An Empirical Investigation and Detailed Critical Analysis of Administration and Management of GOI Under the Leadership of Narendra Modi between 2014 To 2021
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55544/ijrah.2.5.30Keywords:
Modi government, BJP tenure, GOI, ModiAbstract
Under Narendra Modi's able leadership, India has bagged some outstanding achievements and perhaps some of the biggest ones. Amongst all, one initiative of the Modi government that is being appreciated the most is making India free from open defecation. The net aim is to ensure the total sewage treatment takes this considerable initiative forward. Rivers are considered to be holy in the Indian culture. It is essential to ensure that this aim is executed and monitored enthusiastically and with utmost professionalism. India has also surpassed countries like France for becoming the sixth-largest economy globally and is still behind China, the USA, the UK, Japan, and Germany. In the past few months, the GOI has been maintaining its stance that it would be under the three top economies of the world by the year 2030. However, India has already become the third-largest economy globally regarding purchase power parity scale, only behind the USA and China. The Narendra Modi government is often criticized by its opposition for making many foreign trips. However, we cannot ignore that Narendra Modi's trips to different nations have helped our country make many friends. Whether it is about a warm relationship with Obama, Trump, or attending the Ganga Aarti with Prime Minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe, Narendra Modi has developed relationships that benefit our country in the long run.
Downloads
Metrics
References
Chhibber, P. and Verma, R., (2014), The BJP's 2014 Modi Wave: An Ideological Consolidation of the Right. Economic and Political Weekly, 49(39), 50–56.
Hall I., (2016), Multialignment and Indian Foreign Policy under Narendra Modi. The Round Table, 105(3), 271-286.
Mukherjee K., (2016), Security Challenges Faced by the Modi Administration in the Indo-Pacific Region. The Journal of Comparative Asian Development, 15(1), 156-178.
Plagemann J., Destradi S., (2019), Populism and Foreign Policy: The Case of India. Foreign Policy Analysis, 15(2), 283-301.
Chandra V., (2017), Modi Government and Changing Patterns in Indian Foreign Policy. Journal of International Relations, 21(2), 98-117.
Sridharan E., (2014), India's Watershed Vote: Behind Modi's Victory, Journal of Democracy, 20-33.
Chaturvedy R.R., (2017), The Indian Ocean Policy of the Modi Government, Modi and the World, pp. 8, 163-184.
Basrur R., (2017), Modi's foreign policy fundamentals: a trajectory unchanged, International Affairs, 93(1), 7–26.
Kaul, N., (2017), Rise of the Political Right in India: Hindutva-Development Mix, Modi Myth, and Dualities, Journal of Labor and Society, 20(4), 523-548.
Khanna, S., (2015), The Transformation of India's Public Sector: Political Economy of Growth and Change. Economic and Political Weekly, 50(5), 47–60.
Aiyar, Y., (2019), Modi Consolidates Power: Leveraging Welfare Politics. Journal of Democracy, 30(4), 78-88.
Brewster, D., (2015), The Australia-India Framework for Security Cooperation: Another step towards an Indo-Pacific security partnership. Security Challenges, 11(1), 39–48.
Gopal, D., and Ahlawat D., (2015), Australia-India Strategic Relations: From Estrangement to Engagement. India Quarterly, 71(3), 206–220.
Kaura, V., (2020), India's Relations with China from the Doklam Crisis to the Galway Tragedy. India Quarterly, 76(4), 501–518.
Bajpai, K., (2017), Narendra Modi's Pakistan and China Policy: Assertive Bilateral Diplomacy, Active Coalition Diplomacy, International Affairs, 93(1), 69–91.
Choedon, Y., (2015), India and Democracy Promotion: Cautious Approach and Opportunity, India Quarterly, 71(2), 160–173.
Hall, I., (2015), Is a Modi Doctrine Emerging in Indian Foreign Policy? Australian Journal of International Affairs, 69(3), 247–252.
Hall, I., (2017), Narendra Modi and India's Normative Power, International Affairs, 93(1), 113–131.
Chhibber, P., Ostermann, S., (2014), The BJP's fragile mandate: Modi and vote mobilizers in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections. Studies in Indian Politics, 2(22), 137–151.
Gupta, P., Shrimankar, D., (2019), How nationalism helped the BJP. Seminar, 720, 38–43.
Suri, K. C., Verma, R., (2017), Democratizing the BJP. Seminar, 699, 26–31.
Sinha S., (2017), Fragile Hegemony: Modi, Social Media, and Competitive Electoral Populism in India, International Journal of Communication, 11, 4158–4180.
Chadha, K. and Guha, P., (2016), The Bharatiya Janata Party's online campaign and citizen involvement in India's 2014 election. International Journal of Communication, 10, 4389–4406.
Chakravartty, P. and Roy, S., (2015), Mr. Modi goes to Delhi: Mediated populism and the 2014 Indian elections. Television & New Media, 16(4), 311–322.
Pal, J., Chandra, P. and Vydiswaran, V. G., (2016), Twitter and the rebranding of Narendra Modi. Economic & Political Weekly, 51(8), 52–60.
Chhibber, P and Verma, R., (2019), The rise of the second dominant party system in India: BJP's new social coalition in 2019. Studies in Indian Politics, 7(2): 131–148.
Pallathadka, H., & Pallathadka, L. K. (2022). Analysis and Survey of People’s Perception of India under the Leadership of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi. International Journal of Psychosocial Rehabilitation, 26(01), 93–106.
Pallathadka, H., & Kirana Pallathadka, L. (2021). Study on Rising of Yogi Adityanath and Survey on People’s Perception on his Style of Administration and Governance. Journal of Contemporary Issues in Business and Government, 27(5), 2870–2881. https://doi.org/10.47750/cibg.2021.27.05.149
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Integrated Journal for Research in Arts and Humanities
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.