Description
Tinker’s “Separate and Unequal: India and the Indians in the British Commonwealth 1920-1950” offers a comprehensive historical analysis of India’s evolving status within the British Commonwealth during a critical period of decolonization and national transformation. The work examines the political structures, racial hierarchies, and power dynamics that defined India’s relationship with Britain and other Commonwealth nations.
Through detailed research and nuanced argumentation, Tinker explores how Indian leaders negotiated independence while managing Commonwealth membership, highlighting the tensions between formal equality and practical inequality. The book addresses themes of sovereignty, representation, and the legacy of British colonialism on Indian society.
This essential text provides historians, political scientists, and students of postcolonial studies with vital perspectives on how India asserted its identity and interests during the Commonwealth’s transformation from empire to association of independent nations.







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