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Searching with a thematic focus on Conflict and security in Pakistan

Showing 31-40 of 87 results

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  • Document

    To save succeeding generations: UN Security Council reform and the protection of civilians

    Igarape Institute, 2013
    The UN needs to be reformed, and this has been an almost constant item on the agenda of the General Assembly and Security Council since the creation of the organisation. The current paper is a contribution to the debate about UN reform, with specific reference to the protection of civilians by peacekeeping missions under international law.
  • Document

    India in Afghanistan: a rising power or a hesitant power?

    2012
    Ever since the fall of the Taliban in 2001, India has tried to pursue a pro-active Afghanistan policy and a broad-based interaction is taking place between the two states. This is also a time when Indian capabilities - political, economic, and military - have increased markedly and India has become increasingly ambitious in defining its foreign policy agenda.  
  • Document

    After Osama: Pakistan's relations with the US, China & India

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011
    The killing of Osama Bin Laden by the US further accentuates the security situation within Pakistan which is already poised at a delicate juncture, carefully balancing the rise of fundamentalism and hatred against the West and taking actions against terrorists who threaten its very existence.
  • Document

    Chin- Pakistan nuclear alliance: an analysis

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011
    The nuclear agreement with Pakistan has created serious ripples in the non-proliferation regime, and holds important geostrategic implications. This paper shall elucidate on the China-Pakistan nuclear relationship, and argue how it furthers Chinese intent to proliferate beyond South Asia.
  • Document

    Deadly embrace: recent books on Pakistan

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011
    This report is based on a panel discussion organized by the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS) in collaboration with The Book Review Literary Trust on 14 November 2011 at the IIC, New Delhi. It reviews a selection of recent publications focusing on security issues in Pakistan.
  • Document

    Armed conflicts in South Asia 2012 sixth annual conference

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2012
    This paper summarizes the IPCS Sixth Annual Armed Conflicts in South Asia Conference held in New Delhi. The main conference agenda is a discussion of how to quell the expanding violence in South Asia as has been mapped by the IPCS extensively since 2008.
  • Document

    Pakistan: politics, religion & extremism

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2009
    The question that arises is that if militant theology is more often a consequence than a cause for militant orientation, then what leads religious groups towards militancy in the first place? Why did religious groups choose violence to improve the lot of their institutions and constituents, resisting repression and gaining political power?
  • Document

    American military operations inside Pakistan: will it help the US, Pakistan and India?

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2010
    Will an American strategy to increase its troops strength into Pakistan make the situation better for the US on the western side and for India on the eastern side?
  • Document

    Analyzing failure: Pakistan & the Failed State Index

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2012
    Albeit a situation rated as critical, Pakistan climbed down the ranking of this year’s Failed States Index, (FSI), in terms of both score (102.30 to 101.60) and placement (12th to 13th). Although this development is consistent
  • Document

    India, Pakistan and the nuclear race

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2013
    This compilation consists of commentaries by Indian and Pakistani analysts in response to Michael Krepon’s op-ed piece of 4 April 2013 in The New York Times, Nuclear Race on the Subcontinent.

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