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INDIA - PAKISTAN RIVALRY (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   123659


Cost of conflict in South Asia: a case study of India-Pakistan rivalry / Kayani, Saima Ashraf   Journal Article
Kayani, Saima Ashraf Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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2
ID:   140927


Enduring India-Pakistan rivalry: prospects for conflict resolution / Abbasi, Rizwana   Article
Abbasi, Rizwana Article
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3
ID:   139878


India’s Afghanistan policy: the way ahead / Ahmad, Saleem   Article
Ahmad, Saleem Article
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Summary/Abstract Afghanistan’s location at the strategic crossroads between South Asia and Central Asia and South Asia and the West Asia makes the country extremely important for India’s strategic interests in the region. Since, India has friendly ties with Afghanistan and wishes to see a stable democratic government installed in Kabul, and thus, it should be independent from any external interference in Afghan’s affaires.
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4
ID:   123380


India's future plans for Afghanistan / Kumar, Satish   Journal Article
Kumar, Satish Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This Article deals with the post 2014 Afghanistan. Once the US forces leave Afghanistan and allow the war-ravaged country to redefine its strategic alliances in its neighbourhood, India-Pakistan rivalry is pitched to look for the larger space in Afghanistan. Therefore, it becomes relevant to weigh the Indian side in the emerging scenario in Afghanistan.
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5
ID:   117441


Mixed legacies in contested borderlands: Skardu and the Kashmir dispute / Bouzas, Antia Mato   Journal Article
Bouzas, Antia Mato Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The article explores the sense of belonging of people from Skardu, a border town located in the Gilgit-Baltistan region, a territory administered by Pakistan but which is disputed by India for its being part of the former Princely State of Jammu and Kashmir. Neither full Pakistani citizens, nor identifying themselves with Kashmiri nationalism, the people of Gilgit-Baltistan lack of a common sense of belonging. The uncertain future of the territorial entity contributes to this, despite transformations already at work there. By examining the social and material landscape of Skardu town, and therefore using a micro-level perspective, the article aims to address issues of identity and security connected with broader constructed narratives of intrastate or interstate conflict, such as the Kashmir dispute within the wider geopolitical imaginary of India-Pakistan rivalry.
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