The Indian Ocean Region a Framework for Australian Policy Options

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Indian Ocean Region a Framework for Australian Policy Options The Indian Ocean Region A Framework for Australian Policy Options The Indian Ocean Region - A Framework for Australian Policy Options Landmark Study - Future Directions International IOF_SINGLE PAGE SPREAD_2014_UPDATED BLUE.indd 1 1/12/2014 3:42:51 PM The Indian Ocean Region - A Framework for Australian Policy Options Landmark Study - Future Directions International IOF_SINGLE PAGE SPREAD_2014_UPDATED BLUE.indd 2 1/12/2014 3:42:51 PM Contents Foreword........................................................................................................................5 Introduction...................................................................................................................7 Chapter 1 Proposed Australian National Objectives in the Indian Ocean Region...................11 Chapter 2 Strategic Objectives of the United States in the Indian Ocean Region..................25 Chapter 3 Strategic Objectives of China in the Indian Ocean Region......................................41 Chapter 4 Strategic Objectives of India in the Indian Ocean Region.......................................57 Chapter 5 Strategic Objectives of Japan in the Indian Ocean Region.....................................73 Chapter 6 Strategic Objectives of France in the Indian Ocean Region....................................81 FDI: Donors and Sponsors .......................................................................................101 FDI wishes to thank all the individuals and organisations who have so generously contributed their time and expertise to this study. The Indian Ocean Region - A Framework for Australian Policy Options Landmark Study - Future Directions International IOF_SINGLE PAGE SPREAD_2014_UPDATED BLUE.indd 3 1/12/2014 3:42:51 PM 4 Landmark Study – The Indian Ocean Region - A Framework for Australian Policy Options Future Directions International IOF_SINGLE PAGE SPREAD_2014_UPDATED BLUE.indd 4 1/12/2014 3:42:52 PM Foreword Foreword Much of Australia’s external focus has centred on the Pacific, South-East and Eastern Asia. With its developing wealth, increasing population, evolving trade and shipping capabilities and expanding geographic, political and security significance, however, the Indian Ocean and its littoral states will play an increasingly important role in Australia’s future. This strategic importance will only continue to grow in the years ahead because it fronts much of our coastline, including our key minerals and energy regions. It is the location of key sea lines of communication (SLOCs) that are crucial to the global economy. Approximately 35 per cent of all seaborne traded oil travels through the Strait of Hormuz alone, of which over 85 per cent goes to Japan, China, South Korea and India – all major trading partners of Australia and drivers of global economic growth. The consequences of a prolonged disruption to the SLOCs and chokepoints of the Indian Ocean in terms of economic wellbeing and security would be catastrophic. The Indian Ocean Region is also one of the least secure regions in the world. The waters of the Indian Ocean are surrounded by mainly poor countries and contain some of the world’s most difficult security challenges, including nuclear, non-conventional (piracy, smuggling, transnational crime, poverty, water, food and environmental) issues, and a potentially emerging security dilemma between India and China. At the same time, it is also the part of the globe that is least developed in terms of its co-operative mechanisms and Australia, in partnership with other states in the region, should strive to make organisations such as the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) more truly inclusive and effective. This Landmark Study seeks to determine what Australia wants from this region and concentrates on six countries: Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia and South Africa. It is a work in progress that will be regularly updated. I commend the Study as the time for a considered analysis of Australia’s objectives and policy options in the Indian Ocean Region has never been more appropriate. Major General the Honourable Michael Jeffery AC, AO, (Mil), CVO MC (retd) Chairman, Future Directions International (Former Governor General of Australia) The Indian Ocean Region - A Framework for Australian Policy Options 5 Landmark Study - Future Directions International IOF_SINGLE PAGE SPREAD_2014_UPDATED BLUE.indd 5 1/12/2014 3:42:52 PM 6 Landmark Study – The Indian Ocean Region - A Framework for Australian Policy Options Future Directions International IOF_SINGLE PAGE SPREAD_2014_UPDATED BLUE.indd 6 1/12/2014 3:42:52 PM Introduction Introduction As Future Directions International noted in its 2012 publication, Indian Ocean: A Sea of Uncertainty- The Indian Ocean is critical to global trade and food and energy security. Resources increasingly are being exploited by its littoral and island states. It is also a stage for the pursuit of global strategic and regional military and security interests. As the region emerges to become one of the twenty-first century’s leading strategic theatres, it will once again be at the crossroads of global trade, economic growth and potential crises. It is a region in which instability and conflict can quickly arise from imprecise border delineations, internal conflicts, issues of energy and resource security and changing national interests. Over one-third of Australia’s coastline borders the Indian Ocean. Security of lines of trade and the development of both on-shore and off-shore assets are essential to Australia’s economy and development. The Indian Ocean and its littoral and island states are poised to play an increasingly important role in Australia’s future. For all of the above reasons, a detailed knowledge of the evolving nature of the Indian Ocean and its littoral states is essential. Defining the Indian Ocean Region In comparison to the world’s other oceans, defining the exact boundaries of the Indian Ocean has been something of an imprecise science and has been a long-standing source of disagreement for hydrographic experts. The Indian Ocean’s northern, north-western and south-western extremities are now universally agreed upon: the Persian Gulf, Suez Canal and Cape Agulhas, respectively. With the Southern Ocean now receiving widespread acknowledgment as a discreet body of water located between the Antarctic coast and latitude 60°S – and therefore quite separate to the Indian, Pacific and Atlantic Oceans – the southern boundary of the Indian Ocean can also be considered to be defined. Some disagreement remains, however, over the eastern extent of the Indian Ocean; a situation complicated by whether maritime boundaries are best defined by major undersea features, ocean currents or geographical co-ordinates. While all non-Australian authorities include all the waters lying between Australia’s southern coastline and latitude 60°S, some place Bass Strait within the Indian Ocean, while others place it in the Pacific. To the north, the Indian Ocean is considered to extend to the western limits of the Arafura Sea, although some see it reaching as far east as Torres Strait. Equally, just how far the Indian Ocean reaches into the waters of the Indonesian archipelago is open to question, although the Strait of Malacca is almost universally agreed upon as a starting point. With that in mind, and drawing wherever possible on the definitions given by the International Hydrographic Organisation and a general consensus of experts in the field of maritime boundaries, FDI delimits the Indian Ocean by the points below: The Indian Ocean Region - A Framework for Australian Policy Options 7 Landmark Study - Future Directions International IOF_SINGLE PAGE SPREAD_2014_UPDATED BLUE.indd 7 1/12/2014 3:42:52 PM In addition to Australia, FDI’s Indian Ocean studies include the following littoral and island states: Bahrain Kenya Seychelles Bangladesh Kuwait Singapore Burma/Myanmar Madagascar Somalia Comoros Malaysia South Africa Djibouti Maldives Sri Lanka Egypt Mauritius Sudan Eritrea Mozambique Tanzania France1 Oman Thailand India Pakistan Timor-Leste Indonesia Qatar United Arab Emirates Iran Saudi Arabia Yemen 1 In respect of the départments of La Réunion and Mayotte, the Îles Éparses (the islands of Bassas da India, Île Europa, Îles Glorieuses, Île Juan de Nova and Île Tromelin) and the southernmost islands of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands (Les Terres Australes et Antarctiques Françaises): the Crozet and Kerguelen archipelagoes and Îles Saint-Paul and Amsterdam. 8 The Indian Ocean Region - A Framework for Australian Policy Options Landmark Study - Future Directions International IOF_SINGLE PAGE SPREAD_2014_UPDATED BLUE.indd 8 1/12/2014 3:42:52 PM The following states, loosely defined as adjacent to, or dependent on, the Indian Ocean are included as and when events in them directly affect Australia or one or more of the states listed previously: Afghanistan Israel Rwanda Bhutan Jordan South Sudan Botswana Lesotho Swaziland Burundi Malawi Uganda Ethiopia Nepal Zambia Iraq The Palestinian Territories Zimbabwe Having defined the parameters of the region, and some of the reasons for its growing importance, this study will now examine some of the options by which Australia may gain a deeper engagement with the region, together with the strategic objectives of five major powers in the region: the United States, China, India, Japan and France. ***** The Indian Ocean Region - A Framework for Australian Policy Options 9 Landmark Study - Future Directions International IOF_SINGLE
Recommended publications
  • The End of India's Strategic Ambiguity?
    Documento Opinión 67/2020 21 de mayo de 2020 Mikel Herrera Pilar * The end of India’s strategic ambiguity? Visitar la WEB Recibir BOLETÍN ELECTRÓNICO The end of India’s strategic ambiguity? Abstract: The world’s geopolitical center of gravity is shifting towards the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), where Modi’s India has claimed its leadership role as security provider in response to China’s regional aspirations. Aware of the latter’s superiority, Delhi resorts to strategic hedging against Beijing –by balancing the latter while cooperating in common multilateral platforms–, which gives India greater leverage to project its influence on the region while avoiding an undesirable confrontation. In recent years, India’s foreign policy in the IOR has combined a limited alignment with the West and its traditional strategic autonomy, i.e. engaging with multiple actors on tactical convenience. However, in view of the need for a long-term strategy, there are now calls for greater realism. India’s foreign policy should seek convergences instead of conveniences, while leading security cooperation with the IOR neighbours and middle powers to contain China’s assertiveness. Keywords: Indian Ocean Region (IOR), China, India, geopolitics, power, security, strategy. How to quote: HERRERA PILAR, Mikel. The end of India’s strategic ambiguity? Documento de Opinión IEEE 67/2020. http://www.ieee.es/Galerias/fichero/docs_opinion/2020/DIEEEO67_2020MIKHER_India- ENG.pdf y/o enlace bie3 (consultado día/mes/año) *NOTA: Las ideas contenidas en los Documentos de Opinión son responsabilidad de sus autores, sin que reflejen necesariamente el pensamiento del IEEE o del Ministerio de Defensa. Documento de Opinión 67/2020 1 The end of India’s strategic ambiguity? Mikel Herrera Pilar Introduction The Indian Ocean is the third largest ocean in the world, after the Pacific and the Atlantic Oceans.
    [Show full text]
  • INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SEPTEMBER 2017 – JUNE 2018 Table of Contents
    INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SEPTEMBER 2017 – JUNE 2018 Table of Contents 1. INDIA AND ITS NEIGHBOURS __________ 3 4.1. India Central Asia __________________ 56 1.1 India’s Neighbourhood Relations ______ 3 4.2. Tapi Gas Pipeline __________________ 59 1.2. India’s Water Relations with Neighbours 6 5. WEST ASIA/MIDDLE EAST ____________ 61 1.3. China ____________________________ 10 5.1. India West Asia____________________ 61 1.3.1. India China Relations _______________ 10 5.2. India-Iran ________________________ 63 1.3.2. India China Water Relations __________ 13 5.2.1. Iran Nuclear Deal __________________ 65 1.4. Pakistan _________________________ 15 5.3. Israel-Palestine ____________________ 67 1.4.1. Indus Water Treaty _________________ 15 1.4.2. Pakistan’s Gilgit-Baltistan Order _______ 17 5.3.1. India Israel _______________________ 67 1.4.3. Track-II Diplomacy _________________ 18 5.4. India-UAE ________________________ 69 1.4.4. International Sanctions Against Pakistan on Terrorism _____________________________ 18 5.5. India-Oman _______________________ 71 1.5. Bangladesh _______________________ 20 5.6. India Jordan ______________________ 72 1.6. Sri Lanka _________________________ 22 5.7. Other Regional News _______________ 73 5.7.1. The Kurdish Independence Referendum 73 1.7. Nepal Relations ___________________ 23 5.7.2. Islamic Alliance to Fight Terrorism _____ 73 1.7.1. India-Nepal Friendship Treaty_________ 25 5.7.3. Asian Premium ____________________ 73 1.7.2. India-China-Nepal Triangle ___________ 25 6. AFRICA ___________________________ 75 1.8. Afghanistan ______________________ 27 1.8.1. Afghanistan Peace Offer _____________ 29 6.1. India-Africa _______________________ 75 2. INDIAN OCEAN REGION _____________ 31 6.2.
    [Show full text]
  • Global Governance: Emerging Possibilities and Diverse
    GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: EMERGING POSSIBILITIES AND DIVERSE CHALLENGES TO INDIA Madhu Kumari Associate professor of political Science, D.S.College,Aligarh Dr.B.R.Ambedkar University, Agra UP. Contact no. 91-9412617235 Email id: [email protected] GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: EMERGING POSSIBILITIES AND DIVERSE CHALLENGES TO INDIA In a simple and broad-based definition of global governance, the term is used to designate all regulations intended for organization and centralization of human societies on a global scale.1 It may be defined as "the complex of formal and informal institutions, mechanisms, relationships, and processes between and among states, markets, citizens and organizations, both inter- and non-governmental, through which collective interests on the global plane are articulated; Duties, obligations and privileges are established, and differences are mediated through educated professionals. 2 A global governance perspective analyses emerging spheres of authority as both geographically and functionally fragmented; the range of a formal or informal rule system’s capacity to generate compliance on the part of those persons towards whom their directives are issued; and the acquisition of authoritative decision-making capacity by non- state, state and supra-state actors .3. It stipulates no hierarchy between actors; the mode of steering is predominantly non-hierarchical and often based on arguing rather than traditional bargaining.4 Abstract Post- cold war politics witnessed changes in power equations and a new world order emerged with new actors of global governance. Global presence of these actors has been endorsed by the international community. In this process, the world have recognized India’s achievements and admitted India in the new architecture of Global Governance along with Brazil, China and South Africa and assigned her larger global role to play.
    [Show full text]
  • The Emerging Foreign Assistance Policies of India
    THE EMERGING FOREIGN ASSISTANCE POLICIES OF INDIA AND CHINA: INDIA AS A DEVELOPMENT PARTNER Final Draft, March 20141 Eswaran Sridharan, University of Pennsylvania Institute for the Advanced Study of India Introduction: Key Questions about India as an Emerging Donor This paper attempts a detailed account and analysis of India as an emerging foreign aid donor, or development partner as it prefers to call itself, analyzing it in the context of the international aid regime as well as in the contexts of the evolution of Indian foreign policy and economic relations with other developing countries. Much of what India is doing is no different from what Western countries have done. However, it is not a member of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the traditional coordination mechanism of the developed country donors and the international aid regime. India appears to have operated on the realist assumptions of power politics and interest-orientation in its aid policies, particularly with its neighbours (Six, 2009). However, India’s aid policy has been little studied. This study will address this lacuna by asking and analyzing five key questions: 1 This research was supported by IDRC Grant No. 106978-001 over 2012-14 to the University of Pennsylvania Institute for the Advanced Study of India. 1 1. How much? Aid numbers have always been prone to massaging as donors attempt to show their largesse. A good handle on India’s aid numbers is an essential first step. 2. To Whom? What have been the allocations by country and/or region? To what extent is India’s aid directed to the “near abroad” versus more geographically distant countries? Is the aid directed to the poorest countries or to resource-rich countries irrespective of poverty? 3.
    [Show full text]
  • INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Table of Contents
    INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Table of Contents 1. INDIA AND ITS NEIGHBOURS _________ 2 7.1. India European Union ______________ 42 1.1. India-Pakistan _____________________ 2 7.2. BREXIT __________________________ 44 1.1.1. Indus Waters Treaty Dispute __________ 2 8. RUSSIA __________________________ 48 1.1.2. Sir Creek Dispute ____________________ 3 1.2. India-Bangladesh ___________________ 4 8.1. India-Russia Relations ______________ 48 8.1.1. RIC Trilateral _______________________ 50 1.3. India Afghanistan __________________ 6 1.3.1. American Retrenchment from Afghanistan 7 9. USA_____________________________ 52 1.4. India-Bhutan _____________________ 10 9.1. India-U.S. Relations: An Overview ____ 52 1.5. India’s Shift Towards BIMSTEC _______ 11 9.2. India-US Trade Relations ____________ 54 1.6. Unrealized Potential of South Asian Trade12 10. IMPORTANT INTERNATIONAL/REGIONAL GROUPS AND SUMMITS ______________ 56 2. INDIAN OCEAN REGION _____________ 15 10.1. World Trade Organisation __________ 56 2.1. Indo-Pacific Regional Cooperation ____ 15 10.2. UNSC Reforms ___________________ 57 2.2. India- Net Security Provider in Indian Ocean ______________________________ 19 10.3. UN Peacekeeping _________________ 59 2.3. India-Maldives ____________________ 20 10.4. Shanghai Cooperation Organization __ 60 3. SOUTH EAST AND EAST ASIA _________ 23 10.5. Belt and Road Initiative ____________ 63 3.1. India-Japan Relations ______________ 23 10.6. WHO Reforms ___________________ 65 3.2. India-Australia Relations ____________ 24 10.7. Arctic Council ____________________ 66 3.3. India-South Korea Relations _________ 26 10.8. G-20 ___________________________ 68 4. CENTRAL ASIA ____________________ 29 10.9. OIC Meet _______________________ 69 4.1.
    [Show full text]
  • Indian Development and Economic
    This project is funded by the Asia Foundation. The views expressed by the author(s) do not necessarily reflect those of the Foundation or the Funder. Contents Spring 2014 The State of Indian Development Cooperation 2 Regional Briefs on Indian Development Cooperation India-Africa 5 India-Central Asia 7 Bilateral Briefs on Indian Development Cooperation India-Afghanistan 9 India-Bangladesh 11 India-Bhutan 13 India-Maldives 15 India-Myanmar 17 India-Sri Lanka 19 India-Vietnam 21 About IDCR 24 2 IDCR Report: The State of Indian Development Cooperation The State of Indian Development Cooperation Rani D. Mullen The Importance of India as a Growing “Development Partner” The rapid growth of India’s economy in the 21st century along with India’s growing global prominence has led to a large expansion of India’s engagement in development cooperation (foreign assistance) with other countries over the past decade. Yet the rise in volume and diversity of India’s development cooperation over the past decade is a little understood phenomenon. India is not a new donor, having first provided development assistance in the late 1940s, shortly after its independence. Yet its development assistance remained small compared to traditional foreign assistance donors until the turn of the century. Since then, Indian development assistance has risen significantly. Indian development assistance in 2013 was comparable to that of smaller developed countries such as Austria. Moreover, the growth rate of Indian aid stands in notable contrast to the stagnant or even declining foreign assistance of most developed countries. India as an Older “Pivotal Donor” Since the turn of the century, India’s Government of India’s Development Assistance 1999/00 – 2013/14 development cooperation has risen in 80 volume and diversity.
    [Show full text]
  • Nehru Ideology on Indian Foreign Policy
    Nehru Ideology On Indian Foreign Policy inheresFrench andstylishly. peppercorny Corrie is Stafford monoecious always and outriding oversells overflowingly introductorily and as cutes shrunken his liker. Lauren Sotted bestrew and acknowledgedperfectly and crimple Joaquin fragmentary. go-ahead his impureness represent Even withstand a leading economist, Sir Creek, but especially at others. It is attributed to a claim that expanding the united states foreign affairswith several developing countries was accredited itself a kind of indian policy was predominantly hindu nationalists have. Situating India in Asia The Nehru Years. This policy is foreign policies are widely in indian ocean island states and indians from. During their ideological fundamentalism in several countries, he has established such. Indian Foreign land under Modi A New Brand or cardboard Core. The Chinese state promotes the religion on the grounds of its historical association, farmers and middleman fear that this will ultimately result in huge job loss and impact the structure. Kashmir or both these initiatives intend to foreign policy on nehru ideology indian leader of the nam was one sided truth. For India, Pakistan cut out essential supplies to system state, financial assistance and big of technology. Jawaharlal Nehru 14 November 1927 May 1964 was an Indian. Jawaharlal Nehru HISTORY. Reflected in Indian Foreign Policy Formulations 2020 Indian. Since assuming office in bimstec, jay prakash narayan, but how do not true liberalism in relation with nepal differ as a perspective. Despite the famous in Indian political establishment the worse policy. This one thing is ideological, nehru never been shared has given such a major concern. United states foreign policy of.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rise of China and India in Africa
    This PDF is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) Licence. Further details regarding permitted usage can be found at http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Print and ebook editions of this work are available to purchase from Zed Books (www.zedbooks.co.uk). A frica Now Africa Now is an exciting new series, published by Zed Books in association with the internationally respected Nordic Africa Institute. Featuring high-quality, cutting-edge research from leading academics, the series addresses the big issues confronting Africa today. Accessible but in-depth, and wide-ranging in its scope, Africa Now engages with the critical political, economic, socio logical and development debates affecting the continent, shedding new light on pressing concerns. Nordic Africa Institute The Nordic Africa Institute (Nordiska Afrikainstitutet) is a centre for research, documentation and information on modern Africa. Based in Uppsala, Sweden, the Institute is dedicated to providing timely, critical and alternative research and analysis of Africa and to cooperating with African researchers. As a hub and a meeting place for a growing field of research and analysis, the Institute strives to put knowledge of African issues within reach for scholars, policy-makers, politicians, the media, students and the general public. The Institute is financed jointly by the Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden). www.nai.uu.se Forthcoming titles Ilda Lindell (ed.), Africa’s Informal Workers Iman Hashim and Dorte Thorsen, Child Migration in Africa About the editors Fantu Cheru is the Research Director at the Nordic Africa Institute in Uppsala, Sweden and Emeritus Professor of International Develop- ment at the School of International Service, American University in Washington, DC.
    [Show full text]
  • Current Affairs April 2019
    VISION IAS www.visionias.in CURRENT AFFAIRS APRIL 2019 Copyright © by Vision IAS All rights are reserved. No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission of Vision IAS. 1 www.visionias.in ©Vision IAS Table of Contents 1. POLITY _____________________________ 4 5.8. Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services __________________ 44 1.1. Electoral Bonds _______________________ 4 5.9. Ecological Sanitation _________________ 45 1.2. Model Code of Conduct ________________ 5 5.10. Animal Cruelty Issues Now Under Farm 1.3. Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail _________ 7 Ministry _______________________________ 46 1.4. Judicial Accountability _________________ 8 5.11. Financing for Sustainable Development 1.5. Lateral Entry _________________________ 9 Report 2019 ____________________________ 46 2. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS __________ 12 5.12. Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure __________________________ 47 2.1. Indo-Pacific Regional Cooperation ______ 12 5.13. UNESCO Global Geoparks ____________ 48 2.2. India’s Development Partnership _______ 14 5.14. Summer Ploughing __________________ 48 2.3. Belt and Road Initiative _______________ 16 6. SOCIAL ISSUES ______________________ 50 2.4. US Sanctions on Iran _________________ 18 6.1. Transgender Rights___________________ 50 2.5. Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) ______________ 19 6.2. Learning Outcomes-Based Curriculum 2.6. UN Designates Masood Azhar as Global Framework ____________________________ 51 Terrorist _______________________________ 20 6.3. National Institutional Rankings Framework 2.7. Libya Crisis _________________________ 20 2019 __________________________________ 52 3. ECONOMY _________________________ 22 6.4. EAT- Lancet Commissions Food Planet 3.1.
    [Show full text]
  • India's Global Footprints LIST of VANI PUBLICATIONS
    The Heinrich Böll Foundation The Heinrich Böll Foundation is part of the Green political movement that has developed worldwide as a response to the traditional politics of socialism, liberalism, and conservatism. Our main tenets are ecology and sustainability, democracy and human rights, self-determination and justice. We place particular emphasis on gender democracy, meaning social emancipation and equal rights for women and men. We are also committed to equal rights for cultural and ethnic minorities and to the societal and political participation of immigrants. Finally, we promote non-violence and proactive peace policies. To achieve our goals, we seek strategic partnerships with others who share our values. We are an independent organisation, that is, we determine our own priorities and policies. We are based in the Federal Republic of Germany, yet we are an international actor in both ideal and practical terms. Our namesake, the writer and Nobel Prize laureate Heinrich Böll, personifies the values we stand for: defence of freedom, civic courage, tolerance, open debate, and the valuation of art and culture as independent spheres of thought and action. INDIA'S We Are a Green Think Tank l We promote democratic reforms and social innovation. l We work on ecological policies and sustainable development on a global level. l GLOBAL FOOTPRINTS We provide space for the presentation of and debate on art and culture. l We transfer knowledge and skills from experts to political actors. l We provide a forum for open debate and promote dialogue between politics, business, academia, and society. l We support talented students active on socio-political issues both in Germany and abroad.
    [Show full text]
  • ITEC) Programme 1
    CENTRE FOR POLICY RESEARCH Premier think tank shaping policy debates since 1973 50 Years of Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Indian Development Cooperation Research Report January 2015 The project on Indian Development Cooperation at the Centre for Policy Research is supported by the Asia Foundation. The views expressed by the author(s) do not necessarily reflect those of the Foundation or the Funder. 50 Years of Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation A Report January 2015 CONTENTS Preface i Introduction The History and Evolution of the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation (ITEC) Programme 1 Country Profiles Afghanistan 10 Bhutan 13 Chile 14 Ethiopia 16 Myanmar 17 Namibia 19 Papua New Guinea 21 Vietnam 23 Institute Profiles The Barefoot College 25 Central Institute of Tool Design 28 Entrepreneurship Development Institute 30 The Indian Institute of Management (Ahmedabad) 31 Key Recommendations 33 About IDCR 34 IDCR Report: 50 Years of Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation i PREFACE In 2014, the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation (ITEC) programme celebrated its 50th anniversary, marking five decades of tremendous growth. In its inaugural year, 1964–65, ITEC offered technical and economic training in India to 80 government officials from other developing countries. By 2014-15, ITEC was offering training to more than 10,000 candidates from 161 countries, bringing the total number of people trained under ITEC since its inception to more than 50,000. The Indian ITEC programme has addressed the needs of generations of civil servants and policy makers from countries across South Asia, Africa, South America, and Southeast Asia, drawing on various aspects of India’s own socio-economic development.
    [Show full text]