Gita Subrahmanyam
London School of Economics and Political Science
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Commonwealth & Comparative Politics | 2006
Gita Subrahmanyam
Abstract The concept of empire has undergone a revival in recent years in the context of debates over American power and hegemony in world politics. Authors such as Niall Ferguson and Deepak Lal have used the British Empire as an exemplar to demonstrate that empires can be benign, engendering social and economic development and enabling democracy. In this article, I argue that British imperialism, far from being benign, in most cases undermined colonial democratisation and development through its focus on maintaining physical order and control and sustaining economic extraction. This is demonstrated by both the budgetary priorities and the political and institutional machinations of British colonial regimes. However, different colonies experienced distinct post-independence trajectories, depending upon the character of indigenous social cleavages, elite strategies, the formation of political parties and movements, and the ability of indigenous leaders to manipulate limited opportunity structures. Indias distinctive pathway to democracy would not have been possible had partition not fixed a potentially serious demographic problem by making government institutions inherited from the British suitable to Indias social structure. Pakistans transition to democracy was impeded by partition, which deprived Pakistan of both its central state apparatus and its integrative national party. Transitions to democracy in Nigeria, Kenya and Tanzania were blocked by an entrenched history of autocracy, inappropriate government structures and a lack of well-trained political elites. Had British officials done more, earlier on, in these countries to modernise government structures and develop political capacities, they too may have successfully democratised.
In: Dowding, K and Dumont, P, (eds.) The selection of ministers in Europe. Taylor & Francis (2009) | 2009
Samuel Berlinski; Torun Dewan; Keith Dowding; Gita Subrahmanyam
Parliamentary Affairs | 1995
Patrick Dunleavy; Stuart Weir; Gita Subrahmanyam
Archive | 2010
Mikael Drackner; Gita Subrahmanyam
In: Dowding, K. and Dumont, P., (eds.) The Selection of Ministers in Europe: Hiring and Firing. (pp. 58-78). Routledge: Abingdon, UK. (2008) | 2008
Samuel Berlinski; Torun Dewan; Keith Dowding; Gita Subrahmanyam
Archive | 2014
Gita Subrahmanyam; Vincent Castel
Archive | 2011
Gita Subrahmanyam
Archive | 2003
Gita Subrahmanyam
Archive | 2015
Gita Subrahmanyam
Archive | 2015
Gita Subrahmanyam