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INDIA’S NEIGHBOURHOOD DIPLOMACY (2) 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:   179603


Unresolved Burden of Water Resource-sharing: West Bengal as a Factor in India’s Neighbourhood Diplomacy / Chakraborty, Mohor   Journal Article
Chakraborty, Mohor Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The regional dynamics of South Asia have been vitiated by the contentious issue of resource-sharing between and among its member-states since the dawn of decolonisation. Of the shared resources, the issue pertaining to water-sharing between India and Bangladesh festers till date, posing itself not only as a contentious factor between the two neighbouring states of South Asia, but also in the federal relations of the central government in India and the state government of West Bengal. The roots of the water-sharing dispute of the Teesta river can be traced back to the colonial policies, compounded by the absence of transparency and accountability of policy-makers and their lack of clear understanding of the dynamics of the issue.
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