Hindu Nationalism and The Evolution of Contemporary Indian Security
Portents Of Power
Price: 795.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198089551
Publication date:
03/01/2014
Hardback
280 pages
216.0x140.0mm
Price: 795.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198089551
Publication date:
03/01/2014
Hardback
280 pages
216.0x140.0mm
Part of Oxford International Relations in South Asia
Chris Ogden
Rights: World Rights
Part of Oxford International Relations in South Asia
Chris Ogden
Description
The tenure of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) regime (1998–2004), led by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) saw India’s rise in international prominence, especially in terms of nuclear transparency, a tilt towards the US, regional pragmatism, and use of realpolitik. On all these accounts, the BJP regime often significantly contrasted to those of the Indian National Congress.The practices and ideas that the BJP espoused continue to impact upon India’s security policies today. One of the first few comparative analyses of the security policy of BJP, before, during, and after its leadership of the NDA government, this volume, part of the Oxford International Relations in South Asia series, evaluates the ideological origins and practices of BJP’s foreign policy, both inside and outside of government. Furthermore it highlights the multiple, composite, and competing norms influencing India’s foreign policy—and how these norms make it an absorptive, dynamic, and elastic entity. These norms are used to analyse the viewpoints of India’s political parties and her security community concerning the origins, core principles, and future course of Indian foreign policy. The primary market for this book will be departments of political science and international relations in different institutes and universities worldwide. Apart from institutions, this book will also be of interest to students and teachers of political science, international relations, and foreign policy; researchers; and the informed general reader (particularly in India and across South Asia).
Part of Oxford International Relations in South Asia
Chris Ogden
Table of contents
List of Tables and Figures
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Indian Security, Norms, and the BJP
1. India's Security Identity Develops, 1947-98
2. The BJP and Indian Foreign Policy Until 1998
3. The Reality of Power, Pokhran II, and Domestic Dynamics
4. Confronting, Engaging, Consolidating: Th e BJP and India's Neighbours
5. Exploding Perceptions: India's Global Relations
6. Aftermath: 2004, 2009, and the Evolution of India's Security Identity
Conclusions: The BJP and India's International Emergence
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Part of Oxford International Relations in South Asia
Chris Ogden
Features
- The book produces one of the first few analyses of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP) security policy, and focuses exclusively upon the ideological origins and practice of the BJP's foreign policy both inside and outside of government. The book concentrates on the viewpoints of India's political parties and the country's security community (including ex-leading members of India's bureaucracy, all the three armed services, academics and journalists) concerning the origins, core principles, and future course of India's foreign policy. The book makes a significant, original, and valuable contribution to existing (and expanding) literature on the BJP, Hindu nationalism, and Indian security. The book is a study of how international affairs are seen by the BJP, the principal Opposition party in the world's largest democracy, and timely in the context of India's next general election scheduled for 2014.
Part of Oxford International Relations in South Asia
Chris Ogden
Description
The tenure of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) regime (1998–2004), led by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) saw India’s rise in international prominence, especially in terms of nuclear transparency, a tilt towards the US, regional pragmatism, and use of realpolitik. On all these accounts, the BJP regime often significantly contrasted to those of the Indian National Congress.The practices and ideas that the BJP espoused continue to impact upon India’s security policies today. One of the first few comparative analyses of the security policy of BJP, before, during, and after its leadership of the NDA government, this volume, part of the Oxford International Relations in South Asia series, evaluates the ideological origins and practices of BJP’s foreign policy, both inside and outside of government. Furthermore it highlights the multiple, composite, and competing norms influencing India’s foreign policy—and how these norms make it an absorptive, dynamic, and elastic entity. These norms are used to analyse the viewpoints of India’s political parties and her security community concerning the origins, core principles, and future course of Indian foreign policy. The primary market for this book will be departments of political science and international relations in different institutes and universities worldwide. Apart from institutions, this book will also be of interest to students and teachers of political science, international relations, and foreign policy; researchers; and the informed general reader (particularly in India and across South Asia).
Read MoreTable of contents
List of Tables and Figures
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Indian Security, Norms, and the BJP
1. India's Security Identity Develops, 1947-98
2. The BJP and Indian Foreign Policy Until 1998
3. The Reality of Power, Pokhran II, and Domestic Dynamics
4. Confronting, Engaging, Consolidating: Th e BJP and India's Neighbours
5. Exploding Perceptions: India's Global Relations
6. Aftermath: 2004, 2009, and the Evolution of India's Security Identity
Conclusions: The BJP and India's International Emergence
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
The Oxford Handbook of The American Congress
Eric Schickler & Frances E. Lee
The End of American World Order
Amitav Acharya
Diaspora, Development, and Democracy
Devesh Kapur