AmmaK. (1948). Fundamental rights in relation to the Indian constitution.The Indian Journal of Political Science, 9(2/3), 19–23. http://www.jstor.org/stable/42743209
2.
AustinG. (1966). The Indian constitution: Cornerstone of a nation. Oxford University Press.
3.
AustinG. (1999). Working a democratic constitution: A history of the Indian experience. Oxford University Press.
4.
BajpaiR. (2011). Debating difference: Group rights and liberal democracy in India. Oxford University Press.
5.
BanerjeeD. (1949). Indian states and the future constitution of India.The Indian Journal of Political Science, 10(1/2), 94–100. http://www.jstor.org/stable/42743823
6.
BaxiU. (2002). The (im)possibility of constitutional justice: Seismographic notes on Indian constitutionalism. In HasanZoya, SridharanE., & SudarshanR. (Eds.), India’s living constitution: Ideas, practices, controversies (pp. 31–63). Permanent Black.
BhargavaR. (2008). Politics and ethics of the Indian constitution (pp. 1–38). Oxford University Press.
9.
BhatiaG. (2019). The transformative constitution: A radical biography in nine acts. HarperCollins Publishers India.
10.
ChandB. (1940). Amending process of the Indian constitution.The Indian Journal of Political Science, 2(1), 28–40. http://www.jstor.org/stable/42742975
11.
ChandokeN. (2002). Individual and group rights: A view from India. In HasanZ., SridharanE., & SudarshanR. (Eds.), India’s living constitution ideas, practices, controversies (pp. 207–241). Permanent Black.
12.
ChaubeS. K. (1973). Constituent Assembly of India: Springboard of Revolution. People’s Publishing House.
13.
DeR. (2018). A people’s constitution: The everyday life of law in the Indian republic. Princeton University Press.
14.
GhosalA. (1953). Federalism in the Indian constitution.The Indian Journal of Political Science, 14(4), 317–332. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41853768
15.
GuptaS. D. (1979). Justice and the political order in India: An inquiry into the institutions and ideologies, 1950–1972.KP Bagchi.
16.
GuruG. (2008). Constitutional justice: Positional and cultural. In BhargavaR. (Ed.), Politics and ethics of the Indian constitution (pp. 230–248). Oxford University Press.
17.
GuruG. (2010). Social justice. In Jayal, GopalNiraja, & MehtaPratap Bhanu (Eds.), The Oxford companion to politics in India (pp. 361–380). Oxford University Press.
18.
HaqqiS. (1961). Position of the states under the Indian constitution.The Indian Journal of Political Science, 22(1/2), 43–52. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41853869
JagannadhamV. (1947). Division of powers in the Indian constitution. The Indian Journal of Political Science, 8(3), 742–751. http://www.jstor.org/stable/42743171
21.
JhaS. (2003). Rights versus representation: Defending minority interests in the constituent assembly.Economic and Political Weekly, 38(16), 1579–1583.
22.
JhaS. (2004). Representation and its epiphanies: A reading of constituent assembly debates. Economic and Political Weekly, 39(39), 4357–4360.
23.
KeithA. B. (1969). A constitutional history of India: 1600–1935. Barnes Noble.
24.
KhilnaniS. (1997). The idea of India. H. Hamilton.
25.
KhilnaniS., RaghavanV., & ThiruvengadamA. K. (Eds.). (2013). Comparative constitutionalism in South Asia (Vol. 22). Oxford University Press.
26.
KhoslaM. (2020). India’s founding moment: The constitution of a most surprising democracy. Harvard University Press.
27.
KrishnaswamyS. (2010). Democracy and constitutionalism in India: A study of the basic structure doctrine. Oxford University Press.
28.
MahajanG. (1998). Identities and rights: Aspects of liberal democracy in India. Oxford University Press.
29.
MahajanG. (2008). Religion and the Indian constitution: Questions of separation and equality. In BhargavaR. (Ed.), Politics and ethics of the Indian constitution (pp. 297–310). Oxford University Press.
30.
MahajanG. (2013). India: Political ideas and the making of a democratic discourse. Zed Books Ltd.
31.
MehtaP. B. (2007). India’s unlikely democracy: The rise of judicial sovereignty.Journal of Democracy, 18(2), 70–83.
32.
MenonN. (2004). Citizenship and the passive revolution: Interpreting the first amendment.Economic and Political Weekly, 39(18), 1812–1819. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4414964
33.
NigamA. (2004). A text without author: Locating constituent assembly as event.Economic and Political Weekly, 39(21), 2107–2113. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4415058
34.
PalshikarS. (2008). Indian state constitution and beyond. In BhargavaR. (Ed.), Politics and ethics of the Indian constitution (pp. 143–163). Oxford University Press.
35.
PalshikarS. (2020). Decoding the grammar of constitutionalism [Review of the book India’s founding moment: The constitution of a most surprising democracy by Madhav Khosla]. Economic and Political Weekly, 55(35), p. 29. https://www.epw.in/journal/2020/35/book-reviews/decoding-grammar-constitutionalism.html
36.
PyleeM. V. (1967). Constitutional history of India, 1600–1959. Asia Publishing House.
37.
RaoB. S. (1968). The framing of India’s constitution: a study (Vol. 1–4). Indian Institute of Public Administration.
38.
RauB. N. (1960). Indiaʼs constitution in the making. Orient Longmans.
39.
RoyA. (2010). Mapping citizenship in India. Oxford University Press.
40.
SarkarS. (2001). Indian democracy: The historical inheritance. In KohliAtul (ed) The success of India’s Democracy (pp. 23–46) Cambridge University Press.
41.
ShankarS. (2009). Scaling justice: India’s Supreme Court, social rights, and civil liberties. Oxford University Press.
42.
TushnetM., & KhoslaM. (Eds.). (2015). Unstable constitutionalism: Law and politics in South Asia. Cambridge University Press.