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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development, South-South cooperation in India

Showing 141-150 of 204 results

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  • Document

    Expanding economic activity along the Sino-Indian border & developing infrastructure for connectivity

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2012
    The study attempts to answer three specific questions: First, should one view border trade as a tool to improve India‐China strategic relations? Second, is the emphasis on Ladakh part of an economic strategy to improve larger India‐China trade? Third, is this part of an economic and political strategy to improve the economic conditions and political stability in border regions/peripheries?
  • Document

    Sino-Indian economic dialogue: from bilateral trade to srategic partnership

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2012
    This paper is a conference report the IPCS India-China Relations Conference held in February 2012. The main discussions focused on economic cooperation and bilateral trade. Some Policy Recommendations Include:
  • Document

    Stalled UN Security Council reform: time to consider resetting policy?

    Institute for Security Studies, 2011
    South Africa, Brazil, India, Germany and others have been pushing for reform of the United Nations (UN) Security Council that would realise their ambitions to secure permanent seats on the Security Council. But at the end of 2011, 20 years since the reform momentum began, the process is stalled.
  • Document

    Special Report - Sino-Indian relations: sixty years of experience and enlightenment

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2010
    China-India relations sharply deteriorated after 1959 owing to their differences on the Tibet question and China-India boundary question and under the influence of a number of complicated factors, both international and internal, leading to the border conflict in 1962 and confrontation between the two countries for more than ten years.
  • Document

    Special report - ASEAN and India: a perspective from Indonesia

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011
    This is a transcript of the address of H.E. Lt. Gen. (Retd) Andi  M. Ghalib, Ambassador of Indonesia, to the attendees in the IPCS Conference Room in April 2011, with regards to India’s involvement with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
  • Document

    India-China relations: negotiating a balance

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2010
    India and China are two large nations that are simultaneously reemerging at a rapid pace, thus their relationship has to be based on carefully balanced enlightened self-interests.
  • Document

    Alternative strategies towards China: charting India’s course for the next decade

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011
    Sino-Indian bilateral ties at the start of the 21st century saw the two sides announcing rapid growth of their economic interactions, and claiming that economic imperatives would be the new driver in their relationship. However, that approach have proved little success up to now.
  • Document

    IBSA six years on: co-operation in a new global order

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009
    Six years after its launch, officials can no longer claim that the India–Brazil–South Africa (IBSA) Forum is still in its infancy. It is time to evaluate results and missed opportunities to provide a balanced assessment.
  • Document

    Blue helmets for Africa: India’s peacekeeping in Africa

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2010
    For the past 60 years, the United Nations has been keeping foes apart in strife-torn parts of the world, and rebuilding countries and communities afterwards. In the UN’s peace operations in Africa, India has been an active partner since its peacekeeping mission in the Congo in 1960.
  • Document

    India and Africa: towards a sustainable energy partnership

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2011
    The depletion of hydrocarbon resources, due to unprecedented growth in energy demand from developing countries, concerns over the disruption of energy supplies arising from political instability in the Middle East and the emergence of energy ‘nationalism’ in some oil-producing states, has resulted in major and emerging economies shifting their focus to finding alternative energy sou

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