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Staff Details
Bhavna Singh
Research Officer
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Areas of Interest Chinese Nationalism, Separatism and Terrorism in China's Autonomous Regions, China's policies with regards to the US, India and Japan
Current Projects State Integration in Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia and Tibet- China's nationality issues
Education PhD Candidate at CEAS, JNU
M.Phil- Chinese Division, CEAS, JNU
MA- Modern History, CHS,JNU
Publications
 

Special Reports: 

A Paradigm Shift?: Elections to the Tibetan Government-in-Exile 2011, IPCS, June 2011

Ethnicity, Terrorism and Separatism, China's Triple Conundrum, Special Report, IPCS, August 2010

Issue Briefs:  

Alternative Strategies for India towards Tibet: Between Assertion and Measured Silence

Articles:

China: The Red Weddings

Self-immolations in Tibet: Wider Implications

Will China have an Anna Hazare?

Xinjiang’s July Syndrome: Terrorism or Misgovernance?        

China’s Nepal Focus

Kung Fu Panda: American Invasion of Chinese Culture?

Pre-election Flare-ups for the Tibetan Community: Allegations and Rebuttal  

Sino-Tajik Border: Settlement or Entrapment? 

Myanmar Elections 2010 – IV: China and the Charade 

East China Sea: Will Economic Cooperation alone Suffice? 8 September 2010, IPCS 

Turkistan Islamic Party: Chasing a relinquished dream, IPCS, 4 August 2010

 

Outside Publications: 

SCO: The Great Game Expands, Mainstream Weekly, Vol. XLIX No 31, New Delhi, July 23, 2011

South China Sea Disputes: Sovereignty, Supremacy or Settlement, World Focus,South China Sea: Emerging Developments, April 2011, Vol. No. 376, pp.247-251.

The South China Sea Dispute: A view From New Delhi, Nam-Today, Vol. XXXI, No.12, December 2010, pp.26-36.

Will Xinjiang erupt again? Daily Excelsior, 14 September 2010

Other Conflicts along the J&K border: The Uyghurs in Xinjiang, Epilogue 2010, Issue No. 35. Pp. 36-48.

Select Conference Reports: 

Identity and Asian Power: What does it mean for Regional Cooperation?

Developing a Framework for Regional Cooperation in South Asia
 

BOOK REVIEWS:

G. BALATCHANDIRANE (ed.), Japan in a Resurgent Asia (Delhi: Manak Publications, 2010), pp. xxix + 395. Price: Rs 1,200. China Report November 2010 46: 479-482 (Sage Publications). 

Hubert Vedrine, History Strikes Back: How States, Nations, and Conflicts are Shaping the 21st Century (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 2008, 123 pp., $17.90 pbk) in Millennium - Journal of International Studies May 2011 39: 888-890 (Sage Publications). 

Connectivity Issues in India's Neighbourhood by Asian Institute of Transport Development, IPCS Book Reviews.

BACKGROUND

Bhavna Singh is a Research Officer in the China Research Programme at the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies and a Doctoral candidate at the Chinese division in the Centre of East Asian Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi. She completed her MPhil in Chinese studies from Centre for East Asian Studies, JNU, New Delhi, M.A in Modern History, from Centre for Historical studies, JNU and B.A. in History Honours from Lady Sriram College, New Delhi. Her work focuses on Chinese Nationalism and China's foreign policy with regards to the US, Japan and South Asia. She is particularly interested in sub-national tendencies in the regions of Xinjiang, Tibet, Taiwan and Inner Mongolia. She was nominated to the 'Taiwan Study Camp for future leaders from South Asia' in 2010 and has participated in several seminars and conferences in China. 

 
 

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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