1st Edition

The Challenge to Democracy in Nepal

By T. Louise Brown Copyright 1996

    In 1990 Nepal's Peoples Movement reduced King Birendra from an absolute ruler to a constitutional monarch. This book is the first academic analysis of these events and places the 'revolution' of 1990 within the context of Nepali history.
    Louise Brown examines the background to Nepal's recent upheavals as well as covering the country's ealy history and its continuing problems of national integration. The previous, unsuccessful, democratic experiment and the nature of monarchical rule are discussed within an analysis of Nepal's social and economic modernisation. The evolution of political parties, Nepal's foreign relations and development issues - and the way in which these have moulded the political system - are explored in depth.
    Drawing on extensive interviews with leading politicians and influential figures the author provides a comprehensive survey of the Himalayan Kingdom's political development. This is an original contribution to the debate on democratization in the developing world.

    1 Traditional Nepal 2 The restoration of monarchical rule 3 Society and politics in the Panchayat System 4 King Birendra and the reformed Panchayat System 5 The Jana Andolan 6 The interim government 7 Democratic Nepal 8 Conclusion: The prospects for democracy in Nepal

    Biography

    T. Louise Brown is Lecturer in East Asian Studies, The Japan Centre, and Fellow of the Institute for Advanced Research in the Humanities, University of Birmingham.

    `This is an excellent new book on Nepal which both succinctly digests existing literature on the political history of the country and provides fresh insights into the prospects for democracy ... [It] is an extremely comprehensive, well written and stimulating book which is probably the best introduction to Nepali politics available today.' - David Page of the BBC World Service, International Affairs