• BRIDGING BORDERS: INDIA-NEPAL RELATIONS IN A CHANGING GEOPOLITICAL LANDSCAPE

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    Book title: BRIDGING BORDERS: INDIA-NEPAL RELATIONS IN A CHANGING GEOPOLITICAL LANDSCAPE
    Author(s): Lt Gen Shokin Chauhan PVSM, AVSM, YSM, SM, VSM, PhD
    ISBN: 9788196872274
    Publication Year: 2024
    Binding: HB
    Pages: 214
    Price: Rs. 995
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  • INDIA-AFRICA: Building Synergies in Peace, Security and Development

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    This book represents an effort to present views on peace, security and development partnership between India and the African countries. India and Africa both recognise that peace, security and development are intimately interwoven. While peace ensures opportunity for development, security enables as well as protects fruits of development. Africa is a continent which has witnessed many conflicts. However, Africa has also witnessed economic growth and political reform in the past decade. This volume brings together perspectives from Indian and African experts on diverse issues such as security, trade, development, conflict resolution, peacekeeping, terrorism and climate change. It will be of interest to students and researchers of African studies, India- Africa relations and security studies.

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  • INDIA’S APPROACH TO WEST ASIA: Trends, Challenges and Possibilities

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    This volume provides perspectives of scholars from India and West Asia on several bilateral issues of concern, challenges and scope for further cooperation. The authors contend that a convergence of interests between India and West Asian countries across numerous domains, coupled with India’s escalating stakes in the region, and the growing recognition among West Asian nations of India’s burgeoning economic and political influence, stand as key drivers underpinning the India-West Asia relationship. Furthermore, they have underscored that under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India’s West Asia policy has undergone a major transformation.

    995.00
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  • INDIA’S G20 LEGACY: SHAPING A NEW WORLD ORDER

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    Pathbreaking, Historic,  Transformational – the list of adjectives describing India’s G20 presidency is a long one. India`s stewardship of the G20 in a polarised world has been widely praised and dissected in international media, academic, and strategic circles for reinvigorating multilateralism and bridging divides in a conflicted world. This book presents original perspectives and insights by practitioners, diplomats, and strategic experts that illuminate the multi-faceted legacy of India’s G20 presidency.
    With the baton passing on to Brazil in 2023-2024 and South Africa in 2024-2025, the book dives deep into ideas and themes that animate the legacy of India’s G20 presidency and the lessons it holds for the successive presidencies of the Global South and the future evolution of this global grouping. Incisive essays and commentaries by the key figures who steered India’s G20 presidency provide an insider’s view on behind-the-scenes developments that culminated in the success of the New Delhi summit in September 2023.
    Edited by Manish Chand, a leading foreign policy expert and author, India’s G20 Legacy: Shaping a New World Order is an invaluable reference for policy-makers, practitioners, scholars, students, and strategic experts. The book brings out vividly how visionary leadership and a pragmatic approach can rally the world around a transformational global agenda, paving the way for a new world order.
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  • SYNERGISING INDIA-AFRICA RELATIONS: Contemporary Realities and Emerging Prospects

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    Book title: SYNERGISING INDIA-AFRICA RELATIONS: Contemporary Realities and Emerging Prospects
    Author(s): Prof (Dr) Nagalaxmi M Raman & Dr Neha Sinha
    ISBN: 9788195189434
    Publication Year: 2024
    Binding: HB
    Pages: 276
    Price: Rs. 995
    995.00
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  • TURKIYE`S FOREIGN POLICY UNDER THE AKP: Implications and Challenges for India

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    During the first two decades of the twenty-first century, besides the structural factors namely geography, history, politics, international system and the world order, five conjunctural factors dominated Turkish foreign policy behaviour and conduct. These include the Strategic Depth (Stratejik Derinlik) doctrine with ‘zero-problem’ with neighbours embedded in it followed by the Blue Homeland (Mavi Vatan) doctrine focused on enhancing Türkiye’s maritime presence in its immediate neighbourhood and the periphery. Thirdly, and arguably the most important, is the personality of Recep Tayyip Erdogan who as a dominating figure in contemporary Turkish politics has shaped not only the political discourse but foreign policy praxis. Erdogan’s personalised style of interventions has undoubtedly had a profound impact on Ankara’s interactions and engagements with the wider world. Finally, pan-Islamism and neo-Ottomanism are two important drivers in Turkish foreign policy and were visible notably in the Middle East and North Africa region and came into prominence in the wake of the Arab Spring uprisings. In this context, it is pertinent to ask what are Turkish foreign policy ambitions and how do these impact India? Given that Ankara has expanded its presence, or at least is striving to expand it, in the geographically contiguous Southwest Asia region that connects India to the Middle East, the question how Indian foreign policy should view Türkiye becomes even more important. The bilateral challenges between India and Türkiye make it even more pertinent for Indian scholars and policymakers to take a deep and hard look at Türkiye’s foreign policy doctrines and praxis. This book is an attempt in that direction. It systematically analyses the structural and conjunctural factors in Turkish foreign policy and notes that Türkiye’s foreign policy is embedded in a glorified identification of the past, both Ottoman and Kemalist, and in its geographical location as a multi-regional actor. However, the foreign policy ambitions are limited by Türkiye’s economic performance and political sliding. From an Indian viewpoint, the book identifies Pakistan as a limiting factor so far as the bilateral relations are concerned and recommends that New Delhi should use economic leverage and diplomacy to de-hyphenate the Pakistan factor.

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