000 01925nam a2200181Ia 4500
999 _c3142
_d3142
005 20220328161322.0
008 200202s9999 xx 000 0 und d
082 _a324.2 JHA
100 _a"Jhangiani, Motilal . A."
245 0 _aJana Sangh and Swatantra: a profile of the rightist parties in India
260 _aBombay
260 _bP.C. Manaktalas & Sons
260 _c1967
300 _a223p.
520 _aTHE IMPORTANCE OF political parties in a parliamentary demo cracy need hardly be emphasized. Modern democratic govern ments cannot function effectively in the absence of political parties. They play a very important part in the functioning of democracies inasmuch as they are the means of educating public opinion on general issues and also of criticizing government policies where they are not supported by incontrovertible argu ments. The most important function of the parties is of course to provide the possibility of an alternative government to that which is in office. The study of political parties, therefore, contributes in general to the understanding of the political life of the country of which they are constituent parts. Although political parties have attracted the attention of students of political science in the West, very few, if any, of our own serious students of the subject have been drawn to make objective studies of political parties. Even those who have endeavoured to write on Indian political parties have confined themselves to a general study in the main. No study, to the best of our knowledge, has been made about individual parties or ideologically affiliated groups of parties. In particular, no systematic attempt to study the rightist parties in India has been made here, in our country, in the past. It was with a view to filling this need in acquiring knowledge on political parties that I undertook the study.
650 _aPolitical parties
942 _cB
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