Beyond South Asia : India's strategic evolution and the reintegration of the subcontinent
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Bibliographic Information
Beyond South Asia : India's strategic evolution and the reintegration of the subcontinent
Bloomsbury, 2014
- : pbk
- : hardback
Available at / 3 libraries
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Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Republic of India occupies a key geopolitical and strategic space at the center of the Indian Ocean. How it interacts with the rest of the world will have profound consequences in the 21st century.
Beyond South Asia follows the evolution of India's strategic thinking since 1947, providing a comprehensive analysis of its foreign policy worldview. It begins with India's failed attempt to unite and dominate the subcontinent following independence, a strategy that resulted in conflict as its smaller neighbors invited the U.S. and China to the region, resisted intra-regional cooperation, and even violently opposed New Delhi. It then explores how this worldview has shifted as India, needing markets, energy resources, and ways to balance against China, has developed economic and military ties in Central and Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Africa, the southern Indian Ocean, and beyond. To do so has required more stability in South Asia, making India more conciliatory toward other countries of the subcontinent. This is in turn leading to a lessening of tensions, enhanced cooperation, and an economic reintegration of the subcontinent, including a burgeoning detente with Pakistan.
This in-depth analysis provides a comprehensive look at the domestic and regional factors that drive India, a key actor in global politics. Written in an accessible manner, it will be of use to students and specialists of Indian foreign policy, South Asian politics, international relations, and security studies and to anyone interested in the future of AfPak, the Indian Ocean region, and America's "strategic pivot."
Table of Contents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
PART ONE: INTRODUCTION
Chapter One: Introduction
PART TWO: INDIA'S MONROE DOCTRINE
Chapter Two: Indian Geopolitical Strategy
Chapter Three: Big Brother, Little Brother: India's Small Neighbors
Chapter Four: Paired Minorities: The Fraught Relationship with Pakistan
Chapter Five: Extra-Regional Powers: The United States and China
Chapter Six: Geographic Dislocation: The Fallout of Intraregional Conflict
PART THREE: LOOKING BEYOND
Chapter Seven: Economic Shift
Chapter Eight: Balancing China
Chapter Nine: Beyond South Asia: A New Strategic Direction
Chapter Ten: "Natural Allies"? The United States and India in the 21st Century
PART FOUR: SOUTH ASIAN THREAT PERCEPTION AND REGIONAL INTEGRATION
Chapter Eleven: Small Neighbors
Chapter Twelve: Pakistan: Mutually Assured Construction
PART FIVE: CONCLUSION
Chapter Thirteen: Conclusion
by "Nielsen BookData"