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Title Date Author Time Event Body Research Area Topics File attachments Image
Lecture by the Chief of the Army Staff, General Bipin Rawat, PVSM, UYSM, AVSM, YSM, SM, VSM, ADC (Stands Cancelled) September 09, 2019 1500 hrs Eminent Persons' Lecture Series

Speaker: General Bipin Rawat PVSM, UYSM, AVSM, YSM, SM, VSM, ADC

Venue: IDSA Auditorium

Programme

Registration 1430–1500 hrs

Welcome Remarks by Amb. Sujan R. Chinoy,
Director General, IDSA 1500–1510 hrs

Lecture by Gen Bipin Rawat, Chief of the Army Staff 1510–1540 hrs

Q & A Session 1540–1610 hrs

High Tea 1610 hrs onwards

About The Speaker

General Bipin Rawat, is an alumnus of St. Edward School, Shimla, and the National Defence Academy, Khadakwasla; he was commissioned to the Fifth Bn, the Eleventh Gorkha Rifles of the Indian Army in December 1978, from IMA, Dehradun, where he was awarded the ‘Sword of Honour’. The officer has vast experience in operations across a wide spectrum of conflict and terrain profiles. He commanded an Infantry battalion, along the Line of Actual Control in the Eastern Sector; a Rashtriya Rifles Sector; an Infantry Division in the Kashmir Valley; and, a Corps in the North East. The officer also commanded a Multinational Brigade, in a Chapter VII mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC). As an Army Cdr, he commanded a theatre of ops along the Western Front.

General Rawat’s staff and instructional assignments include, Instructional tenure at IMA Dehradun; General Staff Officer, at the Military Operations Directorate; Logistics staff officer of a Division in Central India; Colonel Military Secretary and Deputy Military Secretary in the Military Secretary’s Branch; and Senior Instructor, Junior Command Wing. He has been Major General General Staff of the Eastern Theatre, and the Vice Chief of the Army Staff.

General Bipin Rawat is a graduate of the Defence Services Staff College, Wellington, the Higher Command and National Defence College courses and, has attended the Command and General Staff Course at Fort Leavenworth, USA. The officer during the span of over 40 years of service in uniform has been awarded for gallantry and distinguished service with the UYSM, AVSM, YSM, SM, VSM; COAS Commendation on two occasions and the Army Commander’s Commendation. Whilst serving with the United Nations, he was twice awarded the Force Commander’s Commendation.

Academically inclined, the General has authored numerous articles on ‘National Security’ and ‘Leadership’ which have been published in various journals and publications. He was awarded M. Phil in Defence Studies from Madras University, and holds two Diplomas, in Management and Computer Studies respectively. General Bipin Rawat completed his research on military media strategic studies and was awarded Doctorate of Philosophy (Ph.D) from Chaudhary Charan Singh University, Meerut.

The General officer assumed the appointment of the Chief of the Army Staff on 31 Dec 2016

Talk by Ms Elizabeth Sidiropoulos on South Africa's Foreign Policy and Future of India-South Africa Partnership August 21, 2019 1030 to 1300 hrs Talk

Topic: South Africa's Foreign Policy and Future of India-South Africa Partnership

Venue: Board Room # 104, First Floor.

Ms Elizabeth Sidiropoulos, CEO, South Africa Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA)

Speaker Bio

Elizabeth Sidiropoulos is the chief executive of the South African Institute of International Affairs. Her expertise lies in South Africa’s foreign policy, South-South Cooperation and the role of emerging powers in Africa.

She is the co-chair of the Think 20 Africa Standing Group, one of the task forces of the Think 20, which is one of the engagement groups of the G20.

She is currently co-editing a volume on ‘A SA foreign policy for the 2020s’, which will be published in 2019.

Structural Reforms in PLA and Future Assessed Capabilities August 22, 2019 Gaurav Misra 1530 hrs Fellows' Seminar

Venue: Room No. 005 (Ground Floor)

Topic: Structural Reforms in PLA and Future Assessed Capabilities

Talk on “India – Nigeria Relations : Opportunities and Challenges” August 14, 2019 1500 hrs Talk

Speaker: H.E. Maj Gen. Chis S Eze (Retd), High Commissioner of Nigeria to India

Other Participants:
Amb. Mahesh Sachdev, former High Commissioner of India to Nigeria and
Prof. Ajay Dubey, Chairperson, Centre for African Studies, SIS, JNU

Venue: Room No. 005

Africa, Latin America, Caribbean & UN
Seminar on India’s National Security: Kargil to Present Times August 06, 2019 0930 to 1705 hrs Conference

Venue: IDSA Auditorium

Programme

0930 – 1000 hrs       :           

Registration

 

 

1000 – 1005 hrs       :           

Welcome Address  Ambassador Sujan R. Chinoy, Director General, IDSA

 

 

1005 – 1010 hrs       :           

Release of Special Issue JDS* and Book authored by  Col Vivek Chadha (Retd)  titled “Kargil: Past Perfect, Future Uncertain?”

By Gen V.P. Malik (Retd), former Chief of Army Staff and Ambassador Satish Chandra, former Deputy NSA and Ambassador Sujan R. Chinoy, Director General IDSA

 

 

1010 – 1030 hrs       :

Special Address by Gen V.P. Malik, PVSM, AVSM (Retd), Former Chief of Army Staff

1030 – 1050 hrs       :

Special Address by Ambassador Satish Chandra, former Deputy NSA

1050 – 1110 hrs       :           

Interactive Session

           

 

1110 – 1130 hrs       :

Tea Break

 

 

1130 – 1300 hrs       :

Session I: Kargil Conflict: Lessons for Future

           

Chair: Gen V.P. Malik (Retd), Former Chief of Army Staff

 

Shri Shakti Sinha, Director Nehru Memorial Museum and Library. “Political Decision-Making Considerations: A Perspective”

 

Air Marshal R. Nambiar, PVSM, AVSM, VSM and Bar, ADC, AOC-in-C, Western Air Command “Air Force Strategy During Kargil Conflict and Contemporary Challenges

 

Vishnu Som, Defence Editor, NDTV. “Role of Information: Kargil and Beyond”

 

 

1300 – 1400 hrs       :

Lunch

Venue: Dining Hall/Banquet Hall

 

 

1400 – 1530              :

Session II: Kargil to Present

 

Chair: Amb Sujan R. Chinoy, Director General, IDSA

                                                 

Amb TCA Rangachari, Distinguished Fellow, VIF and former Ambassador “Pakistan as a Diplomatic Challenge”

 

Lt Gen Prakash Menon, PVSM, AVSM, VSM (Retd)  “Limited Conflicts Under Nuclear Overhang”

 

Lt Gen Satish Dua, PVSM, UYSM, SM, VSM (Retd) former CIDS, Evolution of Joint Structures”

 

 

1535 – 1700              :

Session III: Leadership Challenges in Combat

                                               

Chair: Maj Gen Alok Deb, SM, VSM (Retd), DDG, IDSA

                                   

Air Marshal V.K. Bhatia, PVSM, AVSM, VrC and Bar (Retd) “Leadership Challenges of Air Combat”

 

Brig Devinder Singh, VSM (Retd), “Challenges of Leadership Against an Entrenched Enemy”

 

Rear Admiral S.Y. Shrikhande, AVSM (Retd) “Educating Future Military Leaders”

 

 

1700 – 1705 hrs       :

Vote of Thanks by Col Vivek Chadha (Retd.)

 

 

1705 onwards           :           

Tea

Round Table Discussion on ‘China’s Policy Towards South Asia: Implications for India’ July 16, 2019 1030 to 1300 hrs Round Table

Chair: Amb. Sujan R. Chinoy, Director General, IDSA

Venue: Room No. 005, Ground Floor

Concept Note

The South Asian region has been central to India’s security and foreign policy. Since independence, India’s natural pre-eminence has been subjected to contestation because of growing presence of extra-regional powers, including China, in the region. China’s presence in Tibet, bordering India, has made China an important part of India’s strategic calculus; more so, because China shares borders with many of India’s neighbours. Though India recognised China’s sovereignty over Tibet and tried to engage and befriend China, the 1962 war not only altered the India-China equation but substantially reshaped the perception of India’s neighbours towards both China and India. To some countries in the region, China gradually emerged as a reliable security partner, while India was perceived as a ‘hegemon’.

Over the years, China’s approach towards South Asia has been a work in progress. At the moment, a pragmatic mode of engagement is evident between China and South Asia which throws up a challenge for India’s neighbourhood policy wherein each of India’s neighbours is eager to play the China card against India. In the past, China not only supported insurgent groups fighting against the Indian State, but also supported anti-India policies of various undemocratic regimes in neighbourhood, who faced popular opposition from constituencies seeking to bring about representative governance in these countries influenced by the successful democratic experiment in India. While following the 1988 Sino-Indian rapprochement, China advised India’s neighbours to resolve their disputes with India bilaterally, it continued to balance India and stay relevant in the region by extending military and strategic cooperation to Pakistan. China has also made multiple inroads into South Asia, often cultivating political parties, highlighting cultural affinity with South Asia, diligently spreading its soft power through Confucius Institutes and building close ties with militaries in different countries by providing defence equipment at cheaper rates. It has forged close relationships with political parties, often inviting delegations belonging to different political parties to visit China and engage the Communist Party of China. It shares close relations with the Nepal Communist Party, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, the Sri Lanka Freedom Party and the Progressive Party of Maldives headed by former President Yameen. In Pakistan, China’s greatest support base has been the Pakistan Army, which wields real power in Pakistan. Apart from these parties which may favour China, through grants, loans and aid, it has made the ruling regimes stakeholders in its strategic calculus, while pursuing its interests in South Asia. It provides generous fellowships to students in the South Asian region to learn the language or pursue higher degrees in leading Chinese universities. It is the largest supplier of weapons to Pakistan, followed by Bangladesh. It has strategic defence and nuclear collaboration with Pakistan; it has signed a Defence Cooperation Agreement with Bangladesh and has recently supplied submarines to the Bangladesh Navy. Its supply of arms during Sri Lanka’s fight against the LTTE is often cited as being critical to its success by the Sri Lankan Army.

China’s ability to provide loans on attractive terms as part of its flagship Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) announced in 2013, has been seen as a success by many countries in the region, especially for the regimes that wish to showcase economic development for their continuation in power and are unwilling to adhere to the terms and conditions of The World Bank and the IMF. Not withstanding the fear of debts, China is able to provide an alternative politically and economically and a choice that these countries can exercise. As a result, China’s strategic entrenchment in the region has been facilitated by its involvement in building ports and infrastructure in South Asia. The deep sea port at Kyaukpyu in Myanmar, the Hambantota Port in Sri Lanka and the Gwadar Port in Pakistan certainly enhance its presence in the Indian Ocean. It is continuing to eye the Sonadia Port in Bangladesh, work on which is currently shelved.

The strategic underpinnings of China’s involvement in these deep sea ports are apparent. It helps China to expand its presence into the Indian Ocean ostensibly to protect its Sea Lanes of Communication (SLOC), and there are several implications for India. It already controls the Hambantota Port on a 99-year lease; 91 per cent of the revenue generated by the Gwadar Port goes to the China Overseas Ports Holding Company while only 9 per cent is earned by the Gwadar Port Authority. Many in Pakistan often refer to their country as China’s colony. Its presence in Gilgit-Baltistan in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (PoK) through the CPEC project and its unrelenting effort to bring Bhutan to its side by offering to swap territory and settle the border dispute with Thimpu, are some examples of China’s attempts to make further strategic inroads into the region. This also reflects China’s strategy to control ports and to have a strategic presence around India through BRI, in the name of bringing growth and prosperity to the host country. Connectivity has emerged as an important yardstick to measure ‘influence’.

China has substantial defence cooperation with the countries in the South Asia region. It has signed a defence cooperation agreement with Bangladesh in 2001 and the two countries are now strategic partners. According to a media report published in 2018, around 35 per cent of China’s arms supplies went to Pakistan between 2013 and 2017, followed by 19 per cent to Bangladesh. Dhaka procured 71 per cent of its arms from China over the five-year period, and Myanmar sourced 68 per cent of its arms during the same period. Due to India’s inability to assist in supplying arms to Nepal in 2005 because of the takeover of power by the Monarchy, and its difficulties in supplying weapons to Sri Lanka during its war with the LTTE due to opposition from Tamil Nadu, China filled the gap and supplied arms and provided military aid to Nepal and Sri Lanka. This substantially undermined India’s position in the conflicts in these two countries. Later, China provided $32.3mn as grant to the Nepal Army and built an armed police force training academy at the cost of US $350 million. Following the suicide bombings on April 21, 2019 in Colombo on Easter, China has offered Sri Lanka counter-insurgency weapons worth US$14 million.

As regards Beijing’s trade with South Asia, it is heavily skewed in favour of China. Beijing enjoys a surplus in trade with all South Asian countries. However, the pattern of China’s trade does not represent a similar trend for all of South Asia. For instance, while China’s trade with countries like India and Bangladesh shows an average increase in both exports and imports (with exports significantly outweighing imports, as with all other South Asian countries), in the case of Pakistan and Afghanistan, China’s imports have declined drastically; while exports continued to rise: Chinese imports from Pakistan fell from roughly US$ 2.7 billion in 2014 to US$ 1.8 billion in 2017, while imports from Afghanistan reduced from US$ 17 million in 2014 to US$ 3 million in 2017. At the same time, Chinese exports to Pakistan and Afghanistan increased from
US$ 13 billion and US$ 393 million respectively in 2014 to US$ 18 billion and US$ 541 million respectively in 2017. Another noticeable trend in China’s trade with the South Asian region pertains to its economic relations with Nepal and Bhutan. Since 2014, China’s exports to the two landlocked states have declined significantly. While occasionally year-on-year exports have increased – for instance, in 2016 and 2017 with Nepal and in 2017 with Bhutan – it has however, not been able to reach the level of 2014. The trade patterns indicate that the overall nature of China-South Asia trade is unfavourable and unsustainable for the South Asian region.

The question is, what will all this mean for India? To what extent would it affect India’s regional primacy and its vital security interests in times to come, as India would not be able to match China’s capacity to invest? This Roundtable will broadly examine four aspects:

  1. Contours of China’s policies towards South Asia since its presence in Tibet;
  2. The strategic and economic component of its foreign policy and response of countries in the region to China’s strategic overtures;
  3. The BRI and its implications for the South Asian region;
  4. India’s policy response to China’s strategy in the South Asian neighbourhood.

(Concept Note is prepared by South Asia Centre. Inputs provided by East Asia Centre)

Programme

10AM-10.15AM:                                           Inaugural Remarks by Amb. Sujan R. Chinoy, Director General, IDSA

[15 Mnts. Each Speaker)

10.15AM-1.15PM:                                        Chair: Amb. Sujan R. Chinoy

China in South Asia: A Geo-Economic Perspective | Dr. Sanjaya Baru, Distinguished Fellow, IDSA

China’s Political Outreach in South Asia | Amb. T.C.A. Rangachari, Distinguished Fellow, VIF

India, SAARC and China’s Growing Footprint  in South Asia | Prof. S.D. Muni, Member, Executive Council, IDSA

China and South Asia: The Growing Security Linkages | Prof. Srikanth Kondapalli, Chinese Studies, SIS, JNU

Xi Jinping and China’s South Asia              Policy | Dr. Jagannath Panda, Fellow, IDSA

China in Pakistan and Afghanistan’s Foreign Policy | Dr. Ashok Kumar Behuria, Senior Fellow, IDSA

China in the Strategic Outlook of Sri Lanka, Maldives and Bangladesh | Dr. Smruti S. Pattanaik, Fellow, IDSA

Nepal’s Policy Outlook on China | Dr. Nihar R. Nayak, Fellow, IDSA

 

Discussion

East Asia China's South Asia Policy
Round Table on India – Africa Partnership in a Changing World May 29, 2019 1500 hrs Round Table

Concept Note

Africa is becoming significant in the global arena on issues related to security, peace, climate change and sustainable development. It is increasingly contributing to the normative framework on these issues. It has been projected that by 2050, Africa would have the largest workforce in the world and its population would surpass India and China. Africa would also be a major contributor to the global economy, both as a producer and as a consumer. African countries have been commended for finding effective plans for resolving regional problems, particularly related to ending conflicts and sustainable development. At the same time, African countries, through the African Union and also bilaterally, have formed partnerships globally with countries such as Turkey, Brazil, China, Japan, US, UK, France and India.

India and Africa have a long and rich history of interaction marked by cultural, economic and political exchanges based on the principle South-South cooperation. A number of initiatives have been taken in the recent years to facilitate relations between the two sides, especially in the domain of trade and investment, skills and capacity building, energy, agriculture, health, defence and maritime cooperation. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has accorded high priority to Africa in recent years. There have been 29 high level visits at the level of President, Vice President and Prime Minister from India to Africa. India entered into a structured engagement with African countries with the launch of the first Indian Africa Forum Summit in 2008 in New Delhi. This was followed by the second India Africa Forum Summit in Addis Ababa in 2011. The third India-Africa Forum summit, held in New Delhi in October 2015 renewed the focus on strengthening the partnership with African countries.

India has also undertaken significant initiatives to strengthen its development cooperation with African countries. Exim Bank of India has extended Lines of Credit to countries in Africa. India has also supported capacity building through the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme and launched initiatives such as Pan Africa e-Vidya Bharati and e-Arogya Bharati Network Project, among others. The Indian Ocean is a natural bridge connecting India with the African continent. Therefore maritime cooperation is an important aspect of the relationship. This includes maritime surveillance, anti-piracy operations and humanitarian and disaster relief. However, despite these steps, there is still room for realising the full potential of the partnership.

In order to debate on these issues, and to commemorate Africa Day, the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA) is organising a Round Table on the theme “India – Africa Partnership in a Changing World” at 3 pm on 29 May 2019 at the Institute.

Programme

1445h- 1500h: Registration / Tea
1500h- 1530h:             Inaugural Session
Chair: Amb Sujan R. Chinoy, DG, IDSA
Speakers:
1530h -1620h:             Panel Discussion
Chair: Amb. Virendra Gupta, Former High Commissioner of India to South Africa (TBC) (5 mins)
Speakers:
  • H.E. Amb. Michael A.N.N. Oquaye, High Commissioner of Ghana, “Africa in the Global Order: African Perspective”  (7 mins)
  • Ms Ruchita Beri, Senior Research Associate & Coordinator, Africa, LAC & UN Centre, IDSA “Africa in the Global Order: Indian Perspective” (7 mins)
  • H.E. Amb Nejmeddine Lakhal, Ambassador of Tunisia,  “India- Africa Partnership: African Perspective”, (7 mins)
  • Shri Gurjit Singh, Former Ambassador of India to African Union & Chair, CII Taskforce on Trilaterals with Africa, “India- Africa Partnership: Indian Perspective”, ( 7 min)
1620h – 1655h:           Q&A / Interactive Session
1655h – 1700h:           Closing Remarks – Amb. Sujan R. Chinoy, DG, IDSA (5 mins)
1700h:                         Tea/ Refreshments
Africa, Latin America, Caribbean & UN
Talk by Col. Dr. Ali Ahmed (Retd.) on Crisis Management in UN Peacekeeping April 10, 2019 1500 hrs Talk

Chair: Maj. Gen Alok Deb, SM, VSM (Retd), Deputy Director General, IDSA

Speaker: Col. Dr. Ali Ahmed (Retd.)

Subject: Crisis Management in UN Peacekeeping

Venue: Boardroom # 104, First Floor

About The Speaker

Ali Ahmed was a Research Fellow at IDSA between 2008 and 2012. He was part of military affairs cluster and worked on military doctrine. His monographs at IDSA were Reconciling Doctrines: The prerequisite to peace in South Asia and Limited War doctrine: The structural factor. He was earlier an infantry man, retiring from the army with twenty one years service. After leaving IDSA , he has been an assistant professor at the Nelson Mandela Center for Peace and Conflict Resolution and has been a political affairs officer in three UN peacekeeping missions. His doctorate is from JNU. He blogs Ali Writing Blogspot and tweets at [at]aliahd66. He has 900 web-publications to this credit.

UN Peacekeeping
Address by H.E. Mr. André Aranha Corrêa do Lago, Ambassador of Brazil April 02, 2019 1030 to 1300 hrs Talk

Theme: India – Brazil Relations

Venue:Seminar Hall- I, IDSA

About the Speaker [PDF]

Africa, Latin America, Caribbean & UN India-Brazil-South Africa (IBSA)
Round Table Discussion on "States of Emergence, States of Knowledge: A Comparative Sociology of International Relations in China and India" March 08, 2019 1130 hrs Round Table

Topic: States of Emergence, States of Knowledge: A Comparative Sociology of International Relations in China and India

Speaker: Dr. Peter Marcus Kristensen, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Copenhagen

Compiled by Rajrajeshwari Singh

8 March 2019

Dr Peter Marcus Kristensen, Associate Professor at the University of Copenhagen initiated a discussion on the topic “States of Emergence, States of Knowledge: A Comparative Sociology of International Relations in China and India”.

Kristensen’s paper is an outcome of interviews conducted with members of the academic community in China and India. Its aim is to examine the relationship between the geopolitical rise of these countries in international relations and their knowledge production in the field of international relations. The paper attempts to explore the theoretical and empirical relationship between the socio-political condition of emerging/rising powers and their attempts to theorise International Relations, which it categorises as state of emergence and state of knowledge. Kristensen highlighted the need to reject a bifurcation between Western IR and the ‘ir’ of rising powers, which is common in the sociological and historiographical literature. The scholar community in rising powers has a view that is embedded in the state of emergence in different ways. Kristensen uses four registers – constitutive, civic, infrastructural and psychological – and examines how the scholar community in India and China interacted with these registers.

The constitutive register which emerges from the state of emergence is concerned with the larger epistemological order, for instance, the association between the growing global interests and stakes of the rising powers and the epistemic objectives of their IR scholarship. This register was more optimistically accepted in China. In India, a minority of scholars contended that new ‘Indian’ theories of IR should be located within the framework of global IR theory. Moreover, a significant number of Indian scholars were sceptical of India’s emerging power status.

The civic register is problem oriented and serves as a conjunction of science and politics to address and solve real world problems. It has two modes, one to serve as policy advisor to the state, and the second to perform the function of a public intellectual and thereby enrich the public discourse and understanding. The principal difference between China and India in this regard is that Chinese scholars are more attuned to the role of policy advisors whereas their Indian counterparts operate more in the public mode.

Infrastructural register features the condition of economic growth and expansion of resources made available for research. China has experienced immense growth in IR infrastructure, which has enabled a Chinese theoretical discourse to emerge. India’s more gradual emergence has meant that its IR infrastructure has not expanded to the extent that it has happened in China. Moreover, Indian IR remains a-theoretical and conflated with area studies.

Psychological register is the sensibility or awareness of being located in a country that is perceived as an emerging power. In China, this sentiment is widespread, which has not only boosted the confidence of Chinese scholars but also their sense of wanting the world to hear their Chinese voice. There is a similar sense of confidence in India and receptivity to the views of Indian IR scholars abroad. However, Indian scholars also feel that only their contributions on India are valued, with Western IR still setting the agenda and confining Indian IR to an inferior position.

Kristensen concluded by pointing out that China and India differ in the co-productive knowledge with respect to their histories. Different scholars had a different take on the state of emergence. The differences between China and India are partly explained by the more advanced rise of China. There is a stronger sense of ‘Chineseness’ within China’s scholarly discourse, something that is absent in India.

The following points were raised in the ensuing discussion:

S. Kalyanaraman pointed out that Indian IR neglected theory partly because of its strong critique of Western IR theory with its emphasis upon power politics and its efforts to reform the international economic and security order through nonalignment and the pursuit of peace. This situation has begun to change since the end of the Cold War with India’s turn towards greater realism and its integration into the West-led international economic and security order.

Rajeesh Kumar highlighted the multiple paths that the development of Indian IR is likely to take, influenced as it is by its own traditions as well as by Western IR theory and the inspiration provided by the development of IR theory in China.

Deepshika Shahi of the University of Delhi highlighted recent trends in IR theoretical development including her own work on Advaita as a global IR theory. She also pointed out that India’s diversity means the prevalence of multiple schools of IR theories.

Nazir Mir highlighted the contribution of the Indian subaltern school to the IR discourse. In addition, he pointed out the influence of external factors on the development of theory in the United States in addition to the role of America’s self-perception of its role, status and interests in international affairs.

Kristensen noted the importance of avoiding regional labels to IR theories such as London School, Copenhagen School, Chinese IR, Indian IR, etc.

Kalyanaraman concluded the round table by referring to the continuing validity of Martin Wight’s three-way typology of realist, rationalist, and revolutionary approaches to IR as a useful framework within which to apprehend the thought processes of thinkers and scholars in non-Western countries.

East Asia

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