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This essay reviews the development and growth of the field of South Asian comparative constitutional law by analysing three pioneering scholarships published in the last ten years in the field: ‘Comparative Constitutionalism in South Asia’ (OUP, 2012, edited by Sunil Khilnani, Vikram Raghavan and Arun Thiruvengadam), ‘Unstable Constitutionalism: Law and Politics in South Asia’ (Harvard University Press 2015, edited by Mark Tushnet and Madhav Khosla), and ‘Constitutional Resilience in South Asia’ (Hart Publishing 2023, edited by Swati Jhaveri, Tarunabh Khaitan and Dinesha Samararatne). The essay argues that the South Asian comparative constitutional field is slowly shifting towards a greater grounding of differences amongst the South Asian jurisdictions beyond India and Indian constitutional experience. Through a review of themes of resilience and backsliding in South Asia, the essay demonstrates that such a shift is welcomed as the South Asian experience requires plural explanation and theorisation. South Asia both affirms and disturbs the existing categories of ‘democracy’, ‘backsliding’ and ‘resilience’. Grounding differences through immersive, contextual and bottom-up comparison is the way ahead.
Surbhi Karwa (Sun,) studied this question.