India Bangladesh Domestic Politics - Punam Pandey

India Bangladesh Domestic Politics (eBook)

The River Ganges Water Issues

(Autor)

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2016 | 1st ed. 2016
XVII, 138 Seiten
Springer Singapore (Verlag)
978-981-10-2371-2 (ISBN)
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This book deals with how the governments of India and Bangladesh manage the Ganges River. On the basis of the Ganges issue, it explains India's involvement in the domestic politics of Bangladesh and how this involvement, in turn, shapes Ganges river politics. The book further analyses the constant friction between Indian preferences for bilateral negotiation in comparison to Bangladesh's demand for multilateral cooperation on the Ganges. This also highlights the role of civil society, tracing how organisations have engaged in and explored potential compromises acceptable to both countries. As the term of the treaty comes to an end in 2026, the present work underlines its limitations, as the impacts of climate change will involve far more than distress on water. In closing, it discusses a range of other challenges, including the erosion of the Indian central government's monopoly in foreign policy, especially in relation to its neighbours. Through extensive fieldwork in India and Bangladesh, together with interviews with politicians, diplomats and all those closely associated with the Ganges deliberations, the book reveals subtle aspects of the negotiations.  What emerges as a distinctive feature of Indo-Bangladesh interactions on the Ganges is the fact that successful outcomes depend on the extent to which the ruling political powers in both countries accommodate one other's domestic political dynamics.  This insight enriches   scholarship on the Ganges River, addressing an aspect largely overlooked in the literature. Offering an up-to-the-minute analysis, the book examines the implementation of the Ganges Treaty through 2015, making it of interest to researchers focusing on South Asia and international relations, scholars on and practitioners of Indian foreign policy, journalists, water experts, civil society groups, and university students.      



Punam Pandey is currently Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Institute for Reconciliation and Social Justice (IRSJ), University of the Free State, South Africa. Before that she worked as Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of Delhi, India, from where she also obtained her PhD. As a postdoc researcher at the IRSJ, she has written extensively on water politics from the perspective of International Relations. She broadly works on non-traditional security issues in South Asia with a special focus on India and Bangladesh. Some of her publications can be accessed in the refereed journals like Asian Survey, India Quarterly: A Journal of International Affairs, and South Asian Survey among others. Her current research project at the IRSJ is on the issues of memory contestation where she researches the Liberation movement in the competitive politics of Bangladesh.
This book deals with how the governments of India and Bangladesh manage the Ganges River. On the basis of the Ganges issue, it explains India's involvement in the domestic politics of Bangladesh and how this involvement, in turn, shapes Ganges river politics. The book further analyses the constant friction between Indian preferences for bilateral negotiation in comparison to Bangladesh's demand for multilateral cooperation on the Ganges. This also highlights the role of civil society, tracing how organisations have engaged in and explored potential compromises acceptable to both countries. As the term of the treaty comes to an end in 2026, the present work underlines its limitations, as the impacts of climate change will involve far more than distress on water. In closing, it discusses a range of other challenges, including the erosion of the Indian central government's monopoly in foreign policy, especially in relation to its neighbours. Through extensive fieldwork in India and Bangladesh, together with interviews with politicians, diplomats and all those closely associated with the Ganges deliberations, the book reveals subtle aspects of the negotiations.  What emerges as a distinctive feature of Indo-Bangladesh interactions on the Ganges is the fact that successful outcomes depend on the extent to which the ruling political powers in both countries accommodate one other's domestic political dynamics.  This insight enriches   scholarship on the Ganges River, addressing an aspect largely overlooked in the literature. Offering an up-to-the-minute analysis, the book examines the implementation of the Ganges Treaty through 2015, making it of interest to researchers focusing on South Asia and international relations, scholars on and practitioners of Indian foreign policy, journalists, water experts, civil society groups, and university students.      

Punam Pandey is currently Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Institute for Reconciliation and Social Justice (IRSJ), University of the Free State, South Africa. Before that she worked as Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of Delhi, India, from where she also obtained her PhD. As a postdoc researcher at the IRSJ, she has written extensively on water politics from the perspective of International Relations. She broadly works on non-traditional security issues in South Asia with a special focus on India and Bangladesh. Some of her publications can be accessed in the refereed journals like Asian Survey, India Quarterly: A Journal of International Affairs, and South Asian Survey among others. Her current research project at the IRSJ is on the issues of memory contestation where she researches the Liberation movement in the competitive politics of Bangladesh.

Chapter One

Cooperation to Confrontation to Cooperation over the Ganges between India and Bangladesh

Historical Background: The Ganges during Pakistan time

Indo-Bangladesh Negotiations on the Farakka Barrage

Farakka: The Political ‘Football’ in Bangladesh’s Politics

Signing of the Ganges Treaty

Limitations of the Treaty

 

Chapter Two

Evolution of the Ganges Issue in India and Bangladesh

Shared History and Divergent Aspirations

Demand of Indian Federalism

India as a factor in Bangladesh Politics

Fusion of Internal and External Relationship

Assertion of Religious Identity

Debates around Farakka in Bangladesh

 

Chapter Three

Negotiating Strategy on the Ganges: Bilateralism vs. Multilateralism India and Bangladesh Negotiations on the Farakka Barrage Bangladesh’s Attempt to Internationalise the Ganges River Water Issue

Interregnum of Multilateralism in Bilateral Negotiation

Role of Membership in Inter-governmental Organisations (IGOs)

Analysis of Bilateralism vs. Multilateralism

 

Chapter Four

Role of Multiple Tracks in The Ganges negotiations

Multiple Tracks

Multiple Tracks in Resolution of the Ganges River Water Dispute

Constraints and Limitations

Future Potential of Multiple tracks in river water negotiation

 

Chapter Five

Experience of The Ganges Treaty and Future Directions

A Critical Evaluation of Operation of the Treaty

Climate Change and Impact on Ganges River Water Treaty

Interlinking of River Projects and Bangladesh’s Concerns

Emerging Role of Provinces in Indian Federation

 

Analytical Observations and Conclusion

 

Erscheint lt. Verlag 26.11.2016
Zusatzinfo XVII, 138 p. 1 illus. in color.
Verlagsort Singapore
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Biologie Ökologie / Naturschutz
Recht / Steuern Allgemeines / Lexika
Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Privatrecht / Bürgerliches Recht Zivilverfahrensrecht
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Europäische / Internationale Politik
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Politische Systeme
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Vergleichende Politikwissenschaften
Technik
Schlagworte Domestic politics • Ganges Water Treaty • India-Bangladesh Relationship • Joint River Commission • River Dispute • River Water Issues • Water Negotiation • Water Policy
ISBN-10 981-10-2371-9 / 9811023719
ISBN-13 978-981-10-2371-2 / 9789811023712
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