Dr. Panda has produced a timely tour de force treatment of the most important geopolitical relationship in Asia today. This path-breaking study provides a remarkably comprehensive assessment of ChinaIndia relations, analyzing not just bilateral ties, but how the relationship plays out on the subcontinent, in the Asia-Pacific region, within the broader sphere of developing nations and rising powers, as well upon the global stage. I highly commend this up-to-date and thorough volume to anyone seeking to understand the larger twenty-first century seismic forces reshaping the geostrategic landscape of Asia and the world.
Andrew Scobell, RAND Corporation, USA
Jagannath Panda has produced an innovative book on IndiaChina relations that goes beyond just bilateral relations to consider sub-regional, regional and cross-continental interactions in groupings ranging from BCIM to IORA to BRICS. The result is a wide-ranging but careful assessment of the increasing complexities and encounters between India and China in a changing international setting. Scholars and students will benefit from this fresh and comprehensive treatment of IndiaChina relations.
Satu Limaye, East West Center in Washington, USA
In IndiaChina Relations Dr. Jagannath Panda has crafted a comprehensive, thoughtful, and necessary contribution on what has fast become one of the most geopolitically consequential relationships of the twenty-first century. From the origins of the China India border dispute to contemporary issues like the Dalai Lama succession, Chinas One Belt One Road Initiative, and disputes over water resources, Dr. Panda shines a bright analytical light on this complex web of competition, cooperation, conflict, collaboration, and coexistence. Whats more, his research is supported by a generous helping of detailed maps, graphs and charts that will serve as a reference point for scholars for years to come. For anyone interested in one of the most important, complex, and poorly-understood relationships in the world, IndiaChina Relations is a must-read.
Jeff Smith, Asian Security Programs, American Foreign Policy Council, USA
In his new book on IndiaChina relations, Jagannath Panda succeeds in bringing new light on a much-debated issue. His goal is ambitious, and rightly so. Combining political, ideological, geopolitical and geo-economic perspectives, and the willingness to reassess international relations theories at the light of what is really happening on the field and in the decision-makers circles, the multilevel approach selected guides the reader step-by-step across the intricate geometries designed by the two great Asian nations. The analysis is well informed, nuanced. A must-read for those concerned by the new Asian dynamics, and by their impact on the rise of multi-polarity in the global world order.
Jean-Luc Racine, Asia Centre, Paris, France
IndiaChina Relations
The rise of India and China as two major economic and political actors in both regional and global politics necessitates an analysis of not only their bilateral ties but also the significance of their regional and global pursuits. This book looks at the nuances and politics that the two countries attach to multilateral institutions and examines how they receive, react to and approach each others presence and upsurge.
The driving theme of this book is to highlight the enduring and emerging complexities in IndiaChina relations, which are multi-layered and polygonal in nature, and both a result and reflection of a multipolar world order. The book argues that coexistence between India and China in this multipolar world order is possible, but that it is limited to a medium-term perspective, given the constraints of identity complexities and global aspirations these two rising powers are pursuing. It goes on to discuss how their search for energy resources, quest to uphold their own identity as developing powers, and engagement in balance-of- power politics to exert authority on each others presence, are some elements that guide their non-cooperative relationship.
By explaining the foreign policy approaches of Asias two major powers towards the growing Asian and global multilateralism, and highlighting the policies they carry towards each other, the book is a useful contribution to students and scholars of Asian Politics, Foreign Policy and International Relations.
Jagannath P. Panda is a Research Fellow and Heads the East Asia Centre at the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, New Delhi, India.
Routledge Advances in South Asian Studies
Edited by Subrata K. Mitra
South Asia Institute, University of Heidelberg, Germany
South Asia, with its burgeoning, ethnically diverse population, soaring economies and nuclear weapons, is an increasingly important region in the global context. The series, which builds on this complex, dynamic and volatile area, features innovative and original research on the region as a whole or on the countries. Its scope extends to scholarly works drawing on history, politics, development studies, sociology and economics of individual countries from the region as well those that take an interdisciplinary and comparative approach to the area as a whole or to a comparison of two or more countries from this region. In terms of theory and method, rather than basing itself on any one orthodoxy, the series draws broadly on the insights germane to area studies, as well as the tool kit of the social sciences in general, emphasising comparison, the analysis of the structure and processes, and the application of qualitative and quantitative methods. The series welcomes submissions from established authors in the field as well as from young authors who have recently completed their doctoral dissertations.
Globalisation and Governance in India
New challenges to institutions and society
Harihar Bhattacharyya and Lion Knig
Indian Muslims and Citizenship
Spaces for jihad in everyday life
Julten Abdelhalim
IndiaChina Relations in the Contemporary World
Dynamics of national identity and interest
Yang Lu
Islam, Sufism and Everyday Politics of Belonging in South Asia
Edited by Deepra Dandekar and Torsten Tschacher
IndiaChina Relations
Politics of resources, identity and authority in a multipolar world order
Jagannath P. Panda
Indigenous Identity in South Asia
Making claims in the colonial Chittagong hill tracts
Tamina M. Chowdhury
First published 2017
by Routledge
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Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
2017 Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA), New Delhi
The right of Jagannath P. Panda to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.