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A01=Kate Sullivan de Estrada
A01=Rajesh Basrur
Associational Sources
Author_Kate Sullivan de Estrada
Author_Rajesh Basrur
Category=GTP
Category=JP
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Negotiations
Dominant Normative Order
Dominant Systemic Norms
emerging economies diplomacy
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
global power dynamics
High Status States
India Specific Exemption
India's Independent History
India's International Status
India's Nuclear
India's post-Cold War
Indian Foreign Policy
India’s Independent History
India’s International Status
India’s Nuclear
India’s post-Cold War
Integrated Guided Missile Development Programme
international relations theory
Material Power
NAM Member
Nehru Era
Non-Aligned Summit
NPT Regime
Nuclear Disarmament
post-Cold War Global Order
post-Nehru Era
qualitative case studies
social constructivism
Standard Realist Approach
Start Treaty
State's Social Status
State’s Social Status
status hierarchy politics
status seeking strategies in world politics
Subterranean Nuclear Explosion Project
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367607401
  • Weight: 181g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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While India’s prospects as a rising power and its material position in the international system have received significant attention, little scholarly work exists on India’s status in contemporary world politics. This Routledge Focus book charts the ways in which India’s international strategies of status seeking have evolved from Independence up to the present day.

The authors focus on the social dimensions of status, seeking to build on recent conceptual scholarship on status in world politics. The book shows how India has made a partial, though incomplete, shift from seeking status by rejecting material power and proximity to major powers, to seeking status by embracing both material power and major power relationships. However, it also challenges traditional understandings of the linear relationship between material power and status. Seven decades of Indian status seeking reveal that the enhancement of material power is one of only several routes Indian leaders have envisaged to lead to higher status.

By arguing that a state requires more than material power to achieve status, this book reshapes understandings of both status seeking and Indian foreign policy. It will be of interest to academics and policy makers in the fields of international relations, foreign policy, and Indian studies.

Rajesh Basrur is Professor of International Relations and Coordinator of the South Asia Programme at RSIS at NTU, Singapore.

Kate Sullivan de Estrada is Lecturer in Modern Indian Studies at the University of Oxford, UK.

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