6 results
Search Results
2. India's policy towards Australia under Modi's administration.
- Author
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Shaheen, Nadia, Mu, Ren, and Razzaque Soomro, Junaid
- Subjects
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BUSINESS partnerships , *PRIME ministers - Abstract
India and Australia's relationships have been strengthening since 2014, when Narendra Modi was sworn in as India's Prime Minister, and put the country on a new trajectory of expanding regional influence and positioning itself as a regional player in the wake of China's rise. Modi's government has shown keen interest in furthering the strategic partnership with Australia, which enables India's presence in the security and strategic architecture in the Indo-Pacific region. This paper attempts to answer the following questions: first, why India's policy towards Australia has transformed under Modi's administration by the rising power influence of China? Second, in the context of the state's policy response, how may India's diplomatic policies toward Australia be evaluated? This paper examines the evolution of India's diplomacy toward Australia, as well as the geo-strategic and geo-economic factors that have influenced it. The strategic nature of diplomatic policies allows us to grasp the growing significance of India-Australia relations, as well as their strategic implications for rapidly changing regional politics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. QUAD: A RECIPE FOR CONFRONTATION OR STABILITY?
- Author
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Khan, Sheharyar and Mohammad, Dost
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL security , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *NAVAL maneuvers - Abstract
Quad or Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, a group of four democracies, the US, India, Japan, and Australia, was first proposed in 2007 by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in his 'confluence of two seas' speech that subsequently embarked on the path to the foundation of the group. Quad perceives China's economic growth, which enables her to transform the world order as a threat and aims at containing the growing Chinese assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific region. The Malabar naval exercises in the Indian Ocean by the Quad members were one such exercise. This paper, aims to analyze the formation of Quad and will contemplate whether the group is causing confrontation or stability in the Asia-Pacific and Indo-Pacific regions. The paper will also assess that the Quad is designed to counter China's growing influence in the Asia-pacific and Indo-pacific regions. Containing China is likely to create a confrontation in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
4. Major Differences in Minors' Contracts: A Comparative Analysis into the Validity of Contracts with Minors in the Sport and Entertainment Industry.
- Author
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Star, Shaun and Dhankar, Divyangana
- Subjects
- *
CONTRACTS , *MINORS , *SPORTS , *CULTURAL industries , *LEGAL status of children - Abstract
In Australia and the UK, contracts with minors in sports and entertainment are not uncommon. Generally, such contracts are voidable at the option of the minor. However, when contracts fall within the category of beneficial service, as is the case with most professional sports or entertainment contracts, they will be enforceable against the minor. Indian courts do not prescribe to this view holding contracts with minors, void ab initio and unenforceable against contractual parties, with few exceptions. The policy rationale is embedded in protecting minors from their own rash decisions and preventing unscrupulous parties from taking advantage of a minor's nascent mental capacity. By analysing divergent approaches on the validity of minors' contracts in three common law jurisdictions—Australia, India and the UK—the authors highlight inadequacies in legal pronouncements by Indian courts. In India, the legal non-existence and unenforceability of service contracts with minors renders it futile for them or their representatives from negotiating favourable contractual terms beyond welfare measures provided by law as these are unlikely to be upheld. This paper argues that India's narrow approach fails to acknowledge practical realities of minors' participation in the increasingly commercialised sports and entertainment industry. In light of more practical approaches in other common law jurisdictions, the authors set out policy recommendations and suggest reforms to the legal position on minors' capacity to contract in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Constitutional rights and guarantees: the contrasting approaches of Australia and India.
- Author
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Star, Shaun and Bharadwaj, Arindam
- Subjects
- *
CIVIL rights , *CONSTITUTIONAL law , *JUSTICE administration , *SOCIAL norms , *HISTORY of colonies , *FREEDOM of expression , *HUMAN rights , *COUNTRIES - Abstract
The Australian and Indian legal systems share much in common given their shared colonial history. However, despite the similarities, both jurisdictions have adopted vastly different approaches in protecting their people under the auspices of constitutional guarantees and the protection of fundamental human rights. This paper will discuss how each jurisdiction protects the fundamental human rights and basic freedoms under their respective constitutions and whether these protections are adequate. The few constitutional guarantees that exist in Australia will be contrasted to the robust fundamental rights enshrined in the Indian constitution. It will be concluded that India sets a stronger example than Australia when it comes to constitutional rights and guarantees for three main reasons; first, the different vision of the constitutional framers of India and Australia; second, India's Constitution is easier to amend and therefore better placed to evolve and reflect changing societal norms; and finally, the divergent approaches of the Judiciary illustrate the broader interpretation of the scope of constitutional rights by the Indian judiciary. India and Australia can learn much from each other and the ways in which each country protects fundamental rights and basic freedoms are no exception to this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Shared survival and cooperation in India and Australia.
- Author
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Chitranshi, Bhavya and Healy, Stephen
- Subjects
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COOPERATIVE housing , *COOPERATION , *WOMEN farmers , *INDIGENOUS women , *CLIMATE change , *SINGLE women - Abstract
Eka Nari Sanghathan (ENS), an Indigenous single women farmer's collective in Odisha, India and Norco Dairy in regional NSW, Australia are cooperatives undertaking collective action to 'survive well', securing agrarian livelihoods in the face of climate change. Striking differences in affluence and poverty separate these place‐based cooperatives while other things connect them: an Earth unsettled by climate change and extractivist/capitalist interventions. Both cooperatives transform place in practice by engaging similar survival strategies and non‐exploitative forms of cooperation. In this paper we seek to articulate the transformative nature of these places and practices in a way that goes beyond easy binaries of local/global, while enabling recognition of different affiliations between lands, related climate crisis and sustainable and shared surviving mechanisms. We develop a 'two‐thirds' perspective building upon Bruno Latour's third attractor, the Terrestrial, together with another third, Chakrabarti, Dhar and Cullenberg's idea of the World of the Third (WOT). Their interventions open our thinking to the ecological particularities, uncertainties, and postcapitalist possibilities of surviving well in place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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