U.S. Elections: questioning the status quo
An excerpt from a podcast episode conducted with Neelam Deo, Director, Gateway House, about the wider implications of the U.S. elections was republished by Global Europe Anticipation Bulletin.
An excerpt from a podcast episode conducted with Neelam Deo, Director, Gateway House, about the wider implications of the U.S. elections was republished by Global Europe Anticipation Bulletin.
Neelam Deo, Director, Gateway House, was interviewed by India Today about her take on Donald Trump's likely agenda in reaching out to the Hindu community in the U.S.
This infographic seeks to trace the evolution of BRICS from O’Neill’s original vision to its current form, while illustrating how intra-BRICS trade has evolved over the past 15 years.
We continue our special podcast series on the U.S. election. With less than 2 weeks to go before the election on November 8th, Ambassador Neelam Deo discusses the impact this election may have on the simultaneous race for the U.S. Congress and Senate, as well as the larger effect that this election may have on political discourse around the world.
Ambassador Rajiv Bhatia, Distinguished Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies, Gateway House wrote an article for The Hindu on the evolving India-Myanmar bilateral relationship.
An article by Sunil Raman on the growing Chinese influence in Ladakh was republished by Swarajya.
The Indian defence minister spoke – unexpectedly – of a doctrinal change in stance.
An article by Sifra Lentin, Adjunct Fellow, Bombay History Studies, on the historical linkages between Bombay and Shanghai was republished by The Dialogue.
An earnestly, but objectively written, biography of the late prime minister gives credit where it has been denied: PVN was the principal architect of the economic reforms that put the country on a destiny-changing path of growth, while being up against a restless party, hostile Parliament, and an apathetic public.
The recent inauguration of the New Development Bank in Shanghai has made that city a focal point of international financial transactions between the five BRICS countries. This occasions revisiting some of the ways in which Bombay has been historically linked to it