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ID134955
Title ProperMaking sense of India–Bangladesh relations
LanguageENG
AuthorMajumdar, Anindya Jyoti
Summary / Abstract (Note)India and Bangladesh are interrelated in geopolitical relations but their core objectives are different. While geopolitical compulsions introduce the never-ending challenges of proximity to the two parties, including crucial issues of security, migration and resource sharing, Bangladesh is yet to form its own identity in which the perceived image of India figures predominantly, and the attitudes and expectations they develop towards each other shape the pattern of bilateral interactions between the two countries. Solutions to a number of vexed problems remain elusive and irritants in relations out-number gestures of goodwill. While the warmth in relations has frequently fluctuated with the change of regimes, a sustained pattern of uneasiness and mistrust persists. Analysed at three levels of geopolitics, attitudinal effects and functional exchanges, India–Bangladesh relations appear as a reflection of normal big country–small country power relations where policies are formulated on the basis of the primary principle of self-help but are further shaded by the quest for transforming itself into a nation-state by Bangladesh.
`In' analytical NoteIndia Quarterly Vol.70, No.4; Dec.2014: p.327-340
Journal SourceIndia Quarterly Vol: 70 No 4
Standard NumberGeopolitics


 
 
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