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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper which examines the textbook “Comparative Politics,” (author unknown as the text pages were faxed in by student), and discusses the political and economic development of India as presented in the text. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAinpolt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Politics" we are offered a great deal of insight into many different political structures involving nations around the world. The following paper examines the text of this book, as it
regards India, and discusses some of the specific changes in the advancement of political and economic development in India. It should be noted that the text will only be cited
by page number as the author remains unknown to this particular writer. The text pages were faxed by the student requesting this paper and as such that is the only
bibliographic information available. Political Development The author of the text indicates that " The most prominent feature of Indian political culture in recent years has been the emergence
of a dominant state system, which has come to affect every sphere of Indian life and has promoted a pan-Indian middle-class consciousness at the expense of traditional culture" (347). What
this has done, the author argues, is truly push the society to be perhaps very simple, insisting that people are seen as the same as everyone else. It is a
process that has not taken into consideration the differences in the many levels of people in India. We are, for example, well aware of the caste system in India where
there are very clearly defined social classes. These social classes demand that people remain in the class they were born into, and thus we are offered a very rigid and
varied society. But, with the idea that all Indians are to be treated as though they are middle-class many different social classes get overlooked or ignored. This means that the
individual needs of the varying classes and also cultures, is being eliminated in the pursuit of political structure. The author further illustrates the inherent structure of the political system
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