Inter-state conflicts and contentious issues in south asia :Challenges and Prospects for Saarc

Publication subTitle :Challenges and Prospects for Saarc

Author: Nahar; Emanual  

Publisher: Kalpaz Publications‎

Publication year: 2016

E-ISBN: 9789351289616

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9789351281696

Subject: D8 Diplomacy, International Relations

Keyword: 外交、国际关系

Language: ENG

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Description

The organization of eight South Asian nations, namely India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan , Sri Lanka and Afghanistan with observer nations, Myanmar, China, Iran, the European Union (EU) and the United States, to name a few, is known as the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC). It was established at the first summit in Dhaka on December 7-8, 1985. India, significantly, constitutes 70 per cent or more of SAARC's area and population. All have a shared culture, ethnicity and experienced long interactive historical events including British imperialism and its consequences. Over the years, SAARC has attempted to address several regional concerns, for instance drug and human trafficking, economic cooperation among south Asian states and the forging of a south Asian social identity and most recently efforts have been made to tackle the menace of terrorism in the region. Despite its stated intentions SAARC as a regional body has for years grappled with interstate, intra-state and regional conflicts. Since its existence in 1985, SAARC has been criticized for its failure to forge an effective regional identity. Inter-state conflicts and the bilateral interests of member states have a decisive influence on the achievements of SAARC; the regional body has also been influenced by external players and other regional organizations. SAARC, regrettably, has yet to develop into a conflict-mediating or conflict-resolving institution both on multilateral and

Chapter

Foreword

Preface

Introduction

1. SAARC and Indian Ocean: An Agenda for Action

2. South Asian Security Perspective ⠀刀漀氀攀 漀昀 匀䄀䄀刀䌀)

3. SAARC: Challenges of Human Trafficking, Illegal Migration and Human Security

4. Afghanistan: 8th Member of SAARC

5. Small States and Regional Organisations: Case Study of Bhutan and SAARC

6. Non-Tariff Barriers to Indo-Pakistan Trade

7. Indo-Pak Disputes: Bumpy Road Ahead For SAARC

8. India’s Security Concerns: Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia

9. Theorising India’s Role in SAARC

10. Strengthening SAARC: India-Sri Lanka Experience

11. Curbing Transnational Terrorism in South Asia: A Regional Concern

12. Climate Change and SAARC: The Politics of Regional Cooperation

13. Trends of Regional Integration and SAARC

14. Mapping SAARC’s Role in the Changing Geopolitical and Geostrategic Landscape

15. Terrorism in South Asia and its impact on Indian Security

16. Mapping SAARC: Towards a Cooperative Security Framework in South Asia

17. Indo-Pak Disputes: Impact on Regional Cooperation in South Asia

18. Regionalism in the Age of Globalisation: Reinventing the SAARC through New Regional Approach

19. China’s Attitude and Perceptions towards SAARC: An Overview

20. SAARC at Twenty-Eight: Bridging Bridges through Energy

21. India’s Approach Towards SAARC

22. Approaches to Regionalism in the Post-Cold War Era: An Assessment

23. Economic Integration among SAARC Countries: From SAPTA to SAFTA

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