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The Orphan Paradox : Destinies, Autocracies and Democracies in India and the United States
The Orphan Paradox : Destinies, Autocracies and Democracies in India and the United States
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Author(s): Sharma, Dinesh
ISBN No.: 9781666976793
Pages: 256
Year: 202606
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 168.00
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

"Combining psychology, history, and political science, The Orphan Paradox introduces a ground-breaking approach to understanding the development of national leadership. It compares the United States and India - two of the most populist democracies in the world - to present a new and insightful way of looking at political culture. Sharma's exposition of "traumagenic leadership" shaped by psychic wounds and traumas that affect "both nations and the figures who lead them" is particularly compelling." -- Dr. Arturo G. Munoz, Senior Political Scientist, RAND Corporation, and former CIA officer. "This bold new volume discovers how a high percentage of American presidents and India's prime ministers have lost one or both parents as children, and how this deeply shaped their later success. Like Sharma's earlier volumes, the Orphan Paradox offers an eye-opening inside look into our political leaders that even these leaders themselves may not realize.


" -- Harold Takooshian, PhD, Past-President, Division of International Psychology, American Psychological Association, USA "In this ambitious work of synthesis, Dinesh Sharma describes unexpected and intriguing parallels among the personalities, family configurations, and economic policies of pivotal leaders of the United States and India- leading democratic societies in the last half century." -- Howard Gardner, Hobbs Research Professor of Cognition and Education, Harvard Graduate School of Education "Indian prime ministership has swung back-and-forth between the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty and "orphans" with some notable exceptions from the Janata Dal and Janata Party. Dr. Dinesh Sharma, a social scientist with a Doctorate from Harvard University in human development and psychology, took the intellectual effort to pinpoint the early childhood experiences of politicians, despots, and dictators as a psychological explanation for their misuse of power. While not a primary focus, the book's analysis of how social structures and the failure to form healthy bonds can lead to destructiveness would apply to anyone, including children who may have experienced a lack of proper care or emotional bonds." -- Dr. Christian Bartolf, Gandhi Information Centre, Germany " The Orphan Paradox is a rare work that combines historical scholarship with psychological depth. Drawing on extensive research, Dr.


Dinesh Sharma examines the lives of historic leaders across civilizations, revealing how early loss, trauma, and responsibility shape their political character and the destiny of democracy. The book integrates theories from human development, psychology, and trauma studies to illuminate how leadership traits are formed long before leaders enter public life. Moreover, interwoven with historical narratives is a story of youthful responsibility borne at an age far greater than one's own. This fusion of scholarship and lived experience makes The Orphan Paradox not only an important academic contribution but also a profoundly human reflection on leadership, resilience, and the burdens that shape those who are called to serve something larger than themselves." -- Ying Hong, PhD, Professor, Patricia Ramsey Distinguished Research Scholar in Business Area Chair, Fordham University, USA.


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