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China and India in Central Asia: A New Great Game? [Pehme köide]

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China and India in Central Asia: A New Great Game?
Teised raamatud teemal:
China and India's growing interests in Central Asia disrupt the traditional Russian-U.S. "Great Game" at the heart of the old continent. Though for the moment India is unable to equally compete against the Chinese presence in post-Soviet Central Asia, New Delhi is well established in Afghanistan and has begun to cast its eyes more markedly toward the north to the shores of the Caspian Sea. In the years to come, both Asian powers are looking to redeploy their rivalry on the Central Asian and Afghan theaters on a geopolitical, but also political and economic level.

Arvustused

"Marlène Laruelle and Jean-François Huchet have assembled a talented group of scholars from Europe, India, China, and Australia to assess the neglected Sino-Indian dimension of Central Asia's twenty-first century 'Great Game.' These insightful essays are a valuable addition to our understanding of great-power politics in this complex and vital region and will be of interest to specialists and general readers alike." - Charles E. Ziegler, Professor and University Scholar, Department of Political Science, University of Louisville, USA





"China and India in Central Asia is a timely book which deals with one of the regions of the world where our future is being written. Two Asian giants in urgent need of natural resources to sustain their growth are bordering Central Asian countries which are among the richest area for minerals, oil and gas. But Central Asia is also at the heart of the new 'Great game' because of the Afghan war and the spread of Islamism, two causes of concern for Beijing and New Delhi. Will they cooperate to build a better world? Will they fight? The book sets the terms of analysis." - Christophe Jaffrelot, CERI-Sciences Po/CNRS, France





"The volume contributes to the growing literature on Central Asia by focusing on a rather neglected dimension, the regional implications of China-India interactions. It approaches the problem of China-India relations from a wide range of regional and disciplinary perspectives and the volume involves a diverse group of scholars from Central Asia, China, India, and Europe." - Elizabeth Wishnick, Associate Professor of Political Science, Montclair State University and Adjunct Associate Research Scholar, Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University, USA

List of Illustrations
vii
Notes an Contributors ix
1 Why Central Asia? The Strategic Rationale of Indian and Chinese Involvement in the Region
1(8)
The Editors
Part I Negotiating Projections of Power in Central Asia
2 Russia Facing China and India in Central Asia: Cooperation, Competition, and Hesitations
9(16)
Marlene Laruelle
3 Central Asia-China Relations and Their Relative Weight in Chinese Foreign Policy
25(16)
Jean-Pierre Cabestan
4 An Elephant in a China Shop? India's Look North to Central Asia...Seeing Only China
41(20)
Emilian Kavalski
5 Afghanistan and Regional Strategy: The India Factor
61(20)
Meena Singh Roy
6 Afghan Factor in Reviving the Sino-Pak Axis
81(16)
Swaran Singh
Part II India and China in Central Asia, between Cooperation, Parallelism, and Competition
7 India and China in Central Asia: Mirroring Their Bilateral Relations
97(20)
Jean-Francois Huchet
8 India-China Interactions in Central Asia through the Prism of Paul Kennedy's Analysis of Great Powers
117(14)
Basudeb Chaudhuri
Manpreet Sethi
9 Cooperation or Competition? China and India in Central Asia
131(10)
Zhao Huasheng
Part III Chinese and Indian Economic Implementations from the Caspian Basin to Afghanistan
10 Scramble for Caspian Energy: Can Big Power Competition Sidestep China and India?
141(14)
P. L. Dash
11 Comparing the Economic Involvement of China and India in Post-Soviet Central Asia
155(18)
Sebastien Peyrouse
12 The Reconstruction in Afghanistan: The Indian and Chinese Contribution
173(24)
Gulshan Sachdeva
Part IV Revisited Historical Backgrounds, Disputed Religious Modernities
13 From the Oxus to the Indus: Looking Back at India-Central Asia Connections in the Early Modern Age
197(18)
Laurent Gayer
14 Uyghur Islam: Caught between Foreign Influences and Domestic Constraints
215(20)
Remi Castets
15 The Jama'at al Tabligh in Central Asia---a Mediator in the Recreation of Islamic Relations with the Indian Subcontinent
235(14)
Bayram Balci
Index 249
M. Laruelle

J.François Huchet

S. Peyrouse

B. Balci

J.P. Cabestan

E. Kavalski

M. Singh Roy

S. Singh

B. Chaudhuri

M. Sethi

Z. Huasheng

P.L. Dash

G. Sachdeva

L. Gayer

R. Castets