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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development in India

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  • 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

    Fighting corruption: how serious is India?

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2010
    The UN had found that corruption was the chief reason why the poor nations continued to remain in poverty. This essay reviews the anti-corruption trend in India.
  • Document

    Sino-Indian economic dialogue- global business plan for an Asian century

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2012
    India and China share a complicated relationship with diverse strands. There is the long civilizational connection built from the time of the Buddha. Then there is the more ominous overhang from the 1962 conflict, which has left a trail of hurt, anger and suspicion, especially in India.
  • Document

    Alternative regional strategy for India: a charm offensive to win the hearts and minds

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011
    Given the social inequalities and political instability, India is likely to face a neighbourhood, which is either failing or with substantial ungovernable spaces in its backyard. The paper clarifies that India is surrounded by a ring of fire; this is the regional problematic which India is facing today and is likely to face in the foreseeable future. Main findings include:
  • 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

    Sino-Indian strategic economic dialogue- treading a cautious corridor

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2012
    Sino-Indian economic relations have continued to burgeon despite occasional political or diplomatic rumblings on both sides. Not only has the trade volume jumped from  US$ 200 million in 1988 to US$ 61.7 billion in 2010, more commendably both economies have managed to stave off the destabilization resulting from the 2008 global financial crisis.
  • Document

    Defining India’s security: looking beyond limited war and cold start strategies

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011
    The reciprocal India-Pakistan nuclear tests had occurred earlier in May 1998, and a state of nuclear deterrence was established thereafter between the two countries. This essay argues that the potential of the security situations spinning out of control and breaching the nuclear threshold was very real.
  • 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

    Alternative strategies for India towards Tibet: between assertion and measured silence

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011
    While many significant issues have been examined by Chinese and Indian leaders in their foregoing dialogues to normalise relations, the Tibetan question continues to lurk in the dark. This paper notes that the growing disinclination of the two sides to discuss the matter is contextualised best in the burgeoning economic relationship between the two Asian powers.

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