India-Pakistan Nuclear Relationship

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China's Nuclear Policies
China’s Nuclear Policies
Classical Deterrence Theory
Classical nuclear deterrence theory
Deterrence Relationship
Deterrence Stability
Deterrence Theory
deterrence theory application
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India Pakistan Crises
India Pakistan Nuclear
India-Pakistan nuclear relationship
India-Pakistan wars
Indo-US Nuclear Deal
International relations
IR Theory
Kargil Crisis
military doctrines South Asia
Minimum Deterrence
Nuclear Behaviour
Nuclear Capability
nuclear crisis management strategies
Nuclear Deterrence
nuclear proliferation South Asia
Nuclear Weapons
Operation Parakram
Operation Vijay
Pakistan's Nuclear Doctrine
Pakistani Nuclear
Pakistan’s Nuclear Doctrine
Proliferation Optimists
Proliferation Pessimists
regional conflict analysis
Regional Security Complex
Regional Security Complex Theory
South Asia's Nuclear Deterrence
South Asian security studies
South Asia’s Nuclear Deterrence
stability-instability paradox

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415424080
  • Weight: 730g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Mar 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Conflict resolution and promotion of regional cooperation in South Asia has assumed a new urgency in the aftermath of the nuclear tests by India and Pakistan in 1998, and underlined by the outbreak of fighting in Kargil in 1999, full mobilization on the border during most of 2002, and continued low-intensity warfare and terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir. The stability of nuclear deterrence between the two countries is therefore a matter of great urgency and has found a place on the scholarly agenda of security studies in South Asia.

Several books have been written on India’s nuclear programme, but these have been mostly analytical histories. The India-Pakistan Nuclear Relationship is a new departure in that it is the first time that a group of scholars from the South Asian subcontinent have collectively tried to apply deterrence theory and international relations theory to South Asia.

Dr Sridharan is Academic Director of the University of Pennsylvania Institute for the Advanced Study of India, New Delhi. He is Ph.D from the same university where he studied political science. He has held visiting appointments at the University of California, Berkeley, London School of Economics, and Institute for Developing Economies, Tokyo. Dr Sridharan’s research interests are comparative politics and political economy of development, party systems and coalition politics, and international relations. He is the author of The Political economy of Industrial promotion: Indian, Brazilian and Korean Electronics in Comparative Perspective; and co-editor of India’s Living Constitution : Ideas, Practices, Controversies, and India in the Global Software Industry.