Lexington Books
Pages: 326
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-2144-3 • Hardback • January 2008 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
B.M. Jain is honorable academician and research professor at the International Noble Academy in Toronto. He is also editor-in-chief ofThe Indian Journal of Asian Affairs.
Chapter 1 List of Acronyms
Chapter 2 Preface
Chapter 3 Acknowledgements
Chapter 4 1 Globalization and Regionalization in International Relations and Foreign Policy: A Critique of Existing Paradigms
Chapter 5 2 Indian Foreign Policy: An Overview
Chapter 6 3 India's Economic Diplomacy
Chapter 7 4 Indo-U.S. Relations: Estrangement to Engagement
Chapter 8 5 India and Russia: Reassessing the Time-Tested Ties
Chapter 9 6 India-China Relations: Issues and Emerging Trends
Chapter 10 7 India-Pakistan Relations: Sources of Hostility and Reconciliation
Chapter 11 8 India and the Middle East Asia
Chapter 12 9 India and Central Asia
Chapter 13 10 Translating Global Power Ambitions
Chapter 14 Appendix
Chapter 15 Bibliography
Chapter 16 Index
Professor B.M. Jain, an established scholar of India's foreign policy, has written a timely, topical and comprehensive analysis of India's emerging foreign policy. His work addresses an important lacuna in the field. The book will be of use to academics, policymakers, journalists and others interested in the on-going transformation of India's foreign policy.
— Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University
Global Power: India?s Foreign Policy, 1947-2006 is a major work in the fields of foreign policy analysis in general and the international relations of South Asia in particular. The book begins with a thoughtful review of concept formation with regard toglobalization, which draws attention to the neglected importance of regional effects and the shortcomings of existing paradigms. Jain establishes the unevenly structured nature of globalization as a backdrop for foreign policy analysis. He offers a tourde force on the major components of Indian foreign policy, such as economic diplomacy, relations with the US, Russia, China, and Pakistan as individual states and the Middle East and East and Central Asia as regions. This comprehensive review, which reveals the importance of India in both global and regional contexts, culminates in consideration of this state?s ambitions on the world stage. The review of future prospects reveals India ?s enormous potential as a global power while also acknowledging the Asian giant?s ongoing problems in terms of institutional weakness and accountability.
— Patrick James, University of Southern California
Global Power: India's Foreign Policy, 1947-2006 is a major work in the fields of foreign policy analysis in general and the international relations of South Asia in particular.The book begins with a thoughtful review of concept formation with regard to globalization, which draws attention to the neglected importance of regional effects and the shortcomings of existing paradigms.Jain establishes the unevenly structured nature of globalization as a backdrop for foreign policy analysis. He offers a tour de force on the major components of Indian foreign policy, such as economic diplomacy, relations with the US, Russia, China, and Pakistan as individual states and the Middle East and East and Central Asia as regions. This comprehensive review, which reveals the importance of India in both global and regional contexts, culminates in consideration of this state's ambitions on the world stage. The review of future prospects reveals India 's enormous potential as a global power while also acknowledging the Asian giant's ongoing problems in terms of institutional weakness and accountability.
— Patrick James, University of Southern California
In this ambitious book, B.M. Jain sets out to analyze how and in what ways Indian foreign policy has broken with the past. Jain offers a detailed...narrative of Indian events since Independence....The resulting book provides an important source of information for students studying Indian foreign policy at both the undergraduate and graduate levels.
— Pacific Affairs