India-China: Trade And Strategy For Frontier Development/ Guruda Das ed.; C Joshua Thomas ed. and Indian Council of Social Science Research. North Eastern Regional Centre
Contributor(s): Das, Guruda [ed.] | Thomas, C Joshua [ed.] | Indian Council of Social Science Research. North Eastern Regional Centre.
Publisher: Delhi: Bookwell, 2010ISBN: 9789380574073 .Subject(s): Internatiomal Relation -- Bilateral Trade -- India -- ChinaDDC classification: 337.54051 Summary: Unprecedented development has taken place in India-China economic relations over the last decade. One time political advertisaries have become partners in trade and development. This volume analyzes the nature of bilateral trade and identifies the road blocks that need to be addressed for further cementing the bilateral economic relation. Some contributors have made a case for the use of cross-border synergies for the development of the frontier areas in both India and China. As the market-led national development model has failed to infuse growth in the peripehries, this has resulted into secessionist demands by the communities living therein.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
NASSDOC Library | 337.54051 DAS-I (Browse shelf) | Available | 54781 |
Browsing NASSDOC Library Shelves Close shelf browser
No cover image available | No cover image available |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
No cover image available |
![]() |
||
337.54044 IND-; Indo-French seminar on privatisation of public enterprises: | 337.54047 IND- India and Russia: problems in ensuring energy security | 337.5404971 IND- India and Serbia and Montenegro re-engagement: regional and bilateral dimensions | 337.54051 DAS-I India-China: | 337.54051 SOU- South Asia and China : | 337.54056 KHA-I India and West Asia: emerging markets in the liberalisation era | 337.54059 TWO; Two decades of India's look East policy: partnership for peace, progress and prosperity |
Unprecedented development has taken place in India-China economic relations over the last decade. One time political advertisaries have become partners in trade and development. This volume analyzes the nature of bilateral trade and identifies the road blocks that need to be addressed for further cementing the bilateral economic relation. Some contributors have made a case for the use of cross-border synergies for the development of the frontier areas in both India and China. As the market-led national development model has failed to infuse growth in the peripehries, this has resulted into secessionist demands by the communities living therein.
There are no comments for this item.