Authors
B. R. Ambedkar Professor of Indian Constitutional Law
,
Columbia Law School
Madhav Khosla
Madhav Khosla is the B. R. Ambedkar Professor of Indian Constitutional Law and Professor of Political Science at Columbia University. He is interested in the nature and form of constitutions, especially from a comparative and theoretical perspective. He books include "India’s Founding Moment: The Constitution of a Most Surprising Democracy," and he is presently co-editing "The Oxford Handbook of Law and Authoritarianism." His recent article “The Authoritarian Argument” (Journal of Democracy) focuses on the nature of authoritarian legality.

Authors
B. R. Ambedkar Professor of Indian Constitutional Law
,
Columbia Law School
Madhav Khosla
Madhav Khosla is the B. R. Ambedkar Professor of Indian Constitutional Law and Professor of Political Science at Columbia University. He is interested in the nature and form of constitutions, especially from a comparative and theoretical perspective. He books include "India’s Founding Moment: The Constitution of a Most Surprising Democracy," and he is presently co-editing "The Oxford Handbook of Law and Authoritarianism." His recent article “The Authoritarian Argument” (Journal of Democracy) focuses on the nature of authoritarian legality.

Authors
B. R. Ambedkar Professor of Indian Constitutional Law
,
Columbia Law School
Madhav Khosla
Madhav Khosla is the B. R. Ambedkar Professor of Indian Constitutional Law and Professor of Political Science at Columbia University. He is interested in the nature and form of constitutions, especially from a comparative and theoretical perspective. He books include "India’s Founding Moment: The Constitution of a Most Surprising Democracy," and he is presently co-editing "The Oxford Handbook of Law and Authoritarianism." His recent article “The Authoritarian Argument” (Journal of Democracy) focuses on the nature of authoritarian legality.

Authors
B. R. Ambedkar Professor of Indian Constitutional Law
,
Columbia Law School
Madhav Khosla
Madhav Khosla is the B. R. Ambedkar Professor of Indian Constitutional Law and Professor of Political Science at Columbia University. He is interested in the nature and form of constitutions, especially from a comparative and theoretical perspective. He books include "India’s Founding Moment: The Constitution of a Most Surprising Democracy," and he is presently co-editing "The Oxford Handbook of Law and Authoritarianism." His recent article “The Authoritarian Argument” (Journal of Democracy) focuses on the nature of authoritarian legality.

