India and Nepal: changing relationship
Material type:
- 8122001815
- 327.5405496 MUN
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 327.5405496 MUN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 53762 |
No two countries in the world are as closely placed, geographically, cultu rally, historically, economically and strategically, as India and Nepal. It is, therefore, almost natural for them to have extremely intimate and extensive relationship with each other. The tone, temper and thrust of this relationship has been changing according to the changing contexts of regional and inter national politics, rising economic and nationalistic aspirations of the peoples of the two countries and the dynamics of internal political pressures within their respective systems.
The book focusses attention on the changing nature of India-Nepal rela tions with regard to their critical areas of interests. After clinically analysing the linkages between the domestic political imperatives of each country and their bilateral relations, the study goes into the details of the erosion of the Indo-Nepal Treaty of 1950 which Astitutes the foundation of their relations for the past forty years. The significance of Nepal's 'zone of peace' proposal enunciated by King Birendra in 1975, on the India-Nepal politico strategic interaction has also been dis cussed.
The other areas of Indo-Nepal rela tions covered in the book include trade and Indian participation in Nepal's development projects. The study con cludes with a survey of the historic change in Nepal from the King-domi nated Panchayat systems to multi party democracy under constitutional monarchy. The author finds prospects of Indo-Nepal cooperation promising as a result of recent changes within Nepal and also at the global and regio nal levels.
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