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CHANGING CONTOURS (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   139879


Changing contours of India’s neighbourhood diplomacy / Guha, Ayan   Article
Guha, Ayan Article
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Summary/Abstract India shares land and maritime boundaries with eight countries – Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. Apart from China, which is not situated in South Asia,India is overwhelmingly superior compared to her South Asian neighbours in military and economic terms.India's predominant position in the sub-continent has given rise to a great deal of fear and insecurity among its neighbours creating one of the rare instances in the realist theory that calls for "bandwagoing" rather than balancing behaviour.
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2
ID:   149101


hanging contours of US-Iran nuclear relations / Pandey, Hina   Journal Article
Pandey, Hina Journal Article
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3
ID:   156811


Nuclear deterrence: theory, practice and changing contours / Rabbani, Attar   Journal Article
Rabbani, Attar Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Attar Rabbani examines nuclear deterrence in theory as well as in practice during and after the end of the Cold War. His central argument is that technological revolutions pose a serious challenge to the survivability of retaliatory arsenals—the heart of nuclear deterrence—and propel a new arms race among nuclear elites, both recognised and self-declared.
Key Words Nuclear Deterrence  Theory  Practice  Changing Contours 
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