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Modi and the Reinvention of India's Foreign Policy Ian Hall

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Bristol Bristol University Press 2019Edition: 1st edDescription: xiii, 224 p. ; 15.6 x 1.37 x 23.4 cmISBN:
  • 9781529204629
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 954.0533 HAL
Summary: In the campaign that led to his landslide victory in India’s 2014 General election, prime Minister Narendra Modi scarcely mentioned his foreign policy ideas. Once in power, however, Modi moved rapidly to boost India’s reputation as a significant actor in Global affairs and to assert his leadership with a frenetic bout of personal diplomacy. In this book, Ian hall reveals the major changes made by Modi’s government, from strengthening relations with other South Asian states in addition to the United States, Israel, and Japan to taking stronger action against Pakistani-sponsored militancy and adopting a more robust stance towards China. Hall examines how Modi and his supporters have also tried to supply new intellectual underpinnings for Indian foreign policy, aiming to change how the world sees India. He compares Modi’s attempted reinvention with the postcolonial policy of Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first prime Minister, tracing the evolution of Hindu nationalist thinking on international relations and locating Modi’s thought within that tradition.
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In the campaign that led to his landslide victory in India’s 2014 General election, prime Minister Narendra Modi scarcely mentioned his foreign policy ideas. Once in power, however, Modi moved rapidly to boost India’s reputation as a significant actor in Global affairs and to assert his leadership with a frenetic bout of personal diplomacy. In this book, Ian hall reveals the major changes made by Modi’s government, from strengthening relations with other South Asian states in addition to the United States, Israel, and Japan to taking stronger action against Pakistani-sponsored militancy and adopting a more robust stance towards China. Hall examines how Modi and his supporters have also tried to supply new intellectual underpinnings for Indian foreign policy, aiming to change how the world sees India. He compares Modi’s attempted reinvention with the postcolonial policy of Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first prime Minister, tracing the evolution of Hindu nationalist thinking on international relations and locating Modi’s thought within that tradition.

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