Rewriting India: The Construction of the ‘Hindutva’ Citizen in the Indian state

Third World Approaches to International Law Review, Reflections No. 22/2020

11 Pages Posted: 4 Sep 2020

See all articles by Vasanthi Venkatesh

Vasanthi Venkatesh

University of Windsor, Faculty of Law

Fahad Ahmad

Carleton University - School of Public Policy and Administration

Date Written: June 25, 2020

Abstract

The paper sheds light on India's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) insidious use of legitimate state power through administrative regulation, constitutionalism, citizenship determination, adoption of international law and neoliberal economic policies, to further its ‘Hindutva’ ideology. This reflection focuses on two aspects. First, we show how, by implementing the National Registry of Citizens (NRC) along with other national documentation regimes, the government is using facially neutral administrative regulations to construct the ‘documented’ Indian citizen. This ‘citizen’ is made to fit with Hindutva ideals by disenfranchising Muslims and threatening the de facto and de jure citizenship of nondominant caste Hindus and other groups that challenge the ideology. While these state actions may seem distinct, they resemble traditional colonial practices that the BJP is skilfully adopting to advance its discriminatory political ends. Second, we show that, with the CAA, the BJP is perversely using the humanitarian principles of refugee law to construct neighbouring Muslim states as savage, and whose victims have to be protected by the Hindutva state. Thus, India is replicating the practices of liberal, democratic states of the Global North that continue to use logics of coloniality, exceptionalism and racism to maintain systemic inequities and embed oppressions.

Keywords: colonialism, India, citizenship, Hindutva, right-wing ideology

Suggested Citation

Venkatesh, Vasanthi and Ahmad, Fahad, Rewriting India: The Construction of the ‘Hindutva’ Citizen in the Indian state (June 25, 2020). Third World Approaches to International Law Review, Reflections No. 22/2020 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3660660

Vasanthi Venkatesh (Contact Author)

University of Windsor, Faculty of Law ( email )

Windsor, Ontario
Canada
N9B 3P4 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://https://www.uwindsor.ca/law/983/vasanthi-venkatesh

Fahad Ahmad

Carleton University - School of Public Policy and Administration ( email )

Ottawa, Ontario
Canada

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