The Nexus of Naval Modernization in India and China

Strategic Rivalry and the Evolution of Maritime Power

Price: 1795.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780192865595

Publication date:

19/10/2022

Hardback

280 pages

216x140mm

Price: 1795.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780192865595

Publication date:

19/10/2022

Hardback

280 pages

Christopher K. Colley

Makes extensive use of in-depth interviews with experts in India, China, and Washington D.C.,Demonstrates the linkages between the U.S.-China and China-India rivalries,Utilizes Chinese language sources

Rights:  OUP UK (INDIAN TERRITORY)

Christopher K. Colley

Description

Naval modernization is an extremely expensive, time-consuming, and a relatively
rare phenomenon. Scholars have proposed various arguments to explain this
process ranging from bureaucratic politics, to nationalism, and to the security
dilemma. The Nexus of Naval Modernization in India and China demonstrates
that from 1990 until 2020, the primary driver of naval modernization resulted
from a strategic rivalry. Key to strategic rivalries is perceived threat perceptions
that cause decision makers to prepare for worst-case scenarios when trying
to decipher their enemy's behaviour. When a state believes it is threatened by
a rival's naval power it is likely to pursue its own form of naval modernization for
self-protection. Importantly, rivalries do not exist in a vacuum and are frequently
linked. This project will reveal how the interconnected nature of rivalries can
also cause naval modernization. Through a close examination of scholarly works,
government documents, and in-depth focused interviews with experts based in
India, China, Australia, and the U.S. Colley argues that while strategic rivalry is
not the only driver of naval modernization, it is the most compelling explanation.
Other arguments are frequently embedded within the strategic rivalry model
and thus are best seen as only partial drivers. This study contributes to the rivalry
research program as well as the policy and security studies literatures.


About the author

Christopher K. Colley, Assistant Professor of Security Studies, National Defence College of the United Arab Emirates

Christopher K. Colley is an Assistant Professor of Security Studies at the National Defence College of the United Arab Emirates. He received his Ph.D. in political science from Indiana University Bloomington and holds a Master's degree from Renmin University of China. Dr. Colley was an inaugural Wilson Centre China Fellow and has lectured on Chinese politics, foreign policy and security at numerous universities and organizations including Indiana University, Renmin University, China Foreign Affairs College, and the Foreign Military Attaché Corps Club in Beijing. He has written extensively on Sino-Indian relations and has published numerous book chapters, reports and articles on the subject. He lived in China for over a decade and has visited all of China's provinces and political entities multiple times.

Christopher K. Colley

Table of contents

1:Introduction, Christopher K Colley
2:Main Themes and Competing Arguments
3:Theory and Argument
4:The Indian Case
5:The Chinese Case
6:Policy Recommendations and Conclusion
7:Fieldwork Information
8:Interviews
9:Index

Christopher K. Colley

Christopher K. Colley

Christopher K. Colley

Description

Naval modernization is an extremely expensive, time-consuming, and a relatively
rare phenomenon. Scholars have proposed various arguments to explain this
process ranging from bureaucratic politics, to nationalism, and to the security
dilemma. The Nexus of Naval Modernization in India and China demonstrates
that from 1990 until 2020, the primary driver of naval modernization resulted
from a strategic rivalry. Key to strategic rivalries is perceived threat perceptions
that cause decision makers to prepare for worst-case scenarios when trying
to decipher their enemy's behaviour. When a state believes it is threatened by
a rival's naval power it is likely to pursue its own form of naval modernization for
self-protection. Importantly, rivalries do not exist in a vacuum and are frequently
linked. This project will reveal how the interconnected nature of rivalries can
also cause naval modernization. Through a close examination of scholarly works,
government documents, and in-depth focused interviews with experts based in
India, China, Australia, and the U.S. Colley argues that while strategic rivalry is
not the only driver of naval modernization, it is the most compelling explanation.
Other arguments are frequently embedded within the strategic rivalry model
and thus are best seen as only partial drivers. This study contributes to the rivalry
research program as well as the policy and security studies literatures.


About the author

Christopher K. Colley, Assistant Professor of Security Studies, National Defence College of the United Arab Emirates

Christopher K. Colley is an Assistant Professor of Security Studies at the National Defence College of the United Arab Emirates. He received his Ph.D. in political science from Indiana University Bloomington and holds a Master's degree from Renmin University of China. Dr. Colley was an inaugural Wilson Centre China Fellow and has lectured on Chinese politics, foreign policy and security at numerous universities and organizations including Indiana University, Renmin University, China Foreign Affairs College, and the Foreign Military Attaché Corps Club in Beijing. He has written extensively on Sino-Indian relations and has published numerous book chapters, reports and articles on the subject. He lived in China for over a decade and has visited all of China's provinces and political entities multiple times.

Table of contents

1:Introduction, Christopher K Colley
2:Main Themes and Competing Arguments
3:Theory and Argument
4:The Indian Case
5:The Chinese Case
6:Policy Recommendations and Conclusion
7:Fieldwork Information
8:Interviews
9:Index