ABSTRACT

This book studies how a modern monarchy transformed Bhutan into a parliamentary democracy. A political ethnography, it focuses on the historic elections of 2007–2008, and studies democracy and its transformational processes from the ground up. It draws on historical as well as contemporary theories about kingship and regime change to analyse Bhutan’s nascent democratic process and reflect on the direction of political change, both at the state and local levels in the aftermath of the elections. It also presents insights into the electoral and political process by giving a first-hand account of the author’s own participation in the elections and ponders on the larger political implications of this election for the region.

A strong theoretical discussion situated in robust fieldwork and personal experience, this book will be an essential read for scholars and researchers of politics, especially comparative politics and political institutions, South Asian and Himalayan Studies, political sociology and social anthropology.

chapter |32 pages

Introduction

Revisiting theories of kingship and democratic transition 1

chapter 1|22 pages

The Constitution

Royal gift or public responsibility? Setting the discourse for democracy 1

chapter 2|20 pages

Election Commission and electoral laws

Oscillating between “rational” and “magical” modes

chapter 3|26 pages

Mock elections

The practice of an idea

chapter 4|35 pages

National Council elections

A national idiom for conducting local arguments

chapter 5|30 pages

Assembly elections as moral battle

Moralizing of politics

chapter 6|18 pages

Electoral costs and losses

Miscalculation, misinformation and misunderstanding

chapter 7|24 pages

Powerless government?

Contesting royal prerogatives and projects 1

chapter 8|31 pages

Convention of 19 July 2013

Manifesting affective polarization

chapter 9|16 pages

The monarch above politics

Kingship and democratic consolidation

chapter |31 pages

Conclusion

Disjunction, continuity and transformation