EVENT

India’s Near East: A New History w/ Avinash Paliwal

27 Nov 2024 – 17:00 - 18:30 GMT
King's College London
Room SE 1.02
Bush House
South East Wing
Strand Campus
London
WC2R 1AE

Join Avinash Paliwal for a discussion of his new book, India’s Near East, a revealing history of India’s faltering attempts to exert control over its eastern hinterland and the neighbouring states of Bangladesh and Myanmar.

India’s near east encompasses Bangladesh, Myanmar and the Indian states of the ‘Northeast’—Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Assam, Nagaland, Manipur, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram. Celebrated as a theatre of geo-economic connectivity typified by India’s ‘Act East’ policy, the region is key not only to India’s great-power rivalry with China, which first boiled over in the 1962 war, but to the idea(s) of India itself. It is also one of the most intricately partitioned lands anywhere on Earth. Rent by communal and class violence, the region has birthed extreme forms of religious and ethnic nationalisms and communist movements. The Indian state’s survival instinct and pursuit of regional hegemony have only accentuated such extremes.

India's Near EastThis book scripts a new history of India’s eastward-looking diplomacy and statecraft. Narrated against the backdrop of separatist resistance within India’s own northeastern states, as well as rivalry with Beijing and Islamabad in Yangon and Dhaka, it offers a simple but compelling argument. The aspirations of ‘Act East’ mask an uncomfortable truth: India privileges political stability over economic opportunity in this region. In his chronicle of a state’s struggle to overcome war, displacement and interventionism, Avinash Paliwal lays bare the limits of independent India’s influence in its near east.

About the speaker

Avinash Paliwal PhD is Reader in International Relations at SOAS University of London, specialising in South Asian strategic affairs. A former journalist and foreign affairs analyst, he is the author of India’s Near East and My Enemy’s Enemy: India in Afghanistan from the Soviet Invasion to the US Withdrawal, both published by Hurst.

Discussant

Dr Bérénice Guyot-Réchard is a Reader in international and South Asian history at King’s College London, with special expertise in the connections between state-making, nation-building and geopolitics, notably in border spaces like the Himalayas and the Indian Ocean. She is the author of Shadow States: India, China and the Himalayas, 1910-62, which won the James Fisher Prize in Nepal and Himalayan Studies 2017, and South Asia Unbound: New International Histories of the Subcontinent, edited with Elisabeth Leake.

She is currently working on the geopolitics of the Indian Ocean since 1945, and writing a history of India’s contribution to the world order from the 18th to the 21st century.

Chair

Anit Mukherjee is a Senior Lecturer at the King’s India Institute. He joined King’s after ten years in Singapore where he was an Associate Professor at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University. From 2010-2012, he was a Research Fellow at the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA), New Delhi. He is also a Non-Resident Fellow at Centre for Social and Economic Progress (CSEP), New Delhi.

He is the author of The Absent Dialogue: Politicians, Bureaucrats and the Military in India, which examines the role of civil-military relations and military effectiveness. He is the co-editor of India-China Maritime Competition: The Security Dilemma at Sea and India’s Naval Strategy and Asian Security.

 

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