Paving The Path As Vishvaguru: The Indian Experiment In South Asia
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Abstract
India is a major player in South Asia and plays a crucial role in shaping global issues. Indian leadership has far-reaching implications for enhancing intra-regional trade, investment flows, regional transport, and communication links with South Asia. India has also contributed to shaping global and South Asian issues through the lens of educational leadership and administration. This paper, however, argues that India shares common interests with other South Asian countries, including cultural roots, regional challenges such as high inflation and declining foreign exchange reserves, and domestic unrest, among other shared concerns. Given these similarities with the region, India has long faced several challenges there; what accounts for this chaos in India? Is this a Big Brother conspiracy? Or is India a big elephant in the region? The paper examines how India, as the largest and most responsible democratic country in South Asia, could play a crucial role in the region's development. As well as the emerging organisation in South Asia, BIMSTEC, which could surpass SAARC. The paper also examines how India, as a big country in the region, can leverage and enhance regional trade and economic growth, galvanize economic energies, provide an ecological blueprint, highlight the need for regional security, strengthen existing associations, and promote sub-regional initiatives such as the
Mekong-Ganga Cooperation and the South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation. Stepping to BIMSTEC how it could be a platform somewhere India could make trilateral friendship along with South Asian nations! The paper will examine how India could strengthen its position in the region and achieve both economic and strategic depth vis-a-vis China and towards self-reliant South Asia, India which may be the voice of South Asia not as a big brother but as a significant partner in South Asia. It will also examine and assess the effectiveness of India’s regional diplomacy in fostering cooperation and resolving conflicts. Further, it recognises schools and universities as agents of social change and examines educational environments that promote equity and social justice for students and faculty, for instance South Asian University in New Delhi (India). The findings of this study will provide insights into the challenges and opportunities India faces in maintaining its regional leadership and shaping global issues.
Methodology: This is a multidisciplinary paper on international security, economic challenges, and regional issues in South Asia. For this reason, the paper employs normative research to describe regional security challenges and India's role in normative terms, and then supplements this analysis with theories of realism and liberalism in international relations, viewed through the lens of Constructivist theory. This theory emphasises that international relations are constructed through social processes and cooperation.