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Home Rule for India

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  • Stuart, Graham H.

Abstract

The epoch-marking proclamation issued by Queen Victoria in 1858 announced to the people of India that they were to be admitted freely and impartially to political office. The autocratic bureaucracy of foreigners, culminating in the régime of Lord Curzon, when only about 4 per cent of the members of the Indian civil service were natives, was hardly a fulfillment of the spirit of this proclamation. Nor did the peoples of India consider it such. The spirit of unrest finally took shape in the Indian National Congress, founded in 1885, to give expression to the ideas of the educated classes; and this body soon came to be regarded as the unofficial Indian parliament. Each year it brought forward a list of ills which the government of India as then organized could not hope to remedy.

Suggested Citation

  • Stuart, Graham H., 1919. "Home Rule for India," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 13(2), pages 301-305, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:13:y:1919:i:02:p:301-305_01
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