Dr Chatterji has made a thorough and meticulous study of this intricate process of policy-making at the highest levels, on the basis of all available original papers -private and official. In so doing, he has refuted some of the established views. The Court of Directors and India Council are found to be much more effective as policy-makers than is generally supposed or was warranted by law. Wood and Ellenborough appear to have moulded policy more significantly than Vernon Smith and Stanley. The respective roles of the Home and Supreme Governments in policy-making are also revealed in a new light. Dalhousie as Governor-General does not appear to be that independent of Lon-don as is sometimes assumed; Canning as Viceroy is found to be relatively independent; and the achievements of Elgin and Lawrence are seen from a fresh angle. The book, says Dr Percival Spear, 'provides a valuable insight into the working of the Government of India'.
But in fact the inferences of logic were falsified by the practical working of the system. This working success demonstrated both the strength and weakness of British attitudes. Their strength was shown in working the unworkable by a strict attention to practical exigencies, by a willingness to give and take, by the restraint of not pressing a theoretical advantage too far or of pushing a point to its logical conclusion. Their weakness lay in the haziness which allowed such a situation to develop, and the mental laziness which preferred makeshifts to planning and make-belief to the mental discipline of logical rearrangement. The uneasy compromises, the evasions, half-truths and double talk used to cast a cloak of respectability over this opportunist behaviour, were some of the traits which earned for the British the reputation of hypocrisy.
Chaotic as the system seemed, there were certain hidden aids to its successful working. The first was the differing strengths of the various participating bodies. The support they could count on differed widely from their legal powers on paper. In political practice the twenty-four directors were reduced to the three members .of the Secret Committee, while the whole body was diluted by a number of government nominations. Deprived of trade, the Court of Directors was really reduced to the status of a managing agency.
The object of the present book, as the title indicates, is to examine how far, if at all, the two Acts affected the Minister's role in policy-making vis-a-vis the Court of Directors and the India Council ; and, secondly, how far they influenced the respective roles of the Home and Indian Governments. The dates of the study are 1853 to 1865. These have the incidental convenience of embracing the tenures of Sir Charles Wood at the India Board and India Office, which cover several years of both the Company's and Crown's periods of Indian Government, and thus allow an assessment of how the two systems were worked by the same individual in evolving Indian policies. These years also permit a survey of the brief period of working of the Home Government before the 1853 Charter came into effect in April 1854.
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