"Indian" geopolitics: Unity in diversity or diversity of unity?

Authors

  • Sanjay Chaturvedi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53910/26531313-E200370422/423260

Keywords:

India, Geopolitics

Abstract

The author, a Leverhulme Fellow of the University of Cambridge , England, is the Chairman of the Department of Political Science and the Co-ordinator of the Centre for the Study of Geopolitics, Panjab University, Chandigarh. His research interest is the theory and practices of geopolitics, with special reference to polar regions, the Indian Ocean and South Asia. He is the author of Polar Regions: A Political Geography (Wiley, 1996) and co-editor of the forthcoming Rethinking Boundaries: Geopolitics, Identities and Sustainability (Delhi, Manohar). He has contributed articles to several refereed journals including Third World Quarterly, Journal of Social and Economic Geography, and Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. More recently, he has been a Fellow at Columbia University Institute for Scholars, Reid Hall, and Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, Paris, under the International Programme of Advanced Studies (IPAS), researching on the role of "excessive" geopolitics in the partition of British India. Dr Chaturvedi serves on the international editorial board of Geopolitics, a journal published by Frank Cass, London.

Published

2003-12-01

How to Cite

Chaturvedi, S. (2003). "Indian" geopolitics: Unity in diversity or diversity of unity?. Ekistics and The New Habitat, 70(422/423), pp. 327–339. https://doi.org/10.53910/26531313-E200370422/423260