cover image: The Asiatic Review. July 1938

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The Asiatic Review. July 1938

1938

In some of the smaller Provinces it has not always been easy to find men to act as Ministers who arc quite of the right calibre but in the main and on the whole the standard of ability and of courage is a high one; in the matter of maintaining law and order the Ministries are all of them determined to do their duty to the fiill. [...] The consequence of this is that in some of the Provinces the line of division tends to be between Congress on the one hand and the Moslem community on the other and that is a very unsatisfactory state of things. [...] And that perhaps must be put to the debit of the new Constitution; for it is the new elections that have been held the new Ministries that have been formed the changes that are made within the Civil Service and in the appoinment of individuals to particular posts—all these things have brought more into the forefront the diversity of interests between Hindus and Moslems and have made the feel [...] POWERS OF THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL Congress of course complains that the reservation of defence and everything to do with it to the Governor-General and his direct advisers would mean that the people of India would have no proper control over the finances at the Centre because most of the expenditure at the Centre is for purposes of defence. [...] Suppose Congress obtains power at the Centre does that mean separation from the British Empire the witdrawal of the Viceroy and Governors and the British officials and the British Army and the ending of the story of the last hundred and fifty years?
government politics public policy
Published in
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Segment Pages Author Actions
India and the Far Eastern Conflict
417-433 Edwin Haward view
India Today: The Political Situation
434-456 Viscount Samuel view
Empire Day Banquet of the Empire Societies
457-460 unknown view
Leprosy in the British Empire
461-463 Cuthbert Sprawson view
A Ceylon Holiday
464-470 C. Thorpe view
Hyderabad State as A Tourist Resort
471-483 E. Rosentha view
China’s Staying Power
484-490 C. Young view
Should the Chinese Language Be Latinized ?
491-493 unknown view
The Need for Co-Operation Between Australian and Dutch New Guinea
494-viii W. C. Klein view
Buddhist Cave Temples from China to Ellora
497-509 A. D. Brankston view
Shanghai: Its Problem and its Future
510-517 E. H. Anstice view
The Reuter Concession In Persia
518-533 L. E. Frechtling view
The Medium of Instruction in Indian Universities
534-542 Patrick Lacey view
Humanism in Shakespeare
543-548 S. N. A. Jafir view
Palestine and the Problem of Population in Poland
549-557 Smolénski view
Indians in South Africa
558-564 Stanley Rice view
Dictatorship by Proxy in India
565-569 Albion Banerji view
An Address on China
570-576 Rose Quong view
Reviews of Books
577-598 Rose unknown view