( ISSN 2277 - 9809 (online) ISSN 2348 - 9359 (Print) ) New DOI : 10.32804/IRJMSH

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FORMATION AND GROWTH OF COALITION GOVERNMENT OF INDIA

    1 Author(s):  MISS MANJULA V.PUJAR

Vol -  2, Issue- 1 ,         Page(s) : 70 - 78  (2011 ) DOI : https://doi.org/10.32804/IRJMSH

Abstract

The coalition government of India began with the decision of 1989. In any case, truly coalition governmental issues is more seasoned than the Indian constitution itself. Unified India had its first explore different avenues regarding coalitions in 1937 when decisions to the common lawmaking bodies under the Government of India Act, 1935, were held in 1937. The Congress had an implicit constituent comprehension with the Muslim League when it was not completely certain of a conclusive majority in the United Provinces' Legislature. In the Interim government of 1946, Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs were extensively given representation in administration. (Keywords: coalition government, party, multiparty ) Introduction

1. Bidyut Chakrabarty, Forging Power: Coalition Politics in India, New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2006,p.52. 
2. Arshi Khan, “Coalition Politics in India Since 1967”, in: Akhtar Majeed (ed.), Politics and Power Sharing, New Delhi, Manak Publication, 2000, p. 136. 
3. Zaheer M. Quraishi, “Coalition Government: Experience and Prospects”, in: S. Bhatt and V. Mani (eds), India on the Threshold of 21 stCentury :Shape of things to come, Delhi, Lance, 1999, p. 115.
4. Rajni Kothari, “The Congress System in India”, Asian Survey, Vol. IV, No. 12 Dec. 1964.p.35. 7 Iqbal Narain, “Coalitional Politics and the Indian Political System- the Crisis of Compatibility,” in: Saral K. Chatterji (ed.), The Coalition Government, Banglore: Christian Institute for the Study of Religion and Society, 1974,p. 139
5. L. Maheshwari, “Politics of Coalition”, Economic and Political Weekly, No. VII, 1970, p. 118
6. Rekha Saxena, “Party SystemTransition and the Electoral Turning Points in India”, Trends in Social Science Research, Delhi,Vol.5,No.1

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