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ID170893
Title ProperOpening the black box – the making of India’s foreign policy
LanguageENG
AuthorBlarel, Nicolas ;  Paliwal, Avinash
Summary / Abstract (Note)Most studies looking at India’s external policies continue to “black-box” the actual process of how Indian foreign policy is made. More specifically, most studies generally overlook how India’s complex domestic polity and bureaucratic apparatus shape India’s foreign policy outlook. Unlike works on India’s security policy which have built from and contributed to broader academic debates, studies on India’s foreign policy have failed to directly engage with concepts and theories developed by the sub-discipline of Foreign Policy Analysis (FPA). Why have these concepts and approaches not been consistently applied to the Indian context? There are various reasons for this, ranging from these disciplines’ excessive reliance on Western case studies, or the lack of interest in mainstream International Relations scholarship by South Asianists (in contrast to disciplines such as economics, political theory, and developmental studies, all of which have benefited from the Indian experience). This special issue is a step towards bridging this gap and to encourage a greater dialogue between FPA and the systematic study of Indian foreign policy. Through the careful analysis of specific case studies, the different papers offer a conceptually grounded and empirically innovative reading of India’s foreign policy across time, space, and themes.
`In' analytical NoteIndia Review Vol. 18, No.5, 2019; p 457-470
Journal SourceIndia Review Vol; 18 No 5
Key WordsIndia ;  Foreign Policy ;  India’s Foreign Policy


 
 
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