies Reader, London, Routleledge, 1995.

5. B. Friedan, The Feminine Mystique, New York, Norton, 1963.

6. B. Parekh, Rethinking Multiculturalism: Culture Diversity and Political Theory,

London Macmillan Press 2000.

7. C. Pateman, The Disorder of Women, Cambridge, Polity Press, 1989.

8. C. Taylor, Multiculturalism: Examining the Politics of Recognition, edited A. Gutam,

Princeton NJ, Princeton University Press, 1994.

9. E. Said, Orientalism, London, Chatto and Windus, 1978.

10.

11. F. Fanon, Black Skin, White Mask Translated by C.L. Markham, New York, Grove

Press 1979.

12. H. Arendt, On Revolution, New York Viking London, Faber, 1963.

13. I. M. Young, Justice and the Politics of Difference, Oxford, Princeton University Press,

1990.

14. J. G. A. Pocock, The Machiavellian Moment: Florentine Political Thought and the

Atlantic Republication Tradition, Princeton NJ, Princeton University Press, 1975.

15. J. Gray, Post-Liberalism Studies in Political Thought, London, Routledge, 1993.

16. J. M. Mackenzie, Orientalism: History, Theory and the Art, Manchester UK, Manchester

University Press, 1995.

17. J. S. Mill, The Subjection of Women, London, Everyman, 1962.

18. J.B. Elshtain, Public Man, Private Man: Women in Social and Thought, Princeton NJ,

Princeton University Press, 1981.

19. L. Hutcheon, The Politics of Postmodernism, London, and New York, Routledge, 1989.

20. N. Machiavelli, Multicultural Citizenship, Oxford, The Calendon Press, 1995.

21. P. Williams and L. Chrisman, Colonial Discourse and Post Colonial Theory, New York,

Harverster Wheatsheaf, 1993.

22. Q. Skinner, The Foundations of Modern Political Thought, Vol. I: The Renaissance,

Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1978.

23. R. Guha and G.C. Spivak,Selected Subaltern Studies, Oxford University Press, 1988.

24. R. Young, White Mythologies Writing History and the West London, Routledge, 1990.

25. S. de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, London, Cape, (1953)

26. S. Firestone, The Dialectic of Sex, London the Women’s Press, 1979.

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27. S. K. White, Political Theory ad Postmodernism, Cambridge, Cambridge University

Press, 1991.

28. S. M. Okin, Justice, Gender and the Family, New York, Basic Books, 1990.

29. V. Bryson, Feminist Political Theory, London Macmillan, 1992.

30. W. Connolly, Identity/Difference: Democratic Negotiations, Ithaca NY, Cornell

University Press, 1991.

31. W. Kymlicks, Multicultural Citizenship, Oxford, The Calendon Press, 1995.

Peace And Conflict StudiesCourse No. PS-29- (CR)

Suggested Readings

1. Anthony Oberschall, Conflict and Peace Building in Divided Societies; Responses to

ethnic Violence, Routledge, 2007.

2. Boutros, B. Ghali, An Agenda for Peace, UNITED NATIONS, New York, 2nd ed., 1995.

3. Charles P. Webel and Jorgen Johansen (ed) Peace and Conflict Studies, A Reader,

Routledge, 2012.

4. D. Suba Chandran & P. R. Chari (ed) Armed Conflicts in South Asia 2008, Growing

Violence Routledge, 2008.

5. Edwar Said, Orientalism: Western Conceptions of the Orient, Penguin, 1900.

6. Frantz Fanon; The Wretched of the Earth; Penguin Books, 2001.

7. Hugh Miall, Oliver Ramsbotham and Tom Woodhouse; Contemporary Conflict

Resolution; The prevention, management and transformation of deadly conflict, Polity

Press, Cambridge, 2005.

8. Immanuel Kant, Perpetual Peace, Cosimo Classics, New York, 2005.

9. Jacob Bercovitch, Victor Kremenyuk, and I William Zartman; (ed.), The Sage

Handbook of conflict Resolution, Sage Publications 2009.

10. John Bayles, Steve Smith and Patricia Owens (ed.), The Globalization of World

Politics, OUP, 2011.

11. Joseph S. Nye, Jr, Understanding International Conflicts; An Introduction to Theory

and History, Pearson Pub, 2007.

12. Joshua, S. Goldstein, Jon C. Pere House, International Relations, Pearson Pub, 2009.

13. Laurent Gayer and Christophe Jaffrelot (ed.), Armed Militias of South Asia,

Fundamentalists, Maoists and Separatists, Foundation Books, New Delhi, 2009.

14. M. K. Gandhi, Hind Swaraj

15. Neal G. Jesse and Kristen P. Williams; Ethnic Conflict; A Systematic Approach to Cases

of Conflict, CQ Press, Washington, 2011.

16. Noam Chomski, Gilbert Archcar, S. R. Shalom; Perilous Powers to the Middle East Us.

Foreign Policy Dialogue on Terror, Democracy, war and Justice, Paradign Pub, 2006.

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17. O’Neill, John Terrance and Rees, Nicholas; United Nations Peace Keeping in the Post

Cold War Era, New York, Routledge.

18. Peter Wallensteen, Peace Research, Theory and Practice, Routledge, 2010.

19. Raffacle Marchetti, Nathalie Tocci (ed) Conflict Society and Peace Building:

Comparative Perspectives, Routledge, 2011.

20. Ranabir Samaddar (ed), Peace Studies; An Introduction to the Concept, Scope and

Themes, Sage Publications, 2004.

21. S. P. Verma, Modern Political Theory, Vikas Publishing House, 2002.

22. T. G. Fraser, Ireland in Conflict 1922-1998, Routledge, 2000.

23. T. V. Paul; South Asia’s Weak States, Understanding the Regional Insecurity

Predicament, Oxford University Press, 2010.

24. Victoria Schofield, Kashmir in Conflict, Viva Books, 2004.

25. John Galtung, Essays in Peace Research, Vol. I, Copenhagen, 1975.

26. Brecher, Michael, A Study of Crisis, Michigan University Press, 1997.

27. Brauer, Jurgen & Gissy, Economics of

FEDERALISM IN INDIA (Course No. PS-30-DCE)

Suggested Readings

1. Abbas Hoveyda, Ranjay Kumar, Mohammad Aftab Alam, Indian Government and

Politics, New Delhi, Dorling Kindersley, 2011.

2. Singh, M. P and Rekha Saxena, Indian Politics: Contemporary Issues and Concerns,

New Delhi, Prentice Hall, 2008.

3. Mahajan Gurpreet, Multicultural Path: Issues of Diversity and Discrimination in

Democracy, New Delhi, Sage Publications, 2002.

4. Kothari Rajni, Rethinking Democracy, New Delhi, Zed Books, 2008.

5. Frankel Francine,Zoya Hasan, Rajeev Bhargava, Balveer Arora (eds.) Transforming

India: Social and Political Dynamics of Democracy, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 2000.

6. Dua, B. D. and M.P. Singh (eds.), Indian Federalism in the New Millennium, New Delhi,

Manohar, 2004.

7. Singh Ujjwal Kumar, The State, Democracy and Anti-Terror Laws in India, New Delhi,

Sage, 2007.

8. Nariman, Fali. S, India's Legal System: Can It Be Saved?, New Delhi, Penguin Books,

2006.

9. Saxena Rekha, Situating Federalism: Mechanisms of Intergovernmental Relations in

Canada and India, New Delhi, Manohar, 2006.

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10. Akhtar Majeed (eds.), Federalism within the Union: Distribution of Responsibilities in

the Indian System, New Delhi, Manak Publications, 2004.

11. Singh, M. P and Rekha Saxena (eds.), Ideologies and Institutions in Indian Politics,

New Delhi, Deep & Deep Publications, 1998.

12. Chakrabarty Bidyut, Forging Power: Coalition Politics in India, New Delhi, Oxford

University Press, 2006.

13. Singh, M.P. and Rekha Saxena (eds.), Indian Judiciary and Politics: The Changing

Landscape, New Delhi, Manohar, 2006.

14. Mathew George, Panchayati Raj: From Legislation to Movement, New Delhi, Concept

Publishing Company, 1994.

15. Saez Lawrence, Federations Without a Centre: the Impact of Political and Economic

Reform on India’s Federal System, New Delhi, Sage, 2002.

16. Dua, B.D. and M.P. Singh (eds.), Indian Federalism in the New Millennium, New Delhi,

Manohar, 2003.

17. ChatterjeePartha (eds.), State and Politics in India, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 1997.

18. Basu, D.D. ,Introduction to the Constitution of India,New Delhi, Prentice Hall, 2008.

19. Bhargava Rajeev (eds.), Politics and Ethics of the Indian Constitution,New Delhi,

Oxford University Press, 2008.

20. Kashyap Subash (eds.) , Constitutional Reforms: Problems, Prospects and

Perspectives, New Delhi, Radha Publications, 2004.

21. Sathe, S.P. ,Judicial Activism in India: Transgressing Borders and Enforcing Limits,

New Delhi,Oxford University Press, 2000.

22. Arora Balveer, and, Douglas Verney (eds.) Multiple Identities in a Single State: Indian

Federalism in Comparative Perspective, New Delhi, Konark Publishers, 1995.

23. Hasan, Zoya (eds.), Parties and Party Politics in India, New Delhi, Oxford University

Press, 2002.

24. Jenkins Rob (eds.), Regional Reflections: Comparing Politics Across India’s States, New

Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2004.

25. Kohli Atul ,The Success of India’s Democracy,Cambridge, Cambridge University Press,

2001.

26. Ratnaparkhi, M.S., The Grey Areas in the Indian Political System,Atlantic Publishers &

Distributors, 2008.

27. Noorani A.G., Constitutional Questions in India: The President, Parliament and the

States, New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2000.

28. Mohanty Manoranjan (eds.), Caste, Class and Gender, New Delhi, Sage, 2000.

29. Sathyamurthy, T.V. (eds.), Region, Religion, Caste, Gender and Culture in India, Oxford

University Press, 1998.

30. Dreze Jean and Amartya Sen ,India: Development and Participation, New Delhi,

Oxford University Press, 2002.

31. SharmaVeena, President in Indian Political System, New Delhi, Rawat Publications,

2001.

32. Khan, Abbas M., Indian Political System, New Delhi, Anmol Publications, 2006.

33. Verma B.K. ,Modern Indian Political System: Problem and Prospects, New Delhi,

Global Vision Publishing House, 2006.

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34. M. M. Sury, Finance Commissions and Fiscal Federalism in India - (English), Indian

Tax Foundation, New Delhi, 2015

35. Mahapatra Mihir, Fiscal Federalism in India Vdm Verlag,2011

36. Jayesh Shah (Eds), Mrutuyanjaya Sahu Lancy Lobo, FEDERALISM IN INDIA: Towards

a Fresh Balance of Power, Rawat Publication New Delhi,2014

37. Guljit K. Arora Globalisation, Federalism And Decentralisation Implications:For

India , Bookwell,2002

38. Ken Kollman , Pradeep Chhibber, The Formation of National Party Systems:

Federalism and Party Competition in Canada, Great Britain, India, and the United

States (Federalism and Party Competition in Canada, Great Britain, India, and the

United States), Princeton University Press,2010

39. Singh Pritam, Federalism, Nationalism and Development (India and the Punjab

Economy), Taylor and Francis, 2008

40. C. Rangarajan, FEDERALISM AND FISCAL TRANSFERS IN INDIA, OXFORD

UNIVERSITY PRESS-NEW DELHI,2011

41. Kashyap C. Subash, Constitutional History of India: Federalism, Elections,

Government and Rule of Law (History of Science, Philosophy and Culture in Indian

Civilization, Vol. XIV, Part 5B) , PHISPC/Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt

Ltd,2015

42. Awasthy Kaushik, Federalism & presidents rule in india, Book Age Publications,2012

43. Saxena Rekha, RELATIONS IN CANADA AND INDIA, Manohar Publishers And

Distributors,2006

Social and Political Movements in South Asia (Course No. PS-31-DCE)

Suggested Readings

1. Agnihotri, Indu, and Mazumdar, Vina, “Changing Terms of Political Discourse:

Women’s Movement in India, 1970s—1990s”, in Oomen T, K. (Ed.), Social Movements:

Issues of Identity, Vol. 1, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2011.

2. Chattapadhyay, Tapan Kumar, India and the Ecology Question: Confrontation and

Reconstruction, Ekushe, Calcutta, 1999.

3. Chatterjee, Bandana, “Women and Politics in India”, in Chatterjee Rakhahari (Ed.)

Politics India: The State-Society Interface, South Asian Publishers, New Delhi, 2004.

4. Chatterjee, Partha, The Nation and Its Fragments: Colonial and Postcolonial Histories,

Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2001.

5. Kohli Atul, The Success of India’s Democracy, Cambridge University Press, New Delhi,

2004.

6. Oomen, T.K. “Protests Against Displacement by Development Projects in Oomen, T. K.

(Ed.) Social Movements: Issues of Identity, Vol. 1, Oxford University Press, New Delhi,

2011.

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7. Shah, Ghanshyam, Social Movements in India: A Review of Literature, Sage

Publications, New Delhi, 2007.

8. Shiva Vandana, “Ecology Movements in India”. In Oomen T. K. (Ed.), Social

Movements: Issues of Identity, Vol. 1, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2011.

9. Singh, M. P. and Saxena , Rekha, Indian Politics: Contemporary Issues and Concerns,

Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi, 2008.

Term work

Course No. PS-32- (DCE)

The Term Work (4 Credits) shall be discipline centric to be carried out under

the supervision of the concerned teacher/s of the department. Such students

are supposed to choose any sub-discipline of the Subject and work in

consultation and under the guidance of teachers in accordance with their

areas of specialization.

The Term work shall be submitted in the form of typed Dissertation limited

to 80-100 pages and shall be evaluated by one internal examiner followed by

presentation of work and viva voce. 60% marks will be allotted for

Dissertation and 40%for presentation and viva voce.

Course No. PS-33- (DCE)

Suggested Readings:

25. Alan Ryan (2014). On Marx—Revolutionary and Utopian, London: Liveright

Publishers.

26. Alison Jaggar (1983). Feminist Politics and Human Nature, Harvester Press.

27. Eric Hobsbawm (2010). How to Change the World—Tales of Marx and Marxism,

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28. Ernesto Laclau & Chantal Mouffe (1985). Hegemony and Sociaist Strategy. London:

Verso.

29. Ernesto Laclau (1990). New Reflections on the Revolution of our Time, London, Verso.

30. Istvan Meszaros (1970). Marx’s Theory of Alienation, London: Merlin Press.

31. Leszek Kolakowski (1978). Main Currents in Marxism (Vol. 1-3), Oxford: Clarendon

Press.

32. Lynda Nicoloson (ed.) (1990). Feminism/Postmodernism, London: Routledge.

33. Maxine Rodinson (1980). Marxism and the Muslim World, Hyderabad: Orient

Longman.

34. Patricia Williams (1991). The Alchemy of Race and Rights, Harvard, MT: Harvard

University Press.

35. Ronaldo Munck. A Difficult Dialogue: Marxism and Nationalism, London: Zed.

36. Terry Eagleton (2011). Why Marx was Right, London: Yale University Press.