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ID190668
Title ProperIndia and order transition in the Indo-Pacific
Other Title Informationresisting the Quad as a ‘security community’
LanguageENG
AuthorEstrada, Kate Sullivan de
Summary / Abstract (Note)Managing order transition in the Indo-Pacific is as much about negotiating the character of regional order as it is about mounting balance of power challenges or establishing countervailing institutional arrangements. For this reason, members of the Quad have expressed ambitions to deliver shared security on the basis of collective identity and values—though at times more in discourse than in practice. This article argues that India is actively contesting and, in some ways reconfiguring, the legitimating narratives of the Quad as an Indo-Pacific ‘security community’. Under the leadership of Narendra Modi, India has approached the socialising imperative of liberal identity cues selectively and ambivalently. More widely, India has declined to pursue an overt, collective strategy of Chinese containment and has propounded distinctive visions of regional security provision. India’s vision for liberal order in the Indo-Pacific stands apart from the ‘security community’ that the other Quad partners have enunciated in their foreign policy discourse, with consequences for the future of order transition in the Indo-Pacific.
`In' analytical NotePacific Review Vol. 36, No.2; Mar 2023: p.378-405
Journal SourcePacific Review Vol: 36 No 2
Key WordsIndia ;  Security community ;  Indo-Pacific ;  Order Transition ;  Quad


 
 
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