India’s Grand Strategy and Foreign Policy

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A01=Bernhard Beitelmair-Berini
Author_Bernhard Beitelmair-Berini
Category=JPS
Cleavage Theory
Discursive Plurality
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foreign policy
Grand Strategic Preferences
Grand Strategic Thought
Grand Strategy
Grand Strategy Formation
ideological cleavages
India
India's Israel Policy
India's Strategic Culture
Indian Grand Strategy
Indian Strategic
Indian Strategic Thought
India’s Israel Policy
India’s Strategic Culture
international relations India
IR Concept
IR Theory
Kanti Bajpai
Laser Guided Bombs
Neoclassical Realism
policy subcultures
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh
security studies South Asia
statecraft analysis
Strategic Culture
Strategic Culture Approach
Strategic Culture Debate
strategic culture theory
Strategic Pluralism
Strategic Subculture
Strategic Thought
Strategic Worldviews
subculture-cleavage model application
subcultures
Synthetic Aperture Radar Imaging Satellite

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367553449
  • Weight: 435g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jul 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The book explores the competing grand strategic worldviews shaping India’s foreign and security policies by analyzing the interaction between normative modern international relations theories and vernacular concepts of statecraft and strategy.

To assess the diverse competing ideas which characterize India’s debates on grand strategy and foreign policy, the author presents the subculture-cleavage model of grand strategic thought. This innovative analytical framework reveals the complexities of India’s strategic pluralism and offers the building blocks for a systematic analysis of grand strategy formation. The book demonstrates that the strategic paradigms, or strategic subcultures, are marked by contending ideas of Indian statehood and civilization, held by policymakers and the informed public, and are a result of ideology-driven perceptions of the country’s strategic environment. The author argues that the apparent hybridization and stretching of modern and traditional concepts of international relations in India has become a widespread feature of Indian foreign policy to meet the needs of state formation and nation-building.

A unique approach to organizing and understanding the debates and discourse in Indian strategic thinking, the book will be of interest to specialists and students in the field of International Relations, political theory, South Asian Studies, and India’s foreign and security policy.

Bernhard Beitelmair-Berini is an associate member of the South Asia Institute (SAI) at Heidelberg University, Germany.

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