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India's Development Diplomacy & Soft Power in Africa
Kenneth king,
Meera venkatachalam,
Gerard mccann,
Chambi chachage,
Jacqueline halima mgumia,
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Emma mawdsley,
Supriya roychoudhury,
Vincent duclos,
Simona vittorini,
Jagannath panda,
Mrittika guha sarkar,
Muhidin j. shangwe
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Unpacks the histories, actors and geopolitics of India's soft power and evolving engagements with Africa.Since independence India has deployed its soft power in Africa, with educational aid and cap...
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19 November 2021

Unpacks the histories, actors and geopolitics of India's soft power and evolving engagements with Africa.
Since independence India has deployed its soft power in Africa, with educational aid and capacity-building at the heart of its Africa policy. However, following economic liberalisation and in a quest for greater global influence, India's geopolitics have changed. The country's discourse on Africa has shifted from the mantras of post-colonial solidarity and South-South Cooperation, and there is now a growing sense of Indian exceptionalism, as the country reimagines its past and future against the growing influence of the political right. In this book scholars from India, Africa, Europe and North America show how India's soft power has been implemented by the diaspora, government and private sector. Research documents how India's 'aid' has been re-thought in major schemes such as e-global education and health, Gandhi statuary and Covid-19 diplomacy in Africa.
Since independence India has deployed its soft power in Africa, with educational aid and capacity-building at the heart of its Africa policy. However, following economic liberalisation and in a quest for greater global influence, India's geopolitics have changed. The country's discourse on Africa has shifted from the mantras of post-colonial solidarity and South-South Cooperation, and there is now a growing sense of Indian exceptionalism, as the country reimagines its past and future against the growing influence of the political right. In this book scholars from India, Africa, Europe and North America show how India's soft power has been implemented by the diaspora, government and private sector. Research documents how India's 'aid' has been re-thought in major schemes such as e-global education and health, Gandhi statuary and Covid-19 diplomacy in Africa.
Price: $29.99
Pages: 242
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: James Currey
Publication Date:
19 November 2021
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9781847012746
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, International relations, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Developing & Emerging Countries, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / International / Economics & Trade, Development studies, Development economics and emerging economies
India's Development and Soft Power Diplomacy in Africa is a remarkable effort. The merits of the book are many. The volume brings together scholars from several disciplines...Each contribution is crisp and well researched
Introduction: India-Africa Now: Changing Imaginaries and Knowledge Paradigms
Meera Venkatachalam and Kenneth King
PART 1: The Geopolitical Imaginary and Soft Power
1. India's Soft Power in East Africa: Opportunities and Challenges
Muhidin J. Shangwe
2. Between Business and Balance: India-Japan in Africa vis-à-vis China
Mrittika Guha Sarkar and Jagannath Panda
PART 2: The Indian Political Right and the Reconfiguration of Soft Power in Africa
3. The Indian Political Right, Soft Power, and the Reimagination of Africa
Meera Venkatachalam
4. Modi and the Mahatma - The Politics of Statues and the Saffronisation of India-Africa relations
Simona Vittorini
PART 3: Capacity building: Shifting Modalities and New Knowledgescapes
5. India's Changing Human Resource Diplomacy with Africa, and Africa's Responses
Kenneth King
6. A Shining Example: Modelling Growth in India's Pan-African e-Network
Vincent Duclos
7. Partnership in Times of Pandemic: India's Covid Diplomacy with a Lens on Africa
Supriya Roychoudhury and Emma Mawdsley
PART 4: Skilling, Knowledge Transfer, and Indo-African Interactions
8. Precarious Partnerships: Tanzanian Entrepreneurs of Asian and African Descent
Jacqueline Halima Mgumia and Chambi Chachage
9. The Trumpets and Travails of South-South Cooperation: African Students in India since the 1940s
Gerard McCann
Conclusion: Reflections on India-Africa Studies, Development Cooperation, and Soft Power
Kenneth King and Meera Venkatachalam
Meera Venkatachalam and Kenneth King
PART 1: The Geopolitical Imaginary and Soft Power
1. India's Soft Power in East Africa: Opportunities and Challenges
Muhidin J. Shangwe
2. Between Business and Balance: India-Japan in Africa vis-à-vis China
Mrittika Guha Sarkar and Jagannath Panda
PART 2: The Indian Political Right and the Reconfiguration of Soft Power in Africa
3. The Indian Political Right, Soft Power, and the Reimagination of Africa
Meera Venkatachalam
4. Modi and the Mahatma - The Politics of Statues and the Saffronisation of India-Africa relations
Simona Vittorini
PART 3: Capacity building: Shifting Modalities and New Knowledgescapes
5. India's Changing Human Resource Diplomacy with Africa, and Africa's Responses
Kenneth King
6. A Shining Example: Modelling Growth in India's Pan-African e-Network
Vincent Duclos
7. Partnership in Times of Pandemic: India's Covid Diplomacy with a Lens on Africa
Supriya Roychoudhury and Emma Mawdsley
PART 4: Skilling, Knowledge Transfer, and Indo-African Interactions
8. Precarious Partnerships: Tanzanian Entrepreneurs of Asian and African Descent
Jacqueline Halima Mgumia and Chambi Chachage
9. The Trumpets and Travails of South-South Cooperation: African Students in India since the 1940s
Gerard McCann
Conclusion: Reflections on India-Africa Studies, Development Cooperation, and Soft Power
Kenneth King and Meera Venkatachalam