Raja Mohan, Crossing the Rubicon. Kamdar is an engaging writer but her book reads like a collection of. Mohan, Crossing the Rubicon, pp. Is a leading expert and writer on South Asia. Eset product activator 65. Raja Mohan (PhD, Jawaharlal. C., and at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
'Crossing the Rubicon explores the global engagement that India has taken up with a rare sense of purpose and self-confidence in recent years, examining shifts in foreign policy beginning in the 1980s through the nuclear tests of the 1990s to its current strategy. Two key issues guide much of this revolutionary change in Indian diplomacy: the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and a new wave of economic globalization. These developments left India scrambling to find new anchors for its foreign policy. Raja Mohan examines the reworking of India's relations with major powers, notably its new rapport with the United States and its rejuvenated relationship with post-Soviet Russia. What emerges is a remarkable tale of a country's transformation from being a leader of the Third World trade union to preparing for a seat at the highest level of global diplomacy.' Rating: (not yet rated) Subjects • • • More like this • •. Find more information about: ISBN: 625 OCLC Number: 53839947 Notes: Originally published: New Delhi: Viking, 2003.
Description: xxii, 321 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates: illustrations; 22 cm Contents: The nuclear leap forward -- Beyond non-alignment -- Returning to the West -- The US: a natural ally? -- Reviving the Russian connection -- Emulating China -- Containing Pakistan -- Rediscovering Lord Curzon -- Re-forming the subcontinent -- Diplomacy for the Second Republic. Responsibility: C. More information: • • • Abstract. 'This book offers an outstanding exposition of India's foreign policy adaptation since the end of the Cold War. Written in elegant prose, Crossing the Rubicon presents valuable insights into India's international strategy in a rapidly changing world where its ambitions are increasingly becoming enmeshed with the requirements of economic globalization.
Folder transfer free. The book offers an interesting perspective on the reasons for the improvement in U.S.-India relations and the increasing strategic compatibility of the two states on issues such as terrorism and missile defenses. Raja Mohan's enlightened realist account depicts India as a major success story of the liberal order outside the Western world with much untapped potential for it to become a beacon of change in South Asia and the larger world.
This book is definitely one of the best accounts available on Indian foreign policy in the contemporary era.' Paul, James McGill Professor of International Relations, McGill University, Canada, and co-author of: ' India in the World Order: Searching for Major Power Status,' 'This is a thoughtful, astute and invaluable study of the fundamental transformation in India's foreign policy in the aftermath of the Cold War. Raja Mohan has addressed an important lacuna in the literature. This work is a fine-grained, meticulously researched and deeply informed account of the social forces and political choices that contributed to a profound ideological and substantive shift in India's foreign policy.
The book should be of compelling interest to both scholars and practitioners interested in understanding the emergent foreign policy of a major Asian power.' -- Sumit Ganguly, Rabindranath Tagore Chair inIndian Cultures and Civilizations and Director, India Studies Program, Indiana University, Bloomington 'Raja Mohan offers a fine meal for readers hungry to understand how and why India is making itself a major power -- fresh ingredients, marinated with good reason, expertly cooked, pleasantly presented, easily digested. This book should deepen Mohan's reputation as one of India's best strategic analysts. '--George Perkovich, vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and author of 'India's Nuclear Bom'b 'C. Raja Mohan has produced the most readable, authoritative and wide-ranging account to date of the remarkable ongoing transformation in India's post-cold war foreign policy. A leading voice among India's new breed of foreign affairs analysts, Mohan mounts a powerful argument that Indian diplomacy has irreversibly crossed an historic threshold.
Raja Mohan, Crossing the Rubicon. Kamdar is an engaging writer but her book reads like a collection of. Mohan, Crossing the Rubicon, pp. Is a leading expert and writer on South Asia. Eset product activator 65. Raja Mohan (PhD, Jawaharlal. C., and at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
'Crossing the Rubicon explores the global engagement that India has taken up with a rare sense of purpose and self-confidence in recent years, examining shifts in foreign policy beginning in the 1980s through the nuclear tests of the 1990s to its current strategy. Two key issues guide much of this revolutionary change in Indian diplomacy: the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and a new wave of economic globalization. These developments left India scrambling to find new anchors for its foreign policy. Raja Mohan examines the reworking of India's relations with major powers, notably its new rapport with the United States and its rejuvenated relationship with post-Soviet Russia. What emerges is a remarkable tale of a country's transformation from being a leader of the Third World trade union to preparing for a seat at the highest level of global diplomacy.' Rating: (not yet rated) Subjects • • • More like this • •. Find more information about: ISBN: 625 OCLC Number: 53839947 Notes: Originally published: New Delhi: Viking, 2003.
Description: xxii, 321 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates: illustrations; 22 cm Contents: The nuclear leap forward -- Beyond non-alignment -- Returning to the West -- The US: a natural ally? -- Reviving the Russian connection -- Emulating China -- Containing Pakistan -- Rediscovering Lord Curzon -- Re-forming the subcontinent -- Diplomacy for the Second Republic. Responsibility: C. More information: • • • Abstract. 'This book offers an outstanding exposition of India's foreign policy adaptation since the end of the Cold War. Written in elegant prose, Crossing the Rubicon presents valuable insights into India's international strategy in a rapidly changing world where its ambitions are increasingly becoming enmeshed with the requirements of economic globalization.
Folder transfer free. The book offers an interesting perspective on the reasons for the improvement in U.S.-India relations and the increasing strategic compatibility of the two states on issues such as terrorism and missile defenses. Raja Mohan's enlightened realist account depicts India as a major success story of the liberal order outside the Western world with much untapped potential for it to become a beacon of change in South Asia and the larger world.
This book is definitely one of the best accounts available on Indian foreign policy in the contemporary era.' Paul, James McGill Professor of International Relations, McGill University, Canada, and co-author of: ' India in the World Order: Searching for Major Power Status,' 'This is a thoughtful, astute and invaluable study of the fundamental transformation in India's foreign policy in the aftermath of the Cold War. Raja Mohan has addressed an important lacuna in the literature. This work is a fine-grained, meticulously researched and deeply informed account of the social forces and political choices that contributed to a profound ideological and substantive shift in India's foreign policy.
The book should be of compelling interest to both scholars and practitioners interested in understanding the emergent foreign policy of a major Asian power.' -- Sumit Ganguly, Rabindranath Tagore Chair inIndian Cultures and Civilizations and Director, India Studies Program, Indiana University, Bloomington 'Raja Mohan offers a fine meal for readers hungry to understand how and why India is making itself a major power -- fresh ingredients, marinated with good reason, expertly cooked, pleasantly presented, easily digested. This book should deepen Mohan's reputation as one of India's best strategic analysts. '--George Perkovich, vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and author of 'India's Nuclear Bom'b 'C. Raja Mohan has produced the most readable, authoritative and wide-ranging account to date of the remarkable ongoing transformation in India's post-cold war foreign policy. A leading voice among India's new breed of foreign affairs analysts, Mohan mounts a powerful argument that Indian diplomacy has irreversibly crossed an historic threshold.