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New South Asian security : Six core relations underpinning regional security / edited by Chris Ogden.

Contributor(s): Series: Strategic studiesPublisher: New Delhi, [India] : Orient BlackSwan, 2016Description: x, 183 pages : illustration (black and white) ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9788125062615 (hardback)
  • 8125062610 (hardback)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 355.033 OGD 23
LOC classification:
  • UA832.7 .N49 2016
Contents:
Contents: Introduction: Recasting South Asian Security/Chris Ogden. 1. India China Relations: Norms, Perceptions and Geo-politics/David Scott. 2. Torbor: Pakistan and Afghanistan s Cousin Rivalry/Michael Semple. 3. Norms, identity and discourse in India-Pakistan s security relations/Runa Das. 4. China and Afghanistan: challenges and opportunities/Jingdong Yuan. 5. Pakistan, China, security and stability in South Asia/Andrew Small. 6. Afghanistan-India relations: normative sources of bilateral ties/Avinash Paliwal and Harsh V. Pant. 7. Conclusions: shared regional values and trajectories/Chris Ogden. Bibliography. Index. New South Asian Security recasts the interpretation of security and international relations in South Asia. Moving away from the traditional emphasis on India Pakistan relations, this volume focuses on the region s unique confluence of two of the international system s rising great powers (China and India), and two of its failing and most unstable states (Pakistan and Afghanistan). It also acknowledges that South Asian security rests upon the interaction between these four important states. The volume also highlights the region s present status as the fulcrum of contemporary dynamics of international relations and global trends (from rising powers and an Asian Century, to international terrorism, nuclear proliferation and energy security threats). These factors make South Asian security significant to the world, and highlight its relevance to the nature (and future) of the international system. It explicitly: brings Afghanistan and China into the study of South Asian relations; confirms the relevance of big powers in South Asia to regional/global politics; compares the core norms underpinning bilateral relations among its four critical states; and constructs a collective understanding of the strategic interests driving regional security. It thus both broadens and redefines our sense of South Asia, while underscoring the increased need for regional understandings concerning its security and stability, in the context of the planned withdrawal of external actors from Afghanistan. This book will be indispensable for students and scholars of international relations, strategic studies, and peace and conflict studies.
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BOOKs BOOKs National Law School MPP Section 355.033 OGD (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 37545

Includes bibliographical references (pages 148-174) and index.

Contents: Introduction: Recasting South Asian Security/Chris Ogden. 1. India China Relations: Norms, Perceptions and Geo-politics/David Scott. 2. Torbor: Pakistan and Afghanistan s Cousin Rivalry/Michael Semple. 3. Norms, identity and discourse in India-Pakistan s security relations/Runa Das. 4. China and Afghanistan: challenges and opportunities/Jingdong Yuan. 5. Pakistan, China, security and stability in South Asia/Andrew Small. 6. Afghanistan-India relations: normative sources of bilateral ties/Avinash Paliwal and Harsh V. Pant. 7. Conclusions: shared regional values and trajectories/Chris Ogden. Bibliography. Index. New South Asian Security recasts the interpretation of security and international relations in South Asia. Moving away from the traditional emphasis on India Pakistan relations, this volume focuses on the region s unique confluence of two of the international system s rising great powers (China and India), and two of its failing and most unstable states (Pakistan and Afghanistan). It also acknowledges that South Asian security rests upon the interaction between these four important states. The volume also highlights the region s present status as the fulcrum of contemporary dynamics of international relations and global trends (from rising powers and an Asian Century, to international terrorism, nuclear proliferation and energy security threats). These factors make South Asian security significant to the world, and highlight its relevance to the nature (and future) of the international system. It explicitly: brings Afghanistan and China into the study of South Asian relations; confirms the relevance of big powers in South Asia to regional/global politics; compares the core norms underpinning bilateral relations among its four critical states; and constructs a collective understanding of the strategic interests driving regional security. It thus both broadens and redefines our sense of South Asia, while underscoring the increased need for regional understandings concerning its security and stability, in the context of the planned withdrawal of external actors from Afghanistan. This book will be indispensable for students and scholars of international relations, strategic studies, and peace and conflict studies.

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