India & China 1904-2004: A century pf peace an conflict/ (Record no. 154078)
[ view plain ]
000 -LEADER | |
---|---|
fixed length control field | 08212nam a2200193Ia 4500 |
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER | |
International Standard Book Number | 9788178271125 |
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE | |
Transcribing agency | CUS |
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER | |
Classification number | 327.54051 |
Item number | DEE/I |
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
Personal name | Deepak, B.R. |
245 #0 - TITLE STATEMENT | |
Title | India & China 1904-2004: A century pf peace an conflict/ |
Statement of responsibility, etc. | B.R. Deepak |
250 ## - EDITION STATEMENT | |
Edition statement | 1st ed. |
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT) | |
Place of publication, distribution, etc. | New Delhi: |
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. | Manak, |
Date of publication, distribution, etc. | 2005. |
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION | |
Extent | xxiv, 508 p. |
Dimensions | 24 cm. |
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE | |
Formatted contents note | 1. The Making of Common Borders—I: British Expansionism in the Himalayan Regions<br/>1. British Attempts to Open Tibet for Trade<br/>1.1. Bogle's Tibet Mission 1774<br/>1.2. Samuel Turner's Mission 1783<br/>2. The Russian Advances: British Expansionism in the Himalayan States<br/>2.1. Kashmir<br/>2.2. Ladakh<br/>2.2.1. The Boundary Commission 1846-1847 2.2.2. The Johnson Boundary 2.2.3. John-Ardagh Boundary<br/>2.2.4. The Macartney-Macdonald Line<br/>2.3. Nepal<br/>2.4. Sikkim<br/>2.5. Bhutan<br/>2.6. Assam<br/>3. British Military Expeditions to Tibet<br/>3.1. First Military Expedition 3.2. Younghusbands' Military Expedition<br/>3.2.1. Tlie Tibetan Reaction<br/>3.2.2. The British Invasion of Tibet and<br/>the Lhasa Convention<br/>3.2.3. Chinese Reaction and the Anglo-Chinese Talks 4. The Anglo-Russian Convention over Tibet (1907)<br/>2. The Making of Common Borders—II: Chinese Expansionism in the Himalayan Regions<br/>1. The Tributary System<br/>2. The Chinese Annexation of Xinjiang<br/>2.1. Events Leading to the Annexation 2.2. Xinjiang under the Republic of China<br/>3. The Chinese Expansion in Tibet<br/>3.1. Tibet as a Sovereign State<br/>3.2. Tibet During the Ming Dynasty<br/>3.3. Tibet During the Qing Dynasty 4. The Nepalese Invasion of Tibet 5. China's Forward Policy in Tibet<br/>5.1. Anglo-Chinese Agreement on Trade Regulations for Tibet<br/>5.2. The 13th Dalai Lama and the Manchus<br/>6. The Zhao Brothers' Military Conquests in Tibet 6.1. Forward Policy imder the<br/>Zhao Brothers 1907-11<br/>6.2. The Chinese Expeditionary<br/>Forces to Lhasa<br/>6.3. China's Forward Policy in the Assam Himalaya 1910-12 7. The Revolution of 1911, the Republicans and Tibet<br/>3. The British India, Tibet and the Republic of China<br/>1. The Simla Conference<br/>2. The McMahon Line<br/>3. Tibet After the Simla Convention<br/>3.1. Sino-Tibetan Hostilities<br/>3.2. Resumption of Negotiations<br/>3.3. The Dalai-Panchen Row<br/>4. Tibet and the Kuomintang (KMT) Government<br/>4.1. Renewed Sino-Tibetan Confrontation<br/>4.2. Huang Musong's Mission to Lhasa<br/>4.3. Panchen's Attempt to Return to Tibet<br/>4.4. The Installation of the 14th Dalai Lama<br/>4.5. Tibet During the Second World War<br/>4.6. Tbet Desperate and Hopeless<br/>4. The Republic of India, Tibet and the Republic of China<br/>1. India wins Freedom—Tibet Left in Lurch<br/>2. Attempts to Gain Recognition<br/>iJ.X. Tibet at Asiatic Conference fl.l. The Tbetan Trade Mission ?J. Chinese Grievances to India 4. Expulsion of the Chinese from Tibet<br/>4.1. The Communist Reaction<br/>5. India and the Peoples Republic of China 1949-1959: A Decade of Mistrust and Diplomatic Manoeuvrability<br/>1. The Tibetan Situation<br/>2. India's China Policy<br/>3. Tibetan Reaction to the Chinese Threats<br/>3.1. China's Attitude<br/>3.2. Tibet's Plea to the United States<br/>3.3. Tibet in Dilemma<br/>3.4. The Tibetan and Chinese Discussions in Delhi<br/>4. The Chinese Action in Tibet and the Indian Policy<br/>5. Tibet at the UN and India's China Policy<br/>6. Sino-Tibetan Seventeen-point Agreement 7. The 1954 India-China agreement on Hbet; The Failure of Indian Diplomacy 7.1. China in Control of Tibet's Foreign Affairs 7.2. Sino-Indian Negotiations on Tibet 8. India-China after the 1954 Agreement: The Hype of Sino-Indian Brotherhood<br/>8.1. Zhou Enlai's First India Visit<br/>8.2. Nehru's China Visit<br/>8.3. Nehru-Zhou at Bandung<br/>8.4. Zhou Enlai's Second India Visit<br/>8.4.1. Tibet Resurfaces in New Delhi<br/>8.5. Zhou Enlai's Third India Visit<br/>8.6. Other Bilateral Exchanges<br/>9. China's India Policy<br/>6. Behind the Facade of Sino-Indian<br/>Brotherhood: Hostile Coexistence<br/>1. The Sino-Indian Border<br/>1.1. The Western Sector<br/>1.2. The Middle Sector<br/>1.3. The Eastern Sector<br/>2. Hostile Coexistence<br/>3. The Tibetan Rebellion<br/>3.1. The Spark 3.2. The Elight of the Dalai Lama<br/>3.3. The Aftermath<br/>4. Sino-Indian Relations and the Tibetan Revolt<br/>5. Further Deterioration of Relations 5.1. The Longju Incident 5.2. Zhou's Flints at East-West Swap<br/>5.3. Kongka Pass Incident<br/>6. Nehru-Zhou Summit in Delhi<br/>6.1. The Officials Report<br/>6.1.1. Claims and Counter Claims<br/>7. China- Prepares for the War<br/>7.1. Steps to Enhance its Forward<br/>Communications<br/>7.2. Increased Intrusions<br/>7.3. Troop Deployment 8. The Indian Response—Forward Policy<br/>9. An All Out Invasion 10. The Ceasefire and the Colombo Proposals 11. What Prompted the Chinese Invasion?<br/>II.I. Chinese Sensitivities in Tibet<br/>II .2. Domestic Problems<br/>II.3. External Troubles<br/>7, Diplomatic Freeze and the Sino-Indian Detente<br/>After the 1962 War<br/>1. Sino-Pak Entente 2. China Flares up Insurgency in India 3. China's Vulnerability in Tibet<br/>4. India's 'Collusion' with Taiwan<br/>5. De-freezing of Relations<br/>5.1. The Indian Initiative<br/>5.2. The Chinese Response<br/>5.3. Some Irritants<br/>6. Restoration of Ambassadorial Relations<br/>6.1. Deng Xiaoping and the New Order in China<br/>6.1.1. Wang Binnan's India visit 6.2. Change of Regime in India<br/>6.2.1. Vajpayee's China Visit 6.2.2. Deng's proposal of East-west Swap<br/>7. Indira Gandhi's Return to Power:<br/>New Initiatives<br/>7.1. Huang Hua's India Visit<br/>7.2. Eight Rounds of Talks on Border and Other Exchanges<br/>8. The Arrival of Rajiv Gandhi 8.1. Rajiv Gandhi's China Approach 8.2. The Sumdorong Chu Crisis<br/>8. Collapse of the Great Wall Between India and China: Towards a Sino-Indian Detente<br/>1. Rajiv Gandhi's China Visit<br/>1.1. Rajiv-Deng Handshake 1.2. Bilateral Agreements<br/>1.3. "Tian'anmen Incident" and the Indian Silence<br/>2. Janata Dal Government and India's China Policy 3. Li Peng's India Visit<br/>3.1. Bilateral Agreements<br/>4. Narasimha Rao's China Visit<br/>4.1. Agreement Signed 5. Other High Level Visits and Exchanges<br/>5.1. Political Visits<br/>5.2. Defence Ties 5.3. Scientific and Technological Exchange<br/>5.4. Trade Relations<br/>5.5. Cultural Exchange 5.6. Cooperation on International Issues . 6. Ten JWG Meeting on Border 7. Jiang Zemin's India Visit<br/>8. The LAC as an International Border?<br/>9. India Exercises Nuclear Option:<br/>Setback to Sino-Indian Detente<br/>1. PLA Chief in India 2. How Genuine are India's Security Concerns? 2.1. Role of Force in China's Foreign Policy<br/>2.1.1. The Chinese Bomb<br/>2.2. China's Military Assistance to Pakistan<br/>2.3. China's Nuclear and Missile Proliferation<br/>2.4. China and the Nuclear Petonations in<br/>the Subcontinent<br/>2.5. International Condemnation 2.6. Damage Control and Security Dialogues 3. Efforts Leading to Restoration of Relations 3.1 Common Desire to Improve Relations 4. Kargil Conflict and China<br/>5. China's Reaction to the Draft<br/>Indian Nuclear Doctrine<br/>6. Karmapa's Flight to India<br/>10. Towards a Constructive and Cooperative Partnership in the 21st Century<br/>1. Exchanges at the Highest Level in 2001<br/>1.1. K.R. Narayanan's China Visit<br/>1.2. China's Foreign Minister, Tang Jiaxuan in India<br/>1.3. Li Peng's India Visit 2. Other Functional Exchanges<br/>3. Terrorist Attack on the Indian<br/>Parliament and China<br/>4. Exchanges at the Highest Level in 2002 4.1. Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji in India<br/>4.2. Jaswant Singh in China<br/>5. Economic and Trade Relations 6. Five More JWG Meetings on the Border 7. Change of Guard in China 8. Highest Level Exchanges in 2003<br/>8.1. The Indian Defence Minister in China<br/>8.2. Vajpayee's China Visit<br/>8.2.1. Tibet, Sikkim and Border in the<br/>Joint Declaration<br/>11. India and China in the 21st Century: Problems and Prospects<br/>1. Problems that Need to be Addressed<br/>1.1. The Boundary Question<br/>1.2. Tibet Problem<br/>1.3. Sino-Pakistan Entente Cordiale 2. Shared Neighborhood<br/>2.1. South Asia<br/>2.1.1. Nepal<br/>2.1.2. Bhutan<br/>2.1.3. Bangladesh<br/>2.1.4. Sri Lanka<br/>2.2. Southeast Asia<br/>2.2.1. Myanmar<br/>2.3. Other Southeast Asian Countries<br/>3. India, China and the Great Powers<br/>4. Potentials for Future Cooperation<br/>4.1. Need to Strengthen Economic and<br/>Trade Relations<br/>4.1.1. Joint-venture Possibilities<br/>4.1.2. Border Trade<br/>4.1.3. Cooperation in the Field of Science and Technology<br/>4.2. Cooperation in International Arena |
650 ## - SUBJECT | |
Keyword | India -- Foreign relations -- China. |
650 ## - SUBJECT | |
Keyword | China -- Foreign relations -- India. |
650 ## - SUBJECT | |
Keyword | Inde -- Relations extérieures -- Chine. |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
Koha item type | General Books |
Withdrawn status | Lost status | Damaged status | Not for loan | Home library | Current library | Shelving location | Date acquired | Full call number | Accession number | Date last seen | Date last checked out | Koha item type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Central Library, Sikkim University (Yangang Campus) | Central Library, Sikkim University (Yangang Campus) | General Book Section | 28/08/2016 | 327.54051 DEE/I | P08870 | 28/06/2023 | 17/05/2023 | General Books |