000 01743nam a22002537a 4500
005 20250820151949.0
008 250820b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9788188643806
037 _cGifted
_nRRRLF, Kolkata
041 _aEnglish
082 _a342.54083
_bSAR/CI
100 _aSaradindu Mukherji
245 _aCITIZENSHIP AMENDMENT ACT, 2019 : Some Reflections
250 _a1
260 _aNew Delhi
_bAkshaya Prakashan
_c2021
300 _g248
500 _aIndia’s leaders – both political and intellectual have usually failed to anticipate the shape of things to come, and a society which refuses to learn from the past can not escape disaster. The victims of religio-ethnic cleansing from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan have been seeking shelter in India for decades. Originally, they belong to India. They are victims of history and for no fault of theirs. The state policies of these three countries from where the persecuted people flee to India have been brought under the scanner as never before. India’s troubled past over the millennium and religious demography provide the backdrop. Unfortunately, independent India’s ruling class ensured that its polity, educational system and the conduct of foreign affairs usually kept the world largely apathetic and insensitive to this tragedy for purely political considerations. Based on irrefutable evidence, hereis an analysis of all those historical forces, explaining the imperative necessity of the CAA 2019, which offers a solution as never before to our refugee problem.
650 _aLaw 
650 _aConstitutional and administrative law
650 _a Asia 
650 _aIndian Subcontinent
942 _cLEN
942 _2ddc
999 _c196129
_d196129