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IPCS: Research Institutes in India
 
China - Special Report
Nuclear Monthly Monitor
N0.6 , June 2010
CBRN - South Asia 29

Nuclear Monthly Monitor
N0.5 , May 2010
CBRN - South Asia 28

Nuclear Monthly Monitor
N0.4 , April 2010
CBRN - South Asia 27

Special Reports are 3,000-4,500 words in length and examine in-depth,issues that come under the Institute's key focus areas.
 
#113, December 2011
South China Sea: Opportunity or Liability?
Bhavna Singh & Panchali Saikia
#109, August 2011
China-Pakistan Nuclear Alliance:An Analysis
Siddharth Ramana
#108, July 2011
Communist Party of China @ 90
#105, June 2011
A Paradigm Shift?: Elections to the Tibetan Government-in-Exile 2011
Bhavna Singh
#104, June 2011
After Osama: Pakistan’s Relations with the US, China & India
Samarjit Ghosh , Aditi Malhotra , and Rohit Singh
#98, February 2011
India’s Strategic Interests in Myanmar: An Interview with Shyam Saran
Medha Chaturvedi
#96, August 2010
Ethnicity, Separatism and Terrorism in Xinjiang: China's Triple Conundrum
Bhavna Singh
#91, June 2010
Sino-Indian Relations: Sixty Years of Experience and Enlightenment
Amb. Cheng Ruisheng
#86, October 2009
The Dragon on Safari: China’s Africa Policy
Lt. Col JS Kohli
#85, October 2009
India’s Look East Policy: A Critical Assessment
Interview with Amb. Rajiv Sikri
#61, December 2008
Behind the NSG and Six Party Talks: Chinese Strategic Interests
Hayoun Ryou
#59, October 2008
Lotus & the Dragon: BJP's China Policy
Vijay Vikram
#50, February 2008
Linking SouthEast Asia & India
Anushree Bhattacharya
#49, November 2007
Indo-Japan Relations
Conference Report
#48, November 2007
Revival of Nalanda University: Key Players and their Soft Power Diplomacy
Jabin T Jacob , Siddharth Ramana
#34, February 2007
China's ASAT Test
PR Chari
Research Professor, IPCS
#30, September 2006
China-Pakistan Economic Relations
Atul Kumar
#26, June 2006
China-Pakistan Relations: Recent Developments
Urvashi Aneja
#18, May 2006
Sino-Indian Relations: Recent Developements
#17, April 2006
Promoting Strategic and Missile Stability in Southern Asia
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The Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS) is the premier South Asian think tank which conducts independent research on and provides an in depth analysis of conventional and non-conventional issues related to national and South Asian security including nuclear issues, disarmament, non-proliferation, weapons of mass destruction, the war on terrorism, counter terrorism , strategies security sector reforms, and armed conflict and peace processes in the region.

For those in South Asia and elsewhere, the IPCS website provides a comprehensive analysis of the happenings within India with a special focus on Jammu and Kashmir and Naxalite Violence. Our research promotes greater understanding of India's foreign policy especially India-China relations, India's relations with SAARC countries and South East Asia.

Through close interaction with leading strategic thinkers, former members of the Indian Administrative Service, the Foreign Service and the three wings of the Armed Forces - the Indian Army, Indian Navy, and Indian Air Force, - the academic community as well as the media, the IPCS has contributed considerably to the strategic discourse in India.

 
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