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উপর্যুপরি জলবায়ু সংকটের যুগে, চিনের চিরাচরিত উন্নয়নম
Cambodia’s latest megaproject, the Funan Techno Canal, raises concerns about environmental impacts and diplomatic concerns
बिगड़ते जलवायु संकट के युग में चीन की पारंपरिक विकास से ज
In the era of compounding climate crises, China’s traditionalist developmental mindset is causing environmental degradation in the Mekong Basin
वियतनाम के साथ भारत के बढ़ते सामरिक संबंधों से एक बार फिर
The growing strategic ties with Mekong nations such as Vietnam and Myanmar indicate deepening mutual trust in the rapidly changing regional geopolitic
BIMSTEC is the only forum that brings together India’s strategic peripheries — South, East and North — under one single grouping.
Delhi has envisioned various subregions in and around the subcontinent. Re-integrating the subcontinent by re-discovering the old as well as building
An important element of the Act East policy is using cultural diplomacy to further India’s interests.
The second Mekong-Ganga Dialogue, held in Laos and Thailand, effectively threw diverse and comparative insights into wide range of water issues plaguing both the regions and deliberated upon possibilities of cooperation and collective actions to sustainably manage water resources.
A three-day Mekong-Ganga Dialogue has stressed the need for shifting thinking around river-basin development and climate change issues from narrow national security concerns to a regional perspective with ecological and social concerns.
At the recent seventh Japan-Mekong Summit in Tokyo in the first week of July, both Japan and the Mekong countries reiterated their resolve to implement an ambitious cooperation programme called New Tokyo Strategy 2015 for Mekong-Japan Cooperation for the three years covering 2016-18.
As India places the Mekong sub-region among its priorities under the country’s ‘Act East’ policy, the ongoing India-Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway project––currently the only land connectivity project between India and the Mekong countries and the wider Southeast Asian region––could prove to be a game changer. It is imperative to explore ways to ensure early completion of this strategic communication link. This paper focuses on
This paper examines current water management ideologies and practices and the impact they create on strategies for pan-Asian connectivity. It suggests that 'business-as-usual' management principles and the harnessing of transboundary rivers tend to undermine efforts at achieving economic and ecological sustainability goals, as well as meeting long-term development challenges. The Mekong and Ganga basin regions, in particular, suffer from inadequa