Knowledge Themes
Panchsheel Agreement 1954
Non-Aligned Movement (NAM)
Bandung Conference 1955
Article 51
1961 Belgrade Summit
Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence
Mutual Respect for Sovereignty
Non-Intervention
1954 Sino-Indian Agreement
Strategic Autonomy
South-South Cooperation
New International Economic Order (NIEO)
Peaceful Coexistence
1957 UNGA Resolution on Peaceful Coexistence
Nehruvian Consensus
Asian-African Solidarity
Multi-alignment
Global South Advocacy
Structural Subtopics
- Historical background of Nehruvian foreign policy
- Five Principles of Panchsheel and their 1954 origin
- Role of India in the 1955 Bandung Conference
- Genesis and objectives of the Non-Aligned Movement at the 1961 Belgrade Summit
- India's strategy of maintaining strategic autonomy during the Cold War
- Evolution from Nehruvian idealism to Indira Gandhi's realism
- Impact of the 1971 Indo-Soviet Treaty on non-alignment
- Shift from non-alignment to multi-alignment in the post-Cold War era
- Relevance of NAM in a multipolar world order
- India's leadership role in the Global South
- Gujral Doctrine and its principles of non-reciprocity
- Evolution of "Look East" to "Act East" policy
- Strategic significance of the Panchsheel principles in contemporary boundary disputes
- Comparison of original non-alignment with the concept of strategic autonomy
Study Material
Full AI-synthesized study material for Evolution of India's Foreign Policy — Panchsheel, NAM & Non-Alignment is being calibrated.
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