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Talk by Chishin Chang on China’s Strategy towards Indian Ocean: Where is Xi Jinping Leading China to? | January 21, 2016 | 1500 - 1630 hrs | Other |
Dr. Chishin Chang is Assistant Research Fellow at the Center for Asia Policy, National Tsing Hua University. |
East Asia | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Delhi Dialogue VII on ASEAN-India: Shaping the Post-2015 Agenda | March 11, 2015 to March 12, 2015 | 1030 to 1300 hrs | Conference |
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME12 March, 2015, ThursdayVenue: Auditorium, Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA), New Delhi ACADEMIC SESSION (0930-1730 hours): 0900-0930 hours - Registration 0930-0935 hours - Welcome Address by Brig. Rumel Dahiya (Retd), Dy. Director General, IDSA 0945-0955 hours - Brief on Partners and Associates of Delhi Dialogue VII 0955-1135 hours Session 1: Geopolitical IssuesModerator: [ASEAN] Mr. Mediyatama Suryodiningrat, Editor in Chief, The Jakarta Post
1135-1150 hours - Tea/Coffee 1150-1320 hours Session 2: Socio-Cultural Issues
1320-1410 hours - Lunch 1410-1550 hours Session 3: Economic Issues
Moderator: [India] Amb. Shyam Saran, Chairman, RIS and NSAB
1550-1600 hours Tea 1600-1730 hours Session 4: The Way Forward
Moderator: [ASEAN] Prof. Hidetoshi Nishimura, Executive Director-ERIA.
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Delhi Dialogue VIII: ASEAN-India Relations: A New Paradigm | February 17, 2016 to February 19, 2016 | Conference |
Concept NoteDelhi Dialogue is an annual Track 1.5 forum for discussing politico-security, economic and socio-cultural issues between ASEAN and India. Since 2009 when the conference was first held, Delhi Dialogue has emerged as an important forum at which political leaders, policy makers, researchers, academicians, business leaders and media persons converge for brainstorming on a range of issues pertaining to ASEAN-India relations. The ASEAN-India relationship is one of the cornerstones of India’s foreign policy and Act East policy, which has deepened across the three pillars of politico-security, economic and socio-cultural cooperation. The recently concluded 13th ASEAN-India Summit and 10th East Asia Summit in November 2015 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, have defined a dynamic trajectory for ASEAN-India relations. The formalization of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) would also need a new approach towards India’s engagement with ASEAN. Keeping this context in mind and as India moves towards completing 25 years of its dialogue relationship with the ASEAN region, Delhi Dialogue VIII is appropriately themed “ASEAN-India Relations: A New Paradigm”. The key themes of ASEAN-India relationship today will be highlighted in the Inaugural Session and its two panel discussions (with Indian and South East Asian leaders participating) relating to Connectivity and ASEAN Economic Community (AEC). Delhi Dialogue VIII will also provide a larger canvas for the business leaders and the business community of both sides to share their vision for a more robust economic engagement between ASEAN and India. Day 1: 17 February 2016 -Business SessionPlenary Session I: Co-Manufacturing: Creating Manufacturing Value Chains (FICCI) There is a renewed focus on the manufacturing sector in India, especially with introduction of the “Make in India” initiative. India and ASEAN have immense potential in terms of creating regional value chains that act as a driver for regional economic integration. The ASEAN-India FTA which was initially limited to trade in goods has been expanded to include the agreement on trade in services and investment with effect from 1 July 2015. Manufacturers and businesses, both in India and ASEAN, are yet to fully capitalize on the existence of this Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement. This session would discuss the nuances of co-manufacturing within India and ASEAN, with particular focus on identification of goods, services and FDI sectors with complementarities between India and ASEAN. It would also identify barriers to co-manufacturing and suggest ways to surmount them. Plenary Session II: What Do Mega Trade Blocs-RCEP and TPP Mean for ASEAN and India? (CII) Ongoing negotiations for regional trading agreements involving ASEAN member states including the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) has the potential to alter the regional trade architecture. Responding to the emergent institutional architectures require greater strategic planning and implementation. This Session would examine how the FTA between ASEAN and India would be impacted under the broader RCEP and TPP frameworks and offer a blueprint of how Indian and ASEAN Trade and Commerce entities should calibrate their market strategy and manage internal reforms in order to be able to take maximum benefit from these emerging trade blocs. Plenary Session III: Infrastructure and Sustainable Energy for Realizing India ASEAN Economic Integration (ASSOCHAM) At the 13th ASEAN-India Summit on 21 November, Prime Minister, Shri. Narendra Modi, had invited ASEAN member states to participate in the launch and also to join the International Solar Alliance (ISA) of 122 solar-rich countries. In the backdrop of the launch of this alliance on 30 November in Paris, amidst global climate change concerns, the need for developing and using sustainable energy is acutely felt. This session would explore the potential of co-production of renewable energy (wind power, solar power, biomass, hydropower, biofuels, etc.) and use of clean technology, a broad base of processes, practices and tools, in any industry that supports a sustainable business approach, including but not limited to pollution control, resource reduction and management, end of life strategy, waste reduction, energy efficiency, carbon mitigation and profitability. Plenary Session IV: Promoting Cross Border Trade with ASEAN: Capitalising on Comparative Advantage (ICC) Both India and ASEAN have sectors with significant competitive edge including energy, transport and logistics from the view of ASEAN’s investment into India and engineering services, education and tourism services for Indian investment in ASEAN. The establishment of the ASEAN Economic Community is another milestone in the regional economic integration agenda of ASEAN. The Session would cover several aspects of ASEAN-India trade and investment relations, identify new frontiers in trade and investment, and discuss the way ahead for enhanced trade and investment cooperation between ASEAN and India. Plenary Session V: ASEAN-India Cooperation in Start-ups (AIAI) India and ASEAN are seen as new growth areas for start-ups. ASEAN is one of the most diverse and competitive regions in the world with countries like Singapore, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand attracting multinationals. ASEAN has become a launch pad for start-ups, the region now accounts for 38% of Asia’s market for initial public offerings. Indian start-ups are growing rapidly and India is home to more than 5,000 start-ups across all verticals of the industry involving technology companies and other sectors. The session aims to frame the broad contours of an ASEAN-India ecosystem to facilitate the convergence of technology, integration across diverse fields, distributed architecture and people willing to back an idea. The discussions in this session would deliberate upon Start-up Funding; Understanding the Market for a Start-up / Branding and Marketing; ASEAN-India Digital Future; Role of State and Regional Governments and Policies and Initiatives for encouraging start-ups. Day 2: 18 February 2016 -Ministerial SessionThe Ministerial Session will be attended by EAM, Foreign Ministers of ASEAN countries and Chief Ministers of North Eastern States of India. It will include speeches and two panel discussions; viz. (i) Connectivity: Creating Pathways to a Shared Future; and (ii) ASEAN Economic Community and India: Building Regional Value Chains. Panel Discussion I: Connectivity: Creating Pathways to a Shared Future Connectivity is the focal point in the ASEAN-India Strategic Partnership. With completion of the Motor Vehicle Agreement negotiation, implementation of India -Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway has progressed further, thereby bringing the two regions much closer to each other with the North Eastern region as the pivot. The panel comprising Heads of Delegation from ASEAN countries and the Chief Ministers of North Eastern States of India would deliberate upon:
Panel Discussion II: ASEAN Economic Community and India: Integrating Regional Value Chains and Production Networks To integrate ASEAN and India fully into the global economy, enhanced participation in global supply networks as well as stronger value chains between them is crucial. To effectively utilize the mega regional trade agreement such as RCEP, a connected ASEAN with India in terms of value chains therefore holds utmost significance. This Session will be attended by senior leaders of ASEAN member states and India, who would attempt to identify the challenges for ASEAN and India in integrating with regional and global value chains for creating sustainable production activities, technology intensive manufacturing and knowledge intensive services. The session would also examine how to create value chains by nurturing physical, institutional and people-to-people connectivity and the ways ASEAN member states, especially the CLMV countries, would benefit from the integration of India into South East Asian value chains. Vote of Thanks by Mr Jayant Prasad, DG, IDSA Day 3: 19th February 2016 -Academic SessionThe Academic Session will focus on themes ranging from ASEAN-India and the Security of the Asia-Pacific, including the threat from extremism; the Ocean Economy Dynamics; Reinvigorating the Civilisational Links; and the Way Forward for ASEAN-India Relations.
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South East Asia and Oceania | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Talk by Arzan Tarapore on "Indian Way of War" | January 14, 2016 | 1100 hrs | Other |
Venue: Board Room, IDSA About the SpeakerMr. Arzan Tarapore is a PhD scholar at King's College, London and a non-resident Visiting Fellow at ORF studying recent Indian military history. |
Military Affairs | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Talk by Andrew J. Nathan on China Policy in the Next U.S. Administration | January 14, 2016 | 1500-1630 hrs | Other |
Abstract of TalkAmerican politicians love to bash China during presidential election campaigns. Meanwhile, think tanks in both the Democratic and Republican camps gear up to offer advice once the election is over. In the policy community there are serious debates over whether, and in what ways, to accommodate or to resist China’s rise. However, core American and Chinese interests will not change with a change of American leadership, so major areas of both friction and cooperation are likely to see little change. About the SpeakerAndrew J. Nathan is Class of 1919 Professor of Political Science at Columbia University. His teaching and research interests include Chinese politics and foreign policy, the comparative study of political participation and political culture, and human rights. He is engaged in long-term research and writing on Chinese foreign policy and on sources of political legitimacy in Asia, the latter research based on data from the Asian Barometer Survey, a multi-national collaborative survey research project active in eighteen countries in Asia. Nathan is chair of the steering committee of the Center for the Study of Human Rights and chair of the Morningside Institutional Review Board (IRB) at Columbia. He served as chair of the Department of Political Science, 2003-2006, chair of the Executive Committee of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, 2002-2003, and director of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, 1991-1995. Off campus, he is co-chair of the board, Human Rights in China, a member of the board of Freedom House, and a member of the Advisory Committee of Human Rights Watch, Asia, which he chaired, 1995-2000. He is the regular Asia book reviewer for Foreign Affairs magazine and a member of the editorial boards of the Journal of Contemporary China, China Information, and others. He is a member of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations, the Association for Asian Studies, and the American Political Science Association. He does frequent interviews for the print and electronic media, has advised on several film documentaries on China, and has consulted for business and government. Nathan's books include Peking Politics, 1918-1923; Chinese Democracy; Popular Culture in Late Imperial China, co-edited with David Johnson and Evelyn S. Rawski; Human Rights in Contemporary China, with R. Randle Edwards and Louis Henkin; China's Crisis; The Great Wall and the Empty Fortress: China's Search for Security, with Robert S. Ross; China's Transition; The Tiananmen Papers, co-edited with Perry Link; Negotiating Culture and Human Rights: Beyond Universalism and Relativism, co-edited with Lynda S. Bell and Ilan Peleg; China's New Rulers: The Secret Files, co-authored with Bruce Gilley; Constructing Human Rights in the Age of Globalization, co-edited with Mahmood Monshipouri, Neil Englehart, and Kavita Philip; How East Asians View Democracy, coedited with Yun-han Chu, Larry Diamond, and Doh Chull Shin; and the second edition of The Great Wall and the Empty Fortress, co-authored with Andrew Scobell. Nathan's articles have appeared in World Politics, Daedalus, The China Quarterly, Journal of Democracy, Asian Survey, The New Republic, The New York Review of Books, The London Review of Books, The Asian Wall Street Journal, the Boston Globe, the International Herald Tribune, and elsewhere. His research has been supported by the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Henry Luce Foundation, the National Science Foundation, the Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation, the Smith Richardson Foundation, and others. He has directed five National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminars. Born on April 3, 1943, in New York City, Professor Nathan received his degrees from Harvard University: the B.A. in History, summa cum laude, in 1963; the M.A. in East Asian Regional Studies in 1965; and the Ph.D. in Political Science in 1971. He taught at the University of Michigan in 1970-71 and has been at Columbia University since 1971. |
East Asia | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Book Discussion: China Behind The Miracle Authored by Sumita Dawra | January 04, 2016 | 1515-1630hrs | Book Discussion Forum |
Venue: Board Room, IDSA About the AuthorMs. Sumita Dawra is an Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer of Andhra Pradesh cadre and has experience of more than two decades in public administration and worked extensively at all levels of governance in India. She was posted in China (2011-2014) as the head of the economic wing in the Indian Embassy, Beijing. She authored the bestselling book on public policy, Poor but Spirited in Karimnagar: Field Notes of a Civil Servant, published by Harper Collins (India: 2012). About the Book‘China: Behind the Miracle’ is an easy-to-read, comprehensive account of the economic story of China. It explains various aspects of the Chinese economy in ten chapters, using examples from a particular city or region. The book will walk the reader through the Chinese economic landscape, the economy’s strengths and weaknesses, opportunities and threats. Most people world-over have a single dimensional understanding of China as a country with cheap labour-driven manufacturing and exports. This book will enable a multi-dimensional understanding of China as a country which unleashed its economic growth through a cleverly driven strategy of inviting foreign investments to leverage on a supply of cheap land and labour, while encouraging domestic enterprises to become big and absorb foreign technologies. A country that is now transitioning from an old investment heavy, export driven growth model to one driven by higher value addition in manufacturing, services and a strong domestic demand. The book will help the readers understand what is happening in present day China, while realistically helping them develop their own insights into the Chinese miracle and its future. Anyone reading this simple tale of China told by an Indian civil servant will soon feel competent to answer seemingly complex questions on the Chinese economy, in an objective and simple manner. I can surely promise that on this journey for the readers! Some of the questions the book addresses: |
East Asia | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Publications on Display at World Book Fair | January 09, 2016 to January 17, 2016 | 1100 hrs | Other |
The Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA) cordially invites you to the display of its publications for sale at the World Book Fair, 2016, being organised by National Book Trust, India and sponsored by Ministry of Human Resource, Department of Higher Education, Government of India from January 9-17, 2016 at Hall No 18, Stall No.129, Pragati Maidan. The IDSA publications on display will include journals, books, monographs, project reports and occasional papers etc. |
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Talk by Vijay Kumar on Flying Robots | December 29, 2015 | Vijay Kumar | 1000 hrs | Round Table |
Speaker: Dr. Vijay Kumar is from Penn Engineering, University of Pennsylvania |
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Talk by Sajjad Zahir on "The Liberation War of 1971" | December 18, 2015 | 1600 hrs | Other |
Venue: Board Room, IDSA |
South Asia | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Talk by Claude Arpi on "Infrastructure and other Developments in Tibetan Plateau" | December 14, 2015 | 3.00-4.30pm | Other |
Venue: Board Room, IDSA Abstract2015 is a special year for Tibet. Not only did Beijing celebrate the 50th anniversary of the formation of the Tibetan Autonomous Region (TAR), but Premier Li Keqiang mentioned Tibet in his Work Report at the NPC in March; important visits of senior leaders to the region took place (Yu Zhengsheng, Sun Chunlan, Wang Yang, Gen Xu Qiliang, Du Qinglin ); Vice-Premier Wang Yang visited Lhasa (August 17-18), just a week before the two-day Sixth Tibet Work Forum (on August 24 and 25) which decided the future directions for the Roof of the World. The lecture will focus on the infrastructure developments in the plateau (airports, roads, railway, hydropower plants, etc.) and the latest happenings in the political scene. |
East Asia |