India’s statistical system faces a major crisis, and a very tense political atmosphere could present barriers to fixing it. But past reform efforts can shine a light on what needs to be done next.
India’s prime minister is being welcomed warmly in Washington despite human rights issues.
The Indian Ocean region’s importance to global trade, geopolitical competition, and maritime security is growing. Understanding its key players, regional organizations, and challenges is critical to crafting policy toward the region.
Will political change, as signaled by the Karnataka election results, translate into change at the grass roots — or has the Sangh Parivar taken over society?
The objective of this series is to engage analytically with the dynamics of contemporary federalism in India and provide a framework within which to debate the institutional and political solutions to challenges in centre-state relations as they unfold.
India is currently the world’s most populous nation with one of the largest economies. Will India continue to evolve and become a global power?
Imran Khan’s arrest is another case of business as usual in the country’s frustrating, illiberal democratic experiment.
India’s significant weaknesses compared with China, and its inescapable proximity to it, guarantee that New Delhi will never involve itself in any U.S. confrontation with Beijing that does not directly threaten its own security.
America’s dedication to the Asian theater and the rising political temperature in Washington over U.S.-China relations raise intriguing questions about how Asian Americans perceive these changes.
To identify Washington’s implementation of its Indo-Pacific strategy in the Indian Ocean, there needs to be first a study examining the region against U.S. interests, priorities, and competition in light of Washington’s problems, challenges, and opportunities in the Indian Ocean.