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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: As New. Contents: Preface. 1. India-Indonesia: Natural Partners?/Navrekha Sharma. 2. India-Indonesia: economic and foreign policy/Baladas Ghoshal. 3. India-Indonesia bilateral ties: prospects ahead/Rizali W. Indrakesuma. 4. IndiaIndonesia relations: need for new areas of co-operation/Ganganath Jha. 5. India-Indonesia: bilateral trade and investment relations/T.S. Vishwanath. 6. Indonesian democracy and Islam: challenges ahead/Gautam Kumar Jha and Son Kuswadi. 7. India and Indonesia: co-operation challenges and way ahead/Vikash Saharan. 8. India-Indonesia relations in a changing world/Yuvaraj Gogoi and Junuguru Srinivas. 9. India-Indonesia strategic partnership: defining contours of engagement/Pankaj K. Jha. 10. Being the first among equals: Indonesia's emerging leadership role in ASEAN/Anushree Chakraborty. 11. India-Indonesia trade relations/Afreen Bano. 12. India and Indonesia in the indo-pacific imagination/Krishnendra Meena. 13. The evolution of IndiaIndonesia relations from Ramayana to China/Nishit Kumar. 14. India and Indonesia as natural partners in the Asia-Pacific security architecture/Asif Shuja. 15. Determinants of outward foreign direct investment: a study of Indian manufacturing firms/Priya Arora. 16. India and Indonesia in the emerging Indo-Pacific security dynamics/Rahul Mishra. 17. Leadership from below: Indonesia in a twenty-first century South-East Asia/Ruth Rhea Khan. 18. India-Indonesia relationship: maritime security/Sudhir Singh. 19. India-Indonesia: science and technological collaboration prospects/Son Kuswadi and Gautam Kumar Jha. India and Indonesia experienced close historical and civilizational relations from the ancient times to sixteenth century ce. During the Indonesian freedom struggle, its leaders were inspired by the anti-colonial views of Indian leaders. India firmly stood for the freedom of Indonesia from the Dutch. During the post-colonial period, the bilateral relations underwent ups and downs. India's Look East Policy of the 1990s made a phenomenal leap in both the countries' relationship. India by leveraging its soft power, stable foreign policy, non-interference policy established trust among many South-East Asian countries and in particular Indonesia. Indonesia, being the largest country in the region, has been proved as one of the greatest allies of India. After a decade of stable governance under President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Indonesia now has a fairly strong democratic set-up. The country made the transition after thirty-one years of dictatorship of Soeharto, under the leadership of B.J. Habibie, Abdurrhaman Wahid and Megawati Soekarnoputri. Now, when both the countries are poised to fly high after having witnessed considerable economic reforms, they need to forge stronger ties in order to further expand bilateral trade and strategic relations, being the main focus of this volume.
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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: New. 1st Edition. Contents: Preface. 1. When the elders faced god: state policy and theravada revival in Indonesia/Saumyajit Ray. 2. The typological characteristics of Bahasa Indonesia/Pradeep Kumar Das. 3. Culture, not cash-based tourism: a case study of Bali, Indonesia/Gautam Kumar Jha. 4. The palm leaves Balinese calendar: reflection of cultural ties between India and Indonesia/Bachchan Kumar. 5. The rituals in Javanese mystical movement: the Subud brotherhood/Asfa Widiyanto. 6. Hinduism and rituals in Bali/Gautam Kumar Jha. 7. Monuments in Indonesia as sites of nation building/A.S. Gayathiri. 8. Impression of Indian culture on Indonesian dances/Laxman Singh. 9. Colonial legacy of education in Indonesia/Kashyap Deepak. 10. From Arabian trade to peaceful coexistence: journey of Islam in India and Indonesia/Mohammad Saleem. 11. Wayang Kulit: an extraordinary art of Indonesia/Raveesh Rajanya. 12. Rabindranath Tagore and Ki Hajar Dewantara/Supardi. 13. Understanding various nuances of languages and linguistic diversity in Indonesia and India: a systemic functional perspective on language as social semiotics/Susanto. 14. Hinduism in Indonesia: a historical study of religio-cultural cross-fertilization in ancient traditions/Umesh Kumar Khute. 15. A comparative discourse on Muslim and Hindu preaching texts/Hammam. 16. Revisiting Tagore's Java journey: a tour undertaken to explore and restore lost ties/Anurima Chanda and Siddhartha Chakraborti. 17. Budaya Kesantunan Berbahasa Dalam Pembelajaran di Kelas: Penelitian Etnografi Komunikasi di Jurusan Bahasa dan Sastra Indonesia, Universitas Negeri Jakarta/Muhammad Yazid A.R. Gege. Evidences suggest that India and Indonesia were in trade relations for many millennia, starting from 3500 BCE. Suvarnabhumi (Sumatra) is mentioned in Jatakas, Indian epics and Mahavamsa, though there is no sequential documentation of it. The trade relations paved the way for Bali importing Indian pottery, priests coming from India and getting absorbed into the Indonesian society and the Indian traders and priests marrying the locals and settling there, thus spreading Hinduism and Indian culture throughout Java, Bali and Sumatra. Indonesia thus got all three religions - Hinduism, Buddhism and Islam - from India. The historical and civilizational relations continued till the sixteenth century ce. The Western colonization drive of Asian countries broke this long-stood relationship. Coming to the twentieth century, Indonesia and its leaders were highly inspired by the anti-colonial views of Indian leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Vallabhbhai Patel and Rabindranath Tagore, and India extended her moral support to the freedom struggle of Indonesia. But during the post-colonial era, the bilateral relations between both the countries were incoherent. The Look East Policy of India in the 1990s rejuvenated the relations and Indonesia became one of the greatest allies in fulfilling India's South-East Asia Policy. The scholarly articles in this volume vividly talk about topics that foster(ed) mutual relations such as culture, religion, language, traditions, education and so on, keenly drawing the attention of policy makers, trade analysts, cultural enthusiasts, investors, among a wide range of audience.
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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: New. 1st Edition. Contents: 1. The Philippines Claims of Sovereignty over South China Sea 2. A New Imperial China: The Hague Ruling and the South China Sea dispute 3. Differing perspectives on the Looming Crisis in the South China Sea: Belligerence or Tempest in a Teapot 4. Sino-US Rivalry in South China Sea: A New Normal 5. South China Sea Imbroglio: Indias Interests at Stake 6. Natuna Islands: China Drags Indonesia to South China Sea 7. The South China Sea Dispute: Appraising ASEANs Response 8. South China Sea Dispute and Sino-ASEAN Relations: Implications for India 9. Malaysias South China Sea Policy: Still Walking the Tightrope 10. Maritime Security in the Malacca Straits: Challenges and Prospects 11. Vietnam and the South China Sea: Two-Fold Strategy. The Peoples Republic of China brooks no interference in the South China Sea by anyone, be it Japan, United States, or even the United Nations. As Beijing sees it, even the South East Asian countries, whose claims on the various islands in the South China Sea it rejects, should not have anything to do with the region. This book tells the story of Chinese belligerence in the volatile region it claims as its own, and resistance to it from various quarters. (jacket).
Published by Research India Press
ISBN 10: 9391952593 ISBN 13: 9789391952594
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Published by Research India Press
ISBN 10: 9391952593 ISBN 13: 9789391952594
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Published by Pathak Publisher and Distributors, New Delhi, 2023
ISBN 10: 9391952593 ISBN 13: 9789391952594
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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: New. ISBN:9789391952594,xx+231pp.
Published by Research India Press
ISBN 10: 9391952593 ISBN 13: 9789391952594
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Published by Pathak Publisher & Distributors, 2023
ISBN 10: 9391952593 ISBN 13: 9789391952594
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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: New. It is my great pleasure to write the foreword for this exciting book. India and Southeast Asian Countries have a rich and longstanding relation which was built on historic ties and civilizational interaction for more than two millennia. This has resulted in a fascinating and complex history that has left a significant mark on the region. Many examples can be found that explains this strong linkages, among others are maritime trade routes, spread of religion, architecture of temples in Southeast Asia. absorption of Sanskrit words to national language, and stories of Ramayana and Mahabharata which are still widely taught across Southeast Asian Countries. Preface After India gained independence, it established a concrete foreign policy towards A Southeast Asia, which was initially outlined in a 1946 resolution by the Indian National Congress to collaborate with the countries of Southeast Asia. However, the brief period of friendship between Nehru and Sukarno was disrupted due to India's newly formed relations with China, following the Chinese attack on India in 1962. As a result, India's foreign policy shifted towards western nations, neglecting its commitment to Southeast Asia. India's historical relationship with Southeast Asia is rooted in a shared tradition of knowledge, encompassing essential social values for peaceful and harmonious living. This common objective is based on the social laws that are impacted by the Indic tradition. drawn from Indian epics such as the Ramayana, Mahabharata, and the Puranas. This edited volume examines the basis for interactions between India and Southeast Asia and their implications in India's current foreign policy.