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1 |
ID:
135493
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Summary/Abstract |
India needs to meet its growing energy demand while managing energy security and mitigating local andglobal environmental impacts. To this end, India needs to achieve an unprecedented level of energy efficiency and diversification. Though a formidable challenge, India will not face it alone. During the next three decades the world will experience an energy or carbon revolution that will create opportunities as well as challenges for India.
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2 |
ID:
116211
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3 |
ID:
142141
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Summary/Abstract |
India's trade deficit with China is set to reach record levels in 2015, new trade figures show, with the imbalance after the first three quarters of the year already nearing last year's mark. As India has grown its consumers and corporations have been importing an increasing amount of China’s affordable products but India’s exports to China have not kept pace. While China has a cost advantage in most products, analysts say India is very competitive in the pharmaceutical, textile and some services sectors. That is where it needs more access if it wants to start to rectify the skewed trade balance. Similarly, frictions along the border and Chinese incursions mounted in recent years remain a serious security concern for India. This provides ample scope for anti-China constituency in India. Also China’s solidarity with Pakistan has wider ramifications, especially from an Indian standpoint towards bilateral relations.
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4 |
ID:
147996
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Summary/Abstract |
To quote Sir Julian Corbett, the real point of sea power is not so much what happens at sea, but how that influences the outcome of events on land. The MSR’s essential rationale is the leveraging of Chinese soft-power. The aim apparently is to shore-up China’s image as a benevolent state. Beijing’s would also conceivably use the project’s commercial investments to establish its legitimate interests in the Indian Ocean. And while China can be expected to do everything in its power to force region states to join the project - including offering economic aid to potential partners - the bottom-line for it will be to make an offer to India that is hard to refuse. India’s appreciation of the MSR must be based on an objective appraisal of these new realities.
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5 |
ID:
136521
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Summary/Abstract |
China is meeting several new challenges in the new phase, which should be taken into account in the policy-making of environmental protection and sustainable development. Firstly, as a global manufacturing hub China has become producing spot for the products later to be be sold around the world. Even though recent sign show decline in economic growth rates and falling down of export led economy, the product list still continues to grow demanding more manufacturing resulting in further depletion of natural resources and higher emission of pollutants. Secondly, as a most populous developing country, China faces the problem of uneven regional development. Western China, which covers almost 70% of the country’s total landmass, is still struggling with poverty.
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6 |
ID:
120951
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7 |
ID:
118108
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8 |
ID:
125269
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Publication |
2013.
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Summary/Abstract |
The discipline of political science has given birth to different themes, thought and action, time to time depending on the dynamics of prevailing political discourse based on immediate socio- political and economic conditions. Since the evolution of the nation state model in 16th century, based on the rationalist, secular and progressive thought of Industrial revolution and Renaissance period, it has well been reactive to the emerging political developments.
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