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Journal ArticleDOI

China-India-Russia Moving Out of Backwardness, or, ‘Cunning Passages of History’

Amiya Kumar Bagchi
- 01 Apr 2007 - 
- Vol. 43, Iss: 2, pp 139-155
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TLDR
In this article, a recognition of their common destinies as homes of human beings with complicated histories and of the need for cooperation to protect themselves against the forces of evil, in the shape of market fundamentalism, religious fanaticism and super-hegemonic imperialism can help them to guard...
Abstract
At different stages of their history, leaders of China, India and Russia, the most prominent constituents of the Eurasian landmass and home to one-third of the human population of the world, have formulated the aim of breaking out of the ‘backward’ state of their respective countries as a major goal of their movements, their strategies and their policies. Almost in all cases, such a state of backwardness has been perceived in relation to the ‘advanced’ Western countries, and more specifically to the industrialised countries of Europe and North America. All three countries have been caught several times in recent centuries in the cunning passages of history. All of them now see light at the end of the labyrinthine tunnel. A recognition of their common destinies as homes of human beings with complicated histories and of the need for cooperation to protect themselves against the forces of evil, in the shape of market fundamentalism, religious fanaticism and super-hegemonic imperialism can help them to guard ...

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India–China Initiatives in Multilateral Fora Two Case Studies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reflect on the experience of India's engagement with China in two multilateral forums: the Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar (BCIM) Forum for Regional Economic Cooperation, formerly known as the ‘Kunming Initiative’, and the China- India-Russia Academic Trilateral Conference.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

‘De-industrialization’, Industrialization and the Indian Economy, c. 1850–1947

TL;DR: This paper raised some general questions concerning the current state of the historiography on the industrialization of pre-independent India and argued that all too little is known about a seemingly crucial sector, a vacuity that is not confined to India alone among the Third World economies and that this tends to distort accounts of the general functioning of the international economy.
Book

Perilous Passage: Mankind and the Global Ascendancy of Capital

TL;DR: The history of human development as the subject of history is discussed in this paper, where the authors focus on the relationship between human development and capitalist growth in the context of economic development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Land tax, property rights and peasant insecurity in colonial India

TL;DR: In this article, the intimate relation between land tax and the nature of property rights in India under the British is brought out; and it is shown that British land laws tended to aggravate rather than mitigate the insecurity of peasants in the Bombay Deccan.