India-China borderlands : conversations beyond the centre
Material type: TextPublication details: Los Angeles Sage 2014Description: xix, 175 p. mapsISBN: 9788132113515 (hardback : alkaline paper)Subject(s): Borderlands | Borderlands | Regionalism | RegionalismDDC classification: 327.51054 Summary: Despite the compelling immediacy of a 4,056 km long border, it is intriguing that when we think of India and China, we typically think of Delhi and Beijing and not locations along the shared border. The book will engage with this interesting puzzle through a critical comparative analysis of India–China relations at the subregional level. It will locate the massive state-led developmental thrust that India’s Northeast and China’s western border regions are witnessing under the rubric of the Look East policy and the Western Development Strategy respectively. As India and China reimagine their borders as bridges, what role will border regions play in the evolving foreign policy orientation? The book offers a new orientation to the study of India–China relations by bringing people back into the centre of these subregional conversations of change. The book will be of primary interest to those working on international relations, border studies, comparative regionalism and India–China relations.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | 327.51054 NIM/I (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 53686 |
Browsing Kannur University Central Library shelves, Shelving location: Stack Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
327.51 KIS/O On China | 327.51 MIR/C China, the world, and India | 327.5105 FRI/C A contest for supremacy : China, America, and the struggle for mastery in Asia | 327.51054 NIM/I India-China borderlands : conversations beyond the centre | 327.51073 CHR/U Useful adversaries : grand strategy, domestic mobilization, and Sino-American conflict, 1947-1958 | 327.51073 NEW/O Owen Lattimore and the loss of China | 327.54 AMB The Ambassadors' club: the Indian diplomat at large |
Despite the compelling immediacy of a 4,056 km long border, it is intriguing that when we think of India and China, we typically think of Delhi and Beijing and not locations along the shared border. The book will engage with this interesting puzzle through a critical comparative analysis of India–China relations at the subregional level. It will locate the massive state-led developmental thrust that India’s Northeast and China’s western border regions are witnessing under the rubric of the Look East policy and the Western Development Strategy respectively.
As India and China reimagine their borders as bridges, what role will border regions play in the evolving foreign policy orientation? The book offers a new orientation to the study of India–China relations by bringing people back into the centre of these subregional conversations of change.
The book will be of primary interest to those working on international relations, border studies, comparative regionalism and India–China relations.
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