Publication
28 Sep 2010
Existing discussions of regionalism in Asia reveal diverse ideas of Asia's composition, with a lack of agreement about which states should be included/excluded in representations of 'Asia'. This paper seeks to engage the debate by looking at the case of Indian political elites and their efforts to frame India’s own regional space within these larger questions on regional spaces in 'Asia' and the 'Asia-Pacific'. It aims to locate contemporary representations of India’s regional space in a comparative historical framework by looking at India’s earlier tryst with different regionalist projects like the Asian Relations Conference (ARC), New Delhi, in 1947 and the Afro-Asian Conference, Bandung, in 1955.
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English (PDF, 26 pages, 161 KB) |
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Author | Sinderpal Singh |
Series | ISAS Working Papers |
Issue | 113 |
Publisher | Institute of South Asian Studies (ISAS) |
Copyright | © 2010 Institute of South Asian Studies (ISAS) |