Skip navigation

ASIA6075 India Arriving: Security and International Relations in South Asia

Offered By School of Culture, History and Language
Academic Career Graduate Coursework
Course Subject Asian Studies
Offered in Winter Session, 2011
Unit Value 6 units
Course Description

Since the historical hiatus of its economic liberalisation in the early 1990s, India has witnessed an upward leap in its international standing. Three decades of impressive economic growth, a vast expansion of military capacity and an increase in diplomatic influence have delivered India into a position of new-found global prominence. Finally, India seems to be “arriving” – fulfilling, or reasserting, the great destiny that has long been written into its historical narratives.

Yet India’s recently acquired attributes of hard power stand in stark contrast to the characteristics and convictions of its earlier, newly independent self. After independence, India was a militarily weak state whose foreign policy was guided by a commitment to anti-colonialism, anti-racialism and a highly critical stance on what it saw as both the undemocratic and unequal distribution of international power, and the global insecurity that resulted from excessive military spending and nuclear weapons.

This course explores the forces which have led to India’s transformation into a country seemingly more interested in status symbols than moral posturing. On a journey through the history of India’s external relations since independence, the course examines the seismic shifts in both India’s strategic capacity and its status in the international realm, and explores and critiques the theories that help us to explain them.

In a course that encourages students to explore India’s global role through the theoretical lenses of International Relations while playing close attention to the cultural roots and changing ethos of India’s foreign policy, the following four key questions are addressed:

1)       Which tools can we use to understand India's changing global role?

2)       What historical forces have led to the transformations in India's strategic capacity and its status in international society since independence?

3)       What kind of a global role does India envisage for itself and how do current global challenges mediate India's hopes for major-power status?

4)       What might India’s ascendance mean for India, South Asia and the world?

Learning Outcomes

At the completion of this course students should have the following:

  • skills in the critical analysis of global politics as it pertains to India

  • heightened levels of confidence in developing a coherent and well-structured written or spoken argument

  • improved essay writing and presentation skills as well as confidence in group discussion situations

Indicative Assessment

Class Participation and Facilitation  10%

Presentation  10%

Research Paper (3,500 words) 60%

Take Home exam (1500 words) 20%    

Workload

The course is scheduled for Tues-Thurs 5-7 July and Tues-Thurs 12-14 July from 1-5pm each day. The venue is the 4th floor seminar room (E4.44) in the Baldessin Building (#110).

Course Classification(s) AdvancedAdvanced courses are designed for students having reached 'first degree' level of assumed knowledge, which provide a deep understanding of contemporary issues; or 'second degree' and higher levels of knowledge; or for transition to research training programs. and TransitionalTransitional courses are designed for students from a broad range of backgrounds and learning achievements, which provide for the acquisition of generic skills; or an informed understanding of contemporary issues; or fundamental knowledge for transition to Advanced or Specialist courses.
Requisite Statement

Admission to a graduate coursework program or permission of convenor.

Recommended Courses

.

Prescribed Texts

Essential Readings will be made available through the Wattle. Recommended readings will also be available through the Wattle or will be on Course Reserve.

Technology Requirements

Nil

Academic Contact bina.dcosta@anu.edu.au

The information published on the Study at ANU 2011 website applies to the 2011 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2010 website.

Updated:   13 Nov 2015 / Responsible Officer:   The Registrar / Page Contact:   Student Business Solutions