Open Access Research Article

GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT OF TEMPLES IN THE SECULAR STATE OF INDIA

Journal: White Black Legal ISSN: 2581-8503 Published: 2023/09/02 Volume: 2 Issue: 15
Author(s) PRIYA KUMARI
Journal White Black Legal Law Journal
ISSN 2581-8503
Publication Date 2023/09/02
Access Type Open Access
Volume 2
Issue 15

Abstract

[1] E. R. Sand, “State and Religion in India: The Indian Secular Model” 19 Nordic

Journal of Religion and Society, (2006).

[2] R. Dhavan and G. Larson, “The Road to Xanadu: India’s Quest for Secularism” 301-329 (2001).

[3] G. Phillips, “Introduction to Secularism” National Secular Society, London, (2011).

[4]J. J. Hemmer Jr. and XLIV Jefferson, Wall of Separation: How Jurisprudential Interpretation Shaped a Secular Polity  27-39 (Free Speech Yearbook, London, 1st edn., 2009).

[5]R. Bhargava, “Inclusion and Exclusion in South Asia: The Role of Religion. Human Development Report Office” UNDP (2004).

[6] S. Parthasarathy, “How Hinduism was nationalized” Live Mint, April 3, 2016.

[7] G. Ramesh, Governance and Administration of Temples: A Framework (2020). (Research Paper No. 621, IIM Bangalore).

[8] A. A. Choudhary, “Temples should be managed by devotees, not

government: SC,  The Times of India, April 8, 2019.

[9] JusCorpus, “Hindu Temples Under Government Control”(2022).

[10]P. Gupta and S. Kumar, “The growing business of religion in India”,

Live Mint. May 20, 2017.

[11]Available at: https://www.legalservicesindia.com/article/1687/Constitutional-Validity-of-the-Hindu-Religious-and-Charitable-Endowment-Act.html#google_vignette (Last visited on 18 July 2023)

 

[12] Deborah Sutton, “Antiquity, and Colonial Custody of the Hindu Temple in British India” 47 Cambridge University Press, Modern Asian Studies, 135- 166, (2013).

[13] Hemmer Jr. and J. Jefferson, “Wall of Separation: How Jurisprudential

Interpretation Shaped a Secular Polity” 44(1) Free Speech Yearbook, 27-39, (2009).

[14] Franklin A. Presler, “The Structure and Consequences of Temple Policy in Tamil Nadu”, 56 Pacific Affairs, 232-246, (1983).

[15] F.A. Presler, “Religion Under Bureaucracy: Policy and Administration for

Hindu Temples in South India” Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1987).

[16] 1964 AIR 1501

[17] AIR 1954 SC 282

[18]1954 SCR 1005

 

[19] Amit Anand Choudhary, “Temples should be managed by devotees, not government” Times of India, Aug.08, 2022.

[20]I. Roy, “Disjunctions of Democracy and Liberalism: Agonistic Imaginations of Dignity in Bihar” 42 Journal of South Asian Studies 344-358 (2019).

[21] Statistics are taken from an expert committee report which was set up in taking repair work at about 43,000 temples which are under HR&CE department.

[22] Sanjeev Nayyar, “Indian govt won’t be any different from British if Hindus can’t manage their own temples?” The Print, June 25,2021.

[23] Suhirth Parthasarthy , “How Hinduism was Nationalised?” Live Mint, May 05,2023

[24] Hindu Religious Endowments Commission, “Report of the Hindu Religious

 Endowments Commission” New Delhi (1962).

[25]Sandeep Vellaram, “A draft bill to regulate churches and the controversies around it” The News Minute,  July 30, 2022 .

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Journal Information

Journal White Black Legal
ISSN 2581-8503
Access Open Access
Language English

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