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NEW PARTNERSHIPS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   170762


Building militarycCapability, developing new partnerships and protecting national interests in an uncertain world order* / Lanba, Sunil   Journal Article
Lanba, Sunil Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The strategic need for nations to protect and promote their national interest in a changing world order has been the centre piece of global strategic discourse for some time. Linked to this aspect of national interest is the need to build military capability to prepare for the array of security challenges that lie ahead and also developing new partnerships, as the global order shifts from a unipolar model to a multipolar one. There is little dispute over the assertion that the world today is characterised by multi-layered and multi-faceted diversity from political, demographic, economic, environmental and strategic viewpoints. These issues are important from strategic perspective largely because it seems that the world is in another period of historical transition. It would be a fair assumption that we are living through a period of ‘strategic uncertainty
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ID:   138229


Indian Ocean futures: new partnerships, new alliances and academic diplomacy / Doyle, Timothy; Seal, Graham   Article
Doyle, Timothy Article
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Summary/Abstract Much of the job which falls to the editors of relatively new academic journals such as the Journal of the Indian Ocean Region (JIOR) is to forge epistemic and intellectual networks and alliances across an emerging academic field. And there can be no doubt that Indian Ocean studies and associated research ventures are relatively recent pursuits when compared to those works which have focused more heavily upon the Atlantic and Pacific oceanic geopolitical spheres. This is not to say that Indian Ocean interests have only recently emerged, but that rather, over recent decades, the intellectual and critical gaze of the academic nglosphere has been largely focused elsewhere.
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