Spring 2018 (32.1) Essay

India and the International Order: Accommodation and Adjustment

Abstract: India is gradually changing its course from decades of inward-looking economics and strong anti-Western foreign policies. It has become more pragmatic, seeing important economic benefits from globalization, and some political benefits of working with the United States to achieve New Delhi’s great-power aspirations. Despite these changes, I argue that India’s deep-seated anti-colonial nationalism and commitment to strategic autonomy continues to form the core of Indian identity. This makes India’s commitment to Western-dominated multilateral institutions and Western norms, such as humanitarian intervention, partial and instrumental. Thus, while Indian foreign-policy discourse shows little sign of seeking to fully challenge the U.S.-led international order beyond largely reformist measures of building parallel institutions such as the New Development Bank, India will continue to strongly resist Western actions that weaken sovereignty norms.

Keywords: rising powers, strategic autonomy, Indian foreign policy, India and multilateralism, G-20, BRICS

The full essay is available to subscribers only. Click here for access.

More in this issue

Spring 2018 (32.1) Review

Briefly Noted: Dictators without Borders and The Fateful Triangle

The editors review two recent books, Dictators without Borders: Power and Money in Central Asia, and The Fateful Triangle: Race, Ethnicity, Nation.

Spring 2018 (32.1) Review

Ethics in an Age of Surveillance: Personal Information and Virtual Identities by Adam Henschke

This book presents a philosophically sophisticated examination of metadata collection and the ethical issues that it raises.

Spring 2018 (32.1) Essay

Beyond the BRICS: Power, Pluralism, and the Future of Global Order

Dramatic changes in the global system have led many to conclude that the focus on the BRICS reflected a particular moment in time that has ...