Special Reports – NUS Institute of South Asian Studies (ISAS)
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    ISAS Special Reports

    Collation of viewpoints and perspectives from ISAS events

    Title: 10 : A Pakistani Vision of Peace with India
    Author/s: P S Suryanarayana
    Date: 7 December 2012
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    Title: 09 : India-China Comfort Level in Economic Affairs: Good News for Asia’s Stability1
    Author/s: P S Suryanarayana
    Date: 28 November 2012
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    Title: 08 : A Stirring Call for China-India Strategic Leadership
    Author/s: P S Suryanarayana
    Date: 22 November 2012
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    Title: 07 : PM Lee Invites India to Partner ASEAn in New Initiative
    Author/s: P S Suryanarayana
    Date: 13 July 2012
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    Title: 06 : China-India Media Mediation
    Abstract: The India-China relationship is one of the most significant bilateral relationships of the 21st century. While the economic and strategic aspects of this equation have long been debated, the role of the media on both sides is much less understood. Together, the two countries constitute the world's largest media market and the day-to-day concerns of media on both sides can have serious consequences for the future of international relations and for daily diplomacy and national perceptions in China and India. To better understand the evolving role of the media in the India-China relationship, ISAS organised the 'China-India Media Mediation' workshop on 17and18 May 2012. It brought together senior representatives from the Chinese and Indian media and senior academics from Singapore, Australia, United States, Canada, China and India.
    Date: 3 July 2012
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    Title: 05 : Asean-India Relations – Future Directions
    Author/s: S D Muni See Chak Mun
    Abstract: East Asia has always occupied a prominent place in independent India's strategic perspective, an outcome of India's civilisational roots and its long history of commercial engagement with East Asian countries. In the 1930s, Nehru had toyed with the idea of forging an "Eastern Federation" in which China, Burma (now Myanmar), Malaya (now Malaysia), and Siam (now Thailand) were conceived as prospective members. 3 In the inaugural Asian Relations Conference in New Delhi in March 1947 Nehru again reiterated the significance of Southeast Asia in India's strategy to forge Asian solidarity.
    Date: 25 May 2012
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