LSE South Asia Centre and LSE SU Pakistan Development Society recently hosted Rahul Roy-Chaudhury, Senior Fellow for South Asia at the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), for the event titled “Can Intelligence Services Do Good?”. Roy-Chaudhury talks to Mahima A. Jain on India’s foreign policy, its involvement in Afghanistan, the difference in the operational styles of R&AW and ISI, and India’s approach in the Indian Ocean region
After a long period of military and diplomatic tension between the two South Asian nuclear powers, I...
As workers face lay-offs in the Middle East and America makes it increasingly difficult to get worki...
As India celebrates its 68th Republic Day, in this photo essay Mahima A. Jain showcases the highligh...
As India turns 75, the LSE South Asia Centre will publish commemorative posts till August 2023 to dw...
LSE South Asia Centre recently invited Snigdha Poonam, journalist at Hindustan Times and author of D...
With tensions between India and China growing along India’s northern border, Mike Todman (Lancaster ...
As India and China continue to vie for supremacy of the highly geopolitically prized Indian Ocean, S...
The Indian right's global political network is dominating the Indian diaspora in the west, writes Mr...
In November last year, the South Asia Centre, alongside LSE's SU Human Rights society and the LSE SU...
In May 2018, LSE South Asia Centre hosted a workshop where Abhijit Banerjee, the Ford Foundation Int...
Having qualified in the UK during the late 1960s in General Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, I join...
In their new book The US Pivot and Indian Foreign Policy, Pant and Joshi explore India's response to...
Following his participation in the opening panel of the South Asia Centre's London summit 'Is China ...
Geopolitics in the Indo-Pacific region has been heating up. The traditional Sino-Indian rivalry for ...
Following her participation in the panel 'Who are the middle class in South Asia?' at the recent LSE...
After a long period of military and diplomatic tension between the two South Asian nuclear powers, I...
As workers face lay-offs in the Middle East and America makes it increasingly difficult to get worki...
As India celebrates its 68th Republic Day, in this photo essay Mahima A. Jain showcases the highligh...
As India turns 75, the LSE South Asia Centre will publish commemorative posts till August 2023 to dw...
LSE South Asia Centre recently invited Snigdha Poonam, journalist at Hindustan Times and author of D...
With tensions between India and China growing along India’s northern border, Mike Todman (Lancaster ...
As India and China continue to vie for supremacy of the highly geopolitically prized Indian Ocean, S...
The Indian right's global political network is dominating the Indian diaspora in the west, writes Mr...
In November last year, the South Asia Centre, alongside LSE's SU Human Rights society and the LSE SU...
In May 2018, LSE South Asia Centre hosted a workshop where Abhijit Banerjee, the Ford Foundation Int...
Having qualified in the UK during the late 1960s in General Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, I join...
In their new book The US Pivot and Indian Foreign Policy, Pant and Joshi explore India's response to...
Following his participation in the opening panel of the South Asia Centre's London summit 'Is China ...
Geopolitics in the Indo-Pacific region has been heating up. The traditional Sino-Indian rivalry for ...
Following her participation in the panel 'Who are the middle class in South Asia?' at the recent LSE...
After a long period of military and diplomatic tension between the two South Asian nuclear powers, I...
As workers face lay-offs in the Middle East and America makes it increasingly difficult to get worki...
As India celebrates its 68th Republic Day, in this photo essay Mahima A. Jain showcases the highligh...