Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:594Hits:20077434Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID183363
Title ProperInternational relations and the Himalaya
Other Title Informationconnecting ecologies, cultures and geopolitics
LanguageENG
AuthorDavis, Alexander E
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines international relations (IR)'s approach to the Himalaya. We argue that the possibility of violent conflict over contested international borders is not the region's primary international challenge. Rather, slow violence inflicted by state-building and militarisation, intimately connected to geopolitical tensions, threaten the region's ecologies, cultures and languages. The Himalaya is home to three biodiversity hotspots and a mosaic of ethnic groups, many of whom speak threatened languages. Its ice-deposits feed most of Asia's large rivers. In recent years, India and China have pursued large-scale infrastructure development in the region, enabling greater militarisation and extraction, and a tourist rush. These threats are amplified by climate change, which is occurring in the Himalaya at twice global averages, contributing to landslides, flooding, and droughts. However, the region's complexity is not matched by IR's theorisations, which overwhelmingly focus on the possibility of violent conflict between state actors. We argue that IR's analysis of the region must go beyond a states-and-security, Delhi-Beijing-Islamabad centred approach, to look at the numerous interconnections between its geopolitics, cultures and ecologies. We suggest this can be accomplished through incorporating more interdisciplinary analysis, and through focusing on the interaction between the organisation of political authority and the region's environment.
`In' analytical NoteAustralian Journal of International Affairs Vol. 75, No.1; Feb 2021: p.15-35
Journal SourceAustralian Journal of International Affairs Vol: 75 No 1
Key WordsCulture ;  Environment ;  Language ;  China ;  India ;  Himalaya


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text