IRMA-International.org: Creator of Knowledge
Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

In the Name of the Holy Cow!: The Issue of Cow Vigilantism in Contemporary India

In the Name of the Holy Cow!: The Issue of Cow Vigilantism in Contemporary India
View Sample PDF
Author(s): Bodhisattwa Som (REVA University, India)
Copyright: 2024
Pages: 24
Source title: Economic and Societal Impact of Organized Crime: Policy and Law Enforcement Interventions
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Alicia Danielsson (University of Bolton, UK & Hume Institute for Postgraduate Studies, Switzerland)
DOI: 10.4018/979-8-3693-0327-6.ch009

Purchase

View In the Name of the Holy Cow!: The Issue of Cow Vigilantism in Contemporary India on the publisher's website for pricing and purchasing information.

Abstract

India's constitutional ethos establishes itself to be a secular country, believing in every citizen's right to follow their own religious beliefs. However, in the recent past, the evolution of Hindu nationalistic politics of hate, coupled with a monolithic and myopic viewpoint of construing the nation as a Hindu entity, has fanned the growth of fundamentalistic ideals of cow worship and cow protection. This has significantly led to the rise of non-state actors who employ any or all means possible of strong-arming minorities and the vulnerable sections of society in the name of cow protection. Thus, through this chapter, the author shall at the first instance argue the reasons for the rise of cow-vigilantism in India, situating it in a historical and socio-political context. The author's second argument would be to demonstrate how cow vigilantism has elevated to the status of organised crime in India. Finally, the author shall conclude with arguments suggesting ways to put an end to such heinous incidents of vigilantism and forge a way forward.

Related Content

Alicia Danielsson, Junaid Khan. © 2024. 35 pages.
Godfrey Mpandikizi. © 2024. 22 pages.
Nika Chitadze. © 2024. 23 pages.
Amit Anand. © 2024. 19 pages.
Elijah Tukwariba Yin. © 2024. 32 pages.
Baidyanath Mukherjee, Arun Kumar Singh. © 2024. 22 pages.
Himanshi Bhatia, Prateek Sikchi. © 2024. 19 pages.
Body Bottom