Knowledge Themes
Strategic Autonomy
Bandung Principles
Panchsheel
Global South Solidarity
UN Security Council Reform
New International Economic Order
South-South Cooperation
Multipolarity vs Unipolarity
Issue-based Alignment
Nuclear Disarmament
Decolonization and Neo-colonialism
Article 51 of UN Charter
Kampala Declaration
Voice of Global South Summit
Structural Subtopics
- Foundational principles of the Bandung Conference (1955)
- Evolution from Cold War neutrality to strategic autonomy
- NAM's role in advocating for Global South interests
- Impact of the transition from unipolarity to multipolarity on non-alignment
- Reforms in United Nations and Bretton Woods institutions
- NAM's stance on nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation
- South-South cooperation in trade and technology transfer
- Challenges of intra-NAM conflicts and lack of institutional cohesion
- Collective bargaining in international climate change negotiations
- India's shift from Nehruvian non-alignment to multi-alignment
- NAM's relevance in addressing terrorism and cyber warfare
- Strategies for economic sovereignty amidst global debt crises
- Solidarity with Palestinian self-determination and anti-colonial movements
- Comparison between NAM and emerging blocs like BRICS and SCO
Study Material
Full AI-synthesized study material for NAM — Relevance in Multipolar World is being calibrated.
View Legacy Notes →