Versuchen GOLD - Frei
The institutional scaffolding of the Emergency
Business Standard
|January 15, 2026
The Emergency was a defining moment in India’s history.
It has been justified: The Communist Party of India was the only political party that supported it. David Lockwood's 2016 book, The Communist Party of India and the Indian Emergency describes why. It has been explained extensively: More than a dozen books, ranging from David Selbourne’s An Eye to India to Christophe Jaffrelot and Pratinav Anil’s deeply researched work. It has been recalled by many through their experiences, such as in LK Advani's My Prison Diaries and the latest, The Conscience Network by Sugata Srinivasaraju, and analysed in books too numerous to cite.
But this volume is a bit different. It not only explores how the Emergency could be imposed in a democracy like India but also the many fine strands spun by the 18-month interregnum. Some of these skeins have become muscular narratives, like Hindutva (that, according to Kalpana Kannabiran emerged as a full-fledged force during the Emergency) while the fierce defence and support of civil rights honed by the Emergency by the likes of Justice V M Tarkunde has been supplanted by a grotesque form of nationalism that conflates the Indian nation with the Indian state. At the heart of the book is the unstated question: Despite all the pledges that an Emergency will never happen again, is India worse off today than it was when fundamental rights were suspended, freedom of speech was curtailed and the state could intrude in every aspect of a citizen’s life?
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 15, 2026-Ausgabe von Business Standard.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Business Standard
Business Standard
The long road to recovery
IBC and NCLT have helped banks in recovery and resolution of bad debt, but we need more NCLT members and Benches to reduce time taken
5 mins
January 19, 2026
Business Standard
BlackRock's Rick Rieder bid for Fed Chair gains traction
The candidacy of BlackRock’s Senior Managing Director Rick Rieder (pictured) to be the next Federal Reserve chair has gained late momentum, people familiar with the matter say, as President Donald Trump weighs congressional blowback in his bid to put a friendlier face at the head of the central bank.
1 mins
January 19, 2026
Business Standard
'Earnings growth to move more in line with nominal GDP'
The growth outlook remains constructive, but current valuations already reflect much of that optimism, says Anand Shah, chief investment officer, portfolio management services and alternative investment fund at ICICI Prudential Asset Management Company. In an email interview with Abhishek Kumar, Shah says the market offers selective opportunities, with some pockets looking expensive and others presenting attractive businesses with clear earnings visibility. Edited excerpts:
3 mins
January 19, 2026
Business Standard
IT firms meander through deal-pricing complexity in era of AI agents
ANALYSTS SAID THE TRADITIONAL PRICING MODEL THAT HAS LONG RELIED ON TIME AND MATERIAL TO DETERMINE HOW MUCH A CLIENT PAID PER EMPLOYEE, NEEDED TO BE TWEAKED
2 mins
January 19, 2026
Business Standard
SunSource founder-led trio plans ₹10K cr cleantech push
The first project involves a 6 gigawatt solar cell and module manufacturing plant with integrated ingot and wafer facilities at Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar in Maharashtra.
1 min
January 19, 2026
Business Standard
Two busy weeks ahead for MEA
From hosting UAE President and Poland's deputy PM to continuing negotiations on trade with the US, South Block prepares for a hectic diplomatic calendar. Archis Mohan reports
2 mins
January 19, 2026
Business Standard
Smallcap MFs looking to distance from stocks beyond top 1,000
Their exposure just 2% of scheme corpus, finds study
1 min
January 19, 2026
Business Standard
Pentagon readies 1,500 troops to possibly deploy to Minnesota
The Pentagon has ordered about 1,500 active-duty soldiers to prepare for a possible deployment to Minnesota, the site of large protests against the government’s deportation drive, US media reported on Sunday.
1 min
January 19, 2026
Business Standard
Proptech firms see sustained investor interest
Deeper adoption in realty market witnessed
1 min
January 19, 2026
Business Standard
Legal tangle
Investment requires long-term certainty
2 mins
January 19, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
