000 01362nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c45250
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008 200204s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a8185351023
082 _a342.085 CHA
100 _aChaturvedi , D. C.
245 0 _aIndian fundamental rights
260 _aMerrut
260 _bSaru Pub.
260 _c1992
300 _a239 p.
520 _aThe present book is not a mere analysis of the fundamental rights as embodied in the Indian Constitution; it goes a little deeper. It seeks to analyse different concepts of rights both in the Indian as well as the western political traditions. and it also endeavaurs to find out the extent to which our Founding Fathers were influenced by them. The emergence of the concept of rights in our country is a modern phenomenon. To trace its genesis we need go only as far back as the time of the Permanent Settlement, under which the colonial rulers created property rights in land. This was the signal of a revolutionary change in the Indian body politic. It gave rise to litigation and litigation necessitated the birth of the class of professional lawyers. This was the beginning of the rise of middle classes in India. As in the west, in our country also, the middle classes were the harbinger of the concept of rights.
650 _aFundamental rights India
942 _cB
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