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Searching with a thematic focus on Global Governance, Governance in India
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India Africa partnership in healthcare: accomplishments and propsects
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2015In the decades following India’s independence, the principle of South-South cooperation, particularly in the context of the non-aligned movement, has been at the forefront of India’s foreign policy towards Africa. Now, India and Africa are prepared more than ever to re-establish economic and political relationships to promote their mutual interests.DocumentIndia and the United States: new directions in defence partnership
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015Over the last decade, defence cooperation between India and the United States has become one of the centrepieces of the two nations' bilateral relations. Indo-US defence ties are driven by the imperatives of not only commerce but, more importantly, geopolitical strategy.DocumentChallenges in designing counterinsurgency policy: an institutionalist perspective
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015Research on India's counterinsurgency practice is divided intotwo categories. One emphasises moderation in the use of coercive power, while the other highlights its wanton abuse.DocumentIndia in the missile technology control regime: prospects and implications
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015India formally applied for membership to the Missile Technology IControl Regime in June 2015 as part of efforts to integrate itself with the global non-proliferation architecture.DocumentSpace 2.0: shaping India's leap into the final frontier
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015a long-term investor in space technology and infrastructure, AIndia aspires to be one among the top nations in the world in terms of government space investment. Though spaceDocumentThe dance of the elephant and the dragon: the promise and perils of Sino-Indian relations
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015India and China, two of the world's oldest civilisations, have had Ilittle historically relevant interactions with one other. Separated by the world's highest mountain range, the Himalayas, neither of these two nations has ever displayed expansionist tendencies vis-à-vis each other.DocumentThe chimera of global convergence
Transnational Institute, 2014It has become a staple of conventional wisdom that global economic power is shifting inexorably towards the East and the South. Many insist that we are on the brink of a world-historic rebalancing that will result in the end of Western domination and the rise of a new hegemony.DocumentShifting power reader: critical perspectives on emerging economies
Transnational Institute, 2014Does the emergence of a multipolar global order open up policy space for alternative economic visions and pose a necessary challenge to a US and Northern-dominated global order? Or might it instead reinvigorate capitalism and exploitation by a new constellation of corporate elites?DocumentThe emerging economies and climate change: a case study of the BASIC grouping
Transnational Institute, 2014Among the most dramatic and far-reaching geopolitical developments of the post-Cold War era is the shift in the locus of global power away from the West with the simultaneous emergence as major powers of former colonies and other countries in the South, which were long on the periphery of international capitalism.DocumentIndia in the emerging world order: a status quo power or a revisionist force?
Transnational Institute, 2014India's foreign policy strategy is driven by a desire to become a major world power and bolstered by the interests of its corporations seeking new markets, but it has come at a cost of deepseated poverty, internal conflicts and repression of social movements. This paper sets out to trace the changing contours of India’s foreign policy by throwing light on:Pages
