British policy in India, 1858-1905
Material type: TextPublication details: Cambridge CUP 2008Description: 423pISBN: 9780521058605Subject(s): India-History India -- History -- British occupation Colonial politicsDDC classification: 325.342 Summary: British Policy In India Is A Study Of The First Phase Of British Rule In India Under The Crown. It Seeks To Examine The Ideals And Aspirations Of The British Parties And Statesmen, Their Ways And Methods Of Implementing Them, And The Consequences, Both Anticipated And Unintended, Of Their Efforts. The Author Has Studied The Private As Well As The Public Correspondence Of The Viceroys, Secretaries Of State, And Others Concerned, Such As Gladstone And Assessment Of British Policy Towards India As A Whole During This Period, This Book Makes An Important Contribution To The Current Reinterpretation Of British Indian History.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | 325.342 GOP/B (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 53232 |
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325.341 095 48 SUT/O Other landscapes: colonialism and the predicament of authority in ninettenth century South India | 325.3410954 SCH/R The rise and fall of British India : imperialism as inequality | 325.341095409041 HER/G Gandhi & Churchill: the epic rivalry that destroyed an empire and forged our age | 325.342 GOP/B British policy in India, 1858-1905 | 325.346 098 MAH/C Colonialism and postcolonial development : | 325.47 SHE/M Migration, refugee policy, and state building in postcommunist Europe / | 327 Introduction to global politics |
British Policy In India Is A Study Of The First Phase Of British Rule In India Under The Crown. It Seeks To Examine The Ideals And Aspirations Of The British Parties And Statesmen, Their Ways And Methods Of Implementing Them, And The Consequences, Both Anticipated And Unintended, Of Their Efforts. The Author Has Studied The Private As Well As The Public Correspondence Of The Viceroys, Secretaries Of State, And Others Concerned, Such As Gladstone And Assessment Of British Policy Towards India As A Whole During This Period, This Book Makes An Important Contribution To The Current Reinterpretation Of British Indian History.
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