000 02218nam a22003257a 4500
005 20241228133339.0
008 241224b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9789391028305
037 _cPurchased
_nModern Book Centre, Thiruvanthapuram
041 _aEnglish
082 _bANG/FI
_a954.03
100 _aAngellica Aribam
245 _aFIFTEEN
_b: Lives and Times of the Women in India’s Constituent Assembly
250 _a1
260 _aUK
_bHachette
_c2024
300 _g310
500 _a'We are here laying down principles [of democracy] for days to come, for generations, for the nation' In 1946, the Indian Constituent Assembly was tasked with formulating the document that would soon govern the largest democracy in the world. Among its 299 members, were 15 women. These women were vastly different from each other – from members of royal families and the political elite to those from marginalized Dalit and Latin Christian communities; staunch Gandhians to revolutionaries; grassroots social workers to leaders of the global social order. In this keenly researched book, Angellica Aribam and Akash Satyawali chronicle the lives of these trailblazing women – recounting the influences that shaped them, the norms they defied, and the convictions they stood for. Guided by their own life experiences, these women contributed to debates on the idea of India that resonate even today – from drafting progressive personal laws to the need for a uniform civil code, from the rights of detainees to their varied and evolving opinions on reservations. Bringing alive the history of the Indian Constitution in rich detail, The Fifteen pays tribute to the undeniable contribution of women to the Indian republic, while reminding us we must understand the past to better shape the future.
650 _aSocial sciences, sociology & anthropology
650 _aWomen
650 _aHistory, geographic treatment, biography
650 _aAsia
650 _aIndian Subcontinent
650 _aHistory of Asia
650 _aIndia and neighboring south Asian countries
650 _a1971–
700 _aAkash Satyawali
942 _cLEN
942 _2ddc
942 _2ddc
999 _c194279
_d194279