Disorder

Gone are the days of coherent international coordination. Rather than working together to solve pressing crises, many of the world’s most powerful states are actively making those crises worse. The result? We’re living through a novel historical era: The Global Enduring Disorder.  The Disorder podcast teases out the key principles that connect seemingly disparate challenges: from Climate Change to Tax Havens, to Unregulated Cyberspace, to the Wars in Ukraine, Syria, and Libya. Jason Pack, NATO Foundation Senior Analyst, and Alexandra Hall Hall, a former British Ambassador, discuss with world-leading experts, senior diplomats and cultural icons, the fundamental principles lurking behind today’s global issues.  At the conclusion of each episode, they will be proposing inventive, win-win solutions to the globe’s most pressing challenges aka, ‘Ordering the Disorder’. Twitter: @DisorderShow  Website: https://natoandtheglobalenduringdisorder.com  

https://natoandtheglobalenduringdisorder.com

subscribe
share






episode 31: Ep31. Is India a neopopulist Disorderer or a potential Orderer?


India is arguably the world’s only rising great power. As the world’s largest democracy and soon to be third largest economy it is the globe’s most serious aspirant for becoming the 6th permanent member of the UN Security Council. Despite this economic and foreign policy heft, since independence in 1947, India has stridently resisted being aligned with any one particular geopolitical “camp”.  It has always wanted to retain its “strategic autonomy” and to avoid being treated as a junior partner to any major superpower.  Recently, India has hedged between Ukraine and Russia, btw the BRICS and America, and btw Israel and the Arab World. As a result, India has successfully maintained cordial ties with many of the world’s top powers, but has it done so as an Orderer or as a Disorderer?  

 

To discuss, Alex Hall Hall is joined by Indrani Bagchi – one of India’s most respected foreign policy journalists, a former Associate Editor for the Times of India, and currently Chief Executive Officer of the Ananta Centre. The duo discuss India’s approach to Russia, China, the UK, and the Israel-Gaza conflict. At the interview’s conclusion, while trying to Order the Disorder, an incensed Jason butts in with his strong personal hunch that India has much latent ordering potential but that Modi has deliberately squandered it in pursuit of his divisive and disordering neopopulist policies. 

 

Twitter: @DisorderShow 

 

Subscribe to our Substack: https://natoandtheged.substack.com/  

 

Website: https://natoandtheglobalenduringdisorder.com/  

 

Producer: George McDonagh 

Exec Producer: Neil Fearn 

 

Show Notes Links 

 

Find out more about India’s wealth income inequality from TIME here

 

Read about Kejriwal’s arrest here

 

For more on India’s election here 


Learn about how Modi’s Neo-Populist consolidation here

 

More on the arrest of opposition politicians here

 

And about the killing of a Sikh activist in Canada here

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices


fyyd: Podcast Search Engine
share








 April 2, 2024  50m