Constantino Xavier

Fellow @BrookingsIndia • India: foreign policy • South Asia, #Sambandh: regional security, connectivity, democracy, history • Europe-India • PhD SAIS/Hopkins

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Book Recommendations:

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Recommended by Constantino Xavier

3. This is why I found @DrIanHall’s recent book so interesting. My sense is Ian began with the (wrong) premise: Modi reinvented IFP, a “new India” in the world. Both regime fans & critics buy into this narrative: the former supportive, latter worried. https://t.co/exvWFFhV3t (from X)

Narendra Modi’s energetic personal diplomacy and promise to make India a ‘leading power’ surprised many analysts. Most had predicted that his government would concentrate on domestic issues, on the growth and development demanded by Indian voters, and that he lacked necessary experience in international relations. Instead, Modi’s first term saw a concerted attempt to reinvent Indian foreign policy by replacing inherited understandings of its place in the world with one drawn largely from Hindu nationalist ideology. Following Modi’s re-election in 2019, this book explores the drivers of this reinvention, arguing it arose from a combination of elite conviction and electoral calculation, and the impact it has had on India’s international relations.

CX

Recommended by Constantino Xavier

Friday book adda — @curryveppila reviewed “Animosity at Bay: An Alternative History of the India-Pakistan Relationship, 1947-1952.” A great book from @pallaviraghava1, so relevant today! Don’t ask us how or why, but we ended discussing the Dards of Ladakh and deontologism... 🍸 https://t.co/xdqiA9ePSq (from X)

In this groundbreaking book, Raghavan uses previously untapped archival sources to weave together new stories about the experiences of post-partition state-making in South Asia. Through meticulous research, it challenges the existing wisdom about the preponderance of animosity and the rhetoric of war. The book shows how amity and a spirit of cordiality governed relations between the states of India and Pakistan in the first five years after partition. Arguing that a hitherto overlooked set of considerations have to be integrated more closely into the analysis of bilateral dialogue, this book analyses the developments leading to the No War correspondence between Nehru and Liaquat Ali Khan, the signing of a 'Minorities' Pact between the two prime ministers, and the early stages of the Indus Waters negotiations, as well as exploring the calculations of Indian and Pakistani delegates at a series of interdominion conferences held in the years after partition. This book will be of interest to specialists in histories of diplomatic practice as well as a general audience in search of narratives of peace in the South Asia region.