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Searching with a thematic focus on Conflict and security in China, India

Showing 1-10 of 22 results

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  • Document

    IPCS Forecast 2016: cardinal transitions, red herrings, shrinking spaces

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2016
    The Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS) Forecast 2016 is a collection of writings on the near-term trajectories of a wide range of geographic and thematic issues covering Asia, the United States and Nuclear power and energy, authored by analysts and scholars from the Indian strategic community and beyond.
  • Document

    The chimera of global convergence

    Transnational Institute, 2014
    It 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.
  • Document

    The rise of emerging Asia: regional peace and global security

    Peterson Institute for International Economics, 2013
    The rapid economic rise of China, India, and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) could have several effects on regional peace and global security. The power transition perspective overstates the risk of conflict that results from convergence between dominant and challenger states.
  • Document

    China-Japan-Korea: Tangled relationships

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2013
    Territorial disputes between China and Japan over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands in the East China Sea and between Japan and South Korea over the Takeshima/Dokdo islands in the Sea of Japan have, particularly in the second half of 2012, given rise to concerns about peace and security in North East Asia. Because China, Japan and South Korea
  • Document

    Sino-Indian border infrastructure: an update

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2013
    Improved infrastructure has a critical role in enabling a nation to apply military power. On the India-China border, there is a clear military imbalance-not just in terms of equipment and forces on the border but also in terms of the physical infrastructure.
  • Document

    The success of China's aerospace industry: lessons for India

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015
    The emergence of China and India as major regional powers raises hope that the two could help shape the future international system and contribute differently towards Asia's development and harmony. This is in contrast to balance of power politics, which has dominated the discourse in the last few decades.
  • Document

    Army aviation: does the army need its own air force?

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2014
    Within the context of the Indian Army, many defence commentators and analysts have emphasised the need to develop and define the role of the Army Aviation Corps.
  • Document

    Post-election challenges for the new government in Kabul

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2014
    With a new President (Ashraf Ghani) finally in place in Kabul, attention can shift from the protracted electoral process to the challenges likely to confront the new government. The ability of this government to deal with various political and security challenges will depend to a large extent on how it manages its relations with a variety of stakeholders.
  • Document

    A roadmap for RIC

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2014
    The Russia-India-China (RIC) grouping is the only body that brings together the three largest Asian countries at a time when there is a churning in the existing security architecture in the region. But, RIC seems to have lost steam amidst the alphabet soup of multilaterals in which the three countries are engaged, despite some efforts lately to rejuvenate the forum.
  • Document

    Rising powers and the African security landscape

    Chr. Michelsen Institute, Norway, 2014
    As the rising powers of China, Brazil, India and South Africa extend their economic engagement in Africa, they are also gradually becoming more involved in the African peace and security agenda. The four articles in this report describe and analyse how these rising powers are engaging with the African security landscape:

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