Reconstruction of Democracy
The constitutional frameworks of India, the world’s largest democracy, and the United States, its oldest, explicitly enshrine liberty and equality as fundamental rights. The Indian Constitution empowers common citizens with the right to vote, placing the ultimate authority to choose rulers firmly in their hands. Yet, after seven decades of independent journey, a fundamental question haunts democratic thinkers: Is the Indian citizen genuinely sovereign, or merely a subject surviving at the mercy of bureaucratic discretion?
https://www.boloji.com/articles/55477/reconstruction-of-democracy
The constitutional frameworks of India, the world’s largest democracy, and the United States, its oldest, explicitly enshrine liberty and equality as fundamental rights. The Indian Constitution empowers common citizens with the right to vote, placing the ultimate authority to choose rulers firmly in their hands. Yet, after seven decades of independent journey, a fundamental question haunts democratic thinkers: Is the Indian citizen genuinely sovereign, or merely a subject surviving at the mercy of bureaucratic discretion?
https://www.boloji.com/articles/55477/reconstruction-of-democracy
Reconstruction of Democracy
The constitutional frameworks of India, the world’s largest democracy, and the United States, its oldest, explicitly enshrine liberty and equality as fundamental rights. The Indian Constitution empowers common citizens with the right to vote, placing the ultimate authority to choose rulers firmly in their hands. Yet, after seven decades of independent journey, a fundamental question haunts democratic thinkers: Is the Indian citizen genuinely sovereign, or merely a subject surviving at the mercy of bureaucratic discretion?
https://www.boloji.com/articles/55477/reconstruction-of-democracy
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