Skip to content
Search
The Book Review, Monthly Review of Important BooksThe Book Review, Monthly Review of Important Books
The Book Review, Monthly Review of Important Books
  • HOME
  • THE BOOK REVIEW
    • CURRENT ISSUE
    • ARCHIVES
    • SUBSCRIBE
    • OUTREACH
  • ABOUT US
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • BROWSE
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT US
  • LOGIN
  • DONATE
  • HOME
  • THE BOOK REVIEW
    • CURRENT ISSUE
    • ARCHIVES
    • SUBSCRIBE
    • OUTREACH
  • ABOUT US
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • BROWSE
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT US
  • LOGIN
  • DONATE

Tag Archives: International Relations

International Relations


By Nandita Haksar
SHOOTING THE SUN: WHY MANIPUR WAS ENGULFED BY VIOLENCE AND THE GOVERNMENT REMAINED SILENT
2023

The stories of Manipur that this book tells are violent, cruel and infused with unadulterated savagery. The hate and rage in them is tangible and there is no way to make the stories any less brutal


Reviewed by: Malavika Menon

Edited by Rajan Kumar, Meena Keswani Mehra, G. Venkat Raman and Meenakshi Sundriyal
LOCATING BRICS IN THE GLOBAL ORDER: PERSPECTIVES FROM THE GLOBAL SOUTH
2022

Amidst the global economic slowdown and rising wealth disparities among nations, calamities like the pandemic re-underlined the tenets of multilateralism. The BRICS as a multilateral powerhouse is in the making and has been through some tough transitions.


Reviewed by: Aravind Balaji Yelery

Nigel Biggar
COLONIALISM: A MORAL RECKONING
2023

What Biggar has done is to pick up some aspects of the history of the British Empire on which there are writings that seek to dispute a particular point in critiques of colonialism, often taking the narrowest view of a complex historical phenomenon, to build his arguments in defence of British colonialism.


Reviewed by: Amar Farooqui

Tan Tai Yong and Gyanesh Kudaisya
FREEDOM & PARTITION: MOMENTOUS EVENTS OF 14-17 AUGUST 1947 IN INDIA AND PAKISTAN
2023

The most interesting portion of the book is the ‘Epilogue’. It primarily concerns the deliberations which took place at the administrative level. It underlines the long and intense tussle which took place between Lord Mountbatten, the incumbent Viceroy, and Sir Cyril Radcliffe, the Chairman of the two boundary commissions.


Reviewed by: Amol Saghar

Satinder Kumar Lambah
IN PURSUIT OF PEACE: INDIA-PAKISTAN RELATIONS UNDER SIX PRIME MINISTERS
2023

Lambah’s book is a treasure-house of facts and insights and a must-read for anyone interested in India’s foreign and security policies and subcontinental politics


Reviewed by: Jayant Prasad

Cao Yin
CHINESE SOJOURNERS IN WARTIME RAJ, 1942-45
2022

This book is about the various Chinese professionals who came to India during the Second World War and resided in India during that time. This was the time when close to 100,000 Chinese nationals were in India which was the highest ever in history.


Reviewed by: Avinash Godbole

Sabyn Javeri (Ed.)
WAYS OF BEING: CREATIVE NON-FICTION BY PAKISTANI WOMEN
2023

These fifteen essays by Pakistani-origin women in this collection,Ways of Being, break this mould. Ruminative, reflective, often very introspective, they are honest, thoughtful examinations of our present realities; of personal fates; of ‘Life’ in both its grand and paltry confusions.


Reviewed by: Ranjana Sengupta

Seema Alavi
SOVEREIGNS OF THE SEA: OMANI AMBITION IN THE AGE OF EMPIRE
2023

In this work, Seema Alavi addresses the ‘overwhelming silence’ and the ‘invisibility’ of Arab polities and dynasties in the historiography that reflects an ‘unabashed Eurocentrism’. The inability of ‘mainstream’ scholarship to make sense of the unique structures of state power that shaped the Ocean’s political culture has been brilliantly exposed in this work.


Reviewed by: MH Ilias

Vrushal T. Ghoble
WEST ASIA AND THE WORLD: GEOPOLITICAL SHIFTS, MULTIPOLARITY AND ENERGY DEVELOPMENT
2023

In the wake of the Arab uprising in 2011, the West Asian region faces immense uncertainty due to the lack of a democratic structure, authoritarian rules, sectarian divisions, economic crisis, tribal and military polarization, and foreign state interventions. Being a rentier state, the region of West Asia experienced an immense geopolitical shift contesting the definition of regional power, especially between Saudi, Iran, Turkey, and others.


Reviewed by: Azeemah Saleem

Sundeep Waslekar
A WORLD WITHOUT WAR: THE HISTORY, POLITICS AND RESOLUTION OF CONFLICT
2022

Can mankind eliminate nuclear weapons and eliminate the greatest existential risks to the human species and the existence of the planet? This is one of the most intriguing concerns that plague people in modern times. Logic will disagree with such a question or even assertion, but evidence suggests that a number of key global leaders and dignitaries have shown willingness for such a vision, not immediately attainable but may be in the foreseeable future.


Reviewed by: Abidullah Baba

AS Dulat
A LIFE IN THE SHADOWS: A MEMOIR
2023

AS Dulat is reported to have put out, the book under review has been written without taking clearance from current-day intelligence minders. An earlier government order had it that those serving and retired from intelligence services were required to take such clearance prior to publishing anything related to their work. Dulat, former Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) head and Intelligence Bureau (IB) officer, has cocked a snook at the order with good reason. On the surface, there is nothing in the book that should see him fall afoul of powers-that-be.


Reviewed by: Ali Ahmed

Vijay Gokhale
AFTER TIANANMEN: THE RISE OF CHINA
2022

China’s unprecedented rise has forced the world to restudy and refocus on the major factors behind this development. The Deng Xiaoping era is considered to be the time when China moved out of the trap of a low-income agrarian society to becoming the factory of the world and the second largest economy. The reform and opening up announced by Deng in late 1978 gave China the direction which it needed to gain momentum.


Reviewed by: Gunjan Singh

Manoj Joshi
UNDERSTANDING THE INDIA CHINA BORDER: THE ENDURING THREAT OF WAR IN THE HIGH HIMALAYAS
2022

Both the authors need no introduction to the public attentive to strategic matters. Between them, they have fifty years of engagement with strategic affairs. Both have past publications that place them in good standing as readers appraise whether they should pick up their latest wares. While Joshi’s landmark book was on Kashmir—The Lost Rebellion—in the nineties, Sawhney’s co-authored one—The War Unfinished—was on the India-Pakistan crisis of early this century.


Reviewed by: Ali Ahmed

Jayita Sarkar
PLOUGHSHARES AND SWORDS: INDIA’S NUCLEAR PROGRAM IN THE GLOBAL COLD WAR
2022

Jayita Sarkar’s book traces the origins and development of India’s nuclear weapons programme in the context of overlapping narratives of postcolonial modernity, developmentalism and geopolitics. Sarkar achieves this explanation by way of highlighting the technopolitics binding developmentalism and national security in the vision of its technopolitical elite which conceived and ran India’s nuclear programme.


Reviewed by: Mujeeb Kanth

Tilak Devasher
THE PASHTUNS: A CONTESTED HISTORY
2022

Pashtuns are one of the largest ethnic groups in the world who do not have their own country but straddle across a contiguous stretch of territory, across northern Pakistan and southern Afghanistan. They have been embroiled in wars with the British, invaded by the Soviet Union and suffered an almost two-decade long interference by the United States, albeit sometimes benign.


Reviewed by: Rana Banerji

Ashley J. Tellis
STRIKING ASYMMETRIES: NUCLEAR TRANSITIONS IN SOUTHERN ASIA
2022

Although the title refers to ‘Southern Asia’, this masterly survey by Ashley Tellis focuses on three countries: China, India and Pakistan. In so doing, the author differs from other western scholars and analysts writing about nuclear deterrence concerning India, who take a dichotomous view of India’s dilemma, either India versus Pakistan or India versus China. Tellis rightly takes a trichotomous view because it is impossible to consider nuclear issues in South Asia in isolation from China.


Reviewed by: Jayant Prasad

Sharat Sabharwal
INDIA’S PAKISTAN CONUNDRUM: MANAGING A COMPLEX RELATIONSHIP
2022

Many Indian works analyse Pakistan, to understand this subcontinental neighbour. This book is an important addition thanks to the balanced, nuanced, and insightful perspectives offered.Sharat Sabharwal spent eight years in Pakistan (1995-99, 2009-13). Few in our Foreign Service have had similar lengthy exposure.


Reviewed by: Kishan S Rana

Tehmton S. Mistry
THE 24TH MILE: AN INDIAN DOCTOR’S HEROISM IN WAR-TORN BURMA
2021

There is much in common between these six books. They all carry a subtitle, are inexpensive and light reading, though about a rather heavy topic; are tales simply told; and are about the lesser remarked aspects of war. Other than the one by Hisila, they have been penned by people other than the respective protagonists, with Punia having his daughter along as co-author. All are of stories in southern Asia, other than Punia’s which is situated in West Africa.


Reviewed by: Ali Ahmed

Vijay Gokhale
THE LONG GAME: HOW THE CHINESE NEGOTIATE WITH INDIA
2021

It goes without saying that China is India’s most important neighbour and India-China bilateral relations is the most consequential diplomatic engagement for India in the 21st century. Despite greater attention being paid to China in India recently, there is still not enough research and writing that would stand the test of time.


Reviewed by: Avinash Godbole


Myanmar gained Independence on 4th January 1948, less than five months after India.  For both countries, therefore, this year marks the 75th year of Independence. Even before its Independence, Myanmar, then called as Burma, was a province of the British Empire in India and was ruled from Delhi till 1937 when it was made into a separate entity directly administered from London.


Reviewed by:
« Previous PageNext Page »
Subscribe to our website
All Right Reserved with The Book Review Literary Trust | Powered by Digital Empowerment Foundation
ISSN No. 0970-4175 (Print)