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ID192543
Title ProperReinvigorating India’s ‘Act East’ Policy in an age of renewed power politics
LanguageENG
AuthorBajpaee, Chietigj
Summary / Abstract (Note)The year 2022 marks three decades of India’s ‘Look East’ Policy (renamed the ‘Act East’ Policy in 2014). The policy emerged in the aftermath of the Cold War amid efforts by New Delhi to revive the importance of Southeast Asia (and later East Asia and the broader Indo-Pacific region) in India’s foreign policy agenda. While the policy has proven to be resilient as a core component of India’s foreign policy agenda, looking ahead it faces three key challenges: domestically, India’s reform agenda failing to match the country’s foreign policy aspirations; regionally, the principle of ‘ASEAN centrality’ coming under growing scrutiny; and globally, an international order in flux amid a more pronounced rivalry between the United States and China (which has been exacerbated by the Russian invasion of Ukraine). Addressing these issues will be key to maintaining the relevance of India’s ‘Act East’ Policy as it enters its next phase.
`In' analytical NotePacific Review Vol. 36, No.3; May 2023: p.631-661
Journal SourcePacific Review Vol: 36 No 3
Key WordsASEAN ;  India ;  Look East ;  Indo-Pacific ;  Act East ;  Asia regionalism


 
 
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