1,025 research outputs found

    Responding to Indo-Pacific rivalry: Australia, India and middle power coalitions

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    In this Analysis, Lowy Institute International Security Program Director Rory Medcalf and Nonresident Fellow C. Raja Mohan argue that Chinese assertiveness and uncertainties about America’s role in Indo-Pacific Asia are causing middle powers to look for alternative approaches to regional security. The Analysis argues that enhanced security cooperation between Indo-Pacific middle powers should be extended to the creation of “middle-power coalitions” in the region. Key findings China’s assertiveness and uncertainties about America’s response are causing middle powers in Indo-Pacific Asia to looking beyond traditional approaches to security Cooperation between Indo-Pacific middle power coalitions would build regional resilience against the vagaries of US-China relations India and Australia are well placed to form the core of middle power coalition buildin

    A new India for a changing Europe : what to expect from India's foreign policy

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    C. Raja Mohan ; issuing department: Division for International Cooperation, Department for Asia and the Pacifi

    Book Review: Modi's world: expanding India's sphere of influence by C. Raja Mohan

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    Modi's World, a collection of newspaper articles by veteran journalist C. Raja Mohan, traces how Modi's foreign policy has compared with that of his predecessor and how it evolved during his first nine months in power. Raj Verma finds the book an easy read with great journalistic flair, but notes that this does come at the price of academic rigour

    India, China and the United States: Asia's emerging strategic triangle

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    The triangular dynamic among the United States, India and China will be critical to Asia\u27s strategic future. In this contribution to the Lowy Institute\u27s Strategic Snapshot series, leading Indian analyst C. Raja Mohan examines the complex pattern of power balancing and diplomatic engagement that is defining these relations, marked by a sequence of high-level visits at the end of 2010 and beginning of 2011

    Book review: the Oxford handbook of Indian foreign policy edited by David M. Malone, C. Raja Mohan and Srinath Raghavan

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    In The Oxford Handbook of Indian Foreign Policy, editors David M. Malone, C. Raja Mohan and Srinath Raghavan aim to offer an authoritative and up-to-date survey of foreign policy in India since 1947. Raj Verma writes that, despite some limitations, the book is an essential read for students at all levels and scholars who want to familiarise themselves with India’s foreign policy debates

    The Oxford Handbook of Indian Foreign Policy edited by David M. Malone, C. Raja Mohan and Srinath Raghavan

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    In The Oxford Handbook of Indian Foreign Policy, editors David M. Malone, C. Raja Mohan, and Srinath Raghavan aim to offer an authoritative and up-to-date survey of foreign policy in India since 1947. Raj Verma writes that, despite some limitations, the book is an essential read for students at all levels and scholars who want to familiarise themselves with India’s foreign policy debates

    India and the Rebalancing of Asia

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    Few regions have transformed as consequentially as Asia in the twenty-first century. In recent decades, China has risen faster than its neighbours and today outranks its major proximate competitors – India and Japan – on economic and defence indices by huge margins. The United States’ interest in balancing against China is especially significant for India, because the contradictions between New Delhi and an increasingly assertive Beijing are the sharpest in the region. In this Adelphi book, C. Raja Mohan delineates the prospects for an Indian role in structuring a new Asian geopolitical order. Grounding his analysis in the (often neglected) evolution of modern Indian foreign and security policies from the colonial era to the twenty-first century, Mohan argues that China’s rise has compelled India to discard its traditional ambivalence about Chinese power and counter Beijing by strengthening its own national power and developing partnerships with other states, primarily the US. In addition to considering potential challenges to the emerging US–India strategic relationship, the book evaluates India’s likely contributions to a new Asian security, political and economic order in the light of both New Delhi’s enduring regional interests and the policy changes envisioned by the second Trump administration

    International politics and society / India and nuclear weapons

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    C. Raja MohanElectronic ed.: Bonn: FES-Internet-Redaktion, 199

    The Oxford handbook of Indian foreign policy. Edited by David M. Malone, C. Raja Mohan and Srinath Raghavan (Book review)

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    The study of Indian foreign policy is slowly but surely changing, at the same time as Indian foreign policy is itself being transformed. Too long the preserve of the urbane and eloquent diplomats India specializes in cultivating, the field was until recently dominated by reminiscence and self-justification—by thorough but dry country-by-country assessments of the evolution of India's various bilateral relationships or post hoc polemics about past policy decisions. This is no longer the case. As India has emerged as a ‘rising power’, and as dissatisfaction has grown with those inherited ways of explaining its behaviour, established and emerging scholars have taken a fresh interest in its foreign affairs and have taken different approaches to understanding them.No Full Tex

    Factorization of isometries of hyperbolic 4-space and a discreteness condition:

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    Gilman's NSDC condition is a sufficient condition for the discreteness of a two generator subgroup of PSL(2,C). We address the question of the extension of this condition to subgroups of isometries of hyperbolic 4-space. While making this new construction, namely the NSDS condition, we are led to ask whether every orientation preserving isometry of hyperbolic 4-space can be factored into the product of two half-turns. We use some techniques developed by Wilker to first, define a half-turn suitably in dimension 4 and then answer the former question. It turns out that defining a half-turn in this way in any dimension n enables us to generalize some of Gilman's theorems to dimension greater than or equal to 4. We also give an exposition on part of Wilker's work and give new proofs for some of his results.Ph.D.Includes bibliographical references (p. 52-53)by Karan Mohan Pur
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