India and Japan: Assessing the Strategic Partnership: Politics of South Asia
Editat de Rajesh Basrur, Sumitha Narayanan Kuttyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 ian 2019
This
volume
focuses
on
the
rapidly
expanding
strategic
relationship
between
India
and
Japan,
expanding
on
the
hitherto
under-analyzed
concept
of
“strategic
partnership,”
tracing
the
history
of
the
interaction,
and
gauging
its
current
and
future
trajectories.
The
rise
of
China
and
its
challenge
to
U.S.
dominance
of
the
global
system
is
the
setting
in
which
the
partnership
has
assumed
a
major
profile,
incorporating
both
defence
and
economic
cooperation
on
an
unprecedented
scale.
The
increasing
congruence
of
Indian
and
Japanese
interests
is
juxtaposed
with
the
inherent
limitations
of
the
partnership
to
portray
a
complex
picture
of
a
kind
of
strategic
relationship
that
has
become
a
staple
of
contemporary
international
politics.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789811341182
ISBN-10: 9811341184
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Ediția:Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018
Editura: Springer
Colecția Palgrave Pivot
Seria Politics of South Asia
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore
ISBN-10: 9811341184
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Ediția:Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018
Editura: Springer
Colecția Palgrave Pivot
Seria Politics of South Asia
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore
Notă biografică
Rajesh
Basrur
is
Professor
of
International
Relations
and
Coordinator
of
the
South
Asia
Programme
at
the
S.
Rajaratnam
School
of
International
Studies,
Nanyang
Technological
University,
Singapore.
He
has
authored
five
books,
most
recently
(with
Kate
Sullivan
De
Estrada)
Rising
India:
Status
and
Power
(Routledge,
2017).
Sumitha
Narayanan
Kutty
is
Associate
Research
Fellow,
South
Asia
Programme
at
the
S.
Rajaratnam
School
of
International
Studies,
Nanyang
Technological
University,
Singapore.
Her
work
has
appeared
in
several
publications
including
The
Washington
Quarterly
and
Asia
Policy.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
This
volume
focuses
on
the
rapidly
expanding
strategic
relationship
between
India
and
Japan,
expanding
on
the
hitherto
under-analyzed
concept
of
“strategic
partnership,”
tracing
the
history
of
the
interaction,
and
gauging
its
current
and
future
trajectories.
The
rise
of
China
and
its
challenge
to
U.S.
dominance
of
the
global
system
is
the
setting
in
which
the
partnership
has
assumed
a
major
profile,
incorporating
both
defence
and
economic
cooperation
on
an
unprecedented
scale.
The
increasing
congruence
of
Indian
and
Japanese
interests
is
juxtaposed
with
the
inherent
limitations
of
the
partnership
to
portray
a
complex
picture
of
a
kind
of
strategic
relationship
that
has
become
a
staple
of
contemporary
international
politics.
Sumitha
Narayanan
Kutty
is
Associate
Research
Fellow,
South
Asia
Programme
at
the
S.
Rajaratnam
School
of
International
Studies,
Nanyang
Technological
University,
Singapore.
Her
work
has
appeared
in
several
publications
includingThe
Washington
QuarterlyandAsia
Policy.
Caracteristici
Assesses
bilateral
relations
between
India
and
Japan
around
the
concept
of
'strategic
partnership'
Analyses
how
the
balance
between
the
two
–
drivers
and
constraints
–
are
expected
to
play
out
Brings
out
an
important
conceptual
shift
within
the
international
system;
the
gradual
demise
of
the
old
hub-and-spoke
alliance
system
centred
on
the
United
States
Cuprins
1. Conceptualising Strategic Partnerships.- 2. Evolution of India-Japan Ties: Prospects and Limitations.- 3. A Confluence of Two Strategies: The Japan-India Security Partnership in the Indo-Pacific.- 4. Why Japan Needs India as a Defence Partner.- 5. Integrating an Ally and an Aligner in a Principled Security Network: The United States and the India-Japan Strategic Partnership.- 6. Conclusion.