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Whither Indian Secularism?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
Extract
The present paper seeks ‘to explore the nature of Indian secularism, the difficulties it has run into, and the ways in which it may be revised’. This is a large undertaking for a short text, originally written as public lecture, particularly because the issues posed do nopt readily translate into plain questions. The most that I can hope to do is to raise some doubts and make a few suggestions for rethinking the issues involved.
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References
This paper is an extended version of the Fourth Caparo Annual Lecture which I was privilieged to give at the University of Hull, England, on 24 October 1991. It is being published simultaneously by the University.
I am grateful to Bhikhu Parekh, Asghar Ali Engineer, James Björkman, Gopal Krishna, T. P. McNeil, and Noel O'Sullivan for their comments and criticisms. In the preparation of the present text I have been helped by the encouragement of several colleagues in Delhi, particulary Upendra Baxi, Dharma Kumar, Ashis Nandy, Ramashray Roy, Satish Saberwal and Jit Uberoi.
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