Aparna Pande
Aparna Pande is a Research Fellow & Director Hudson Institute's Initiative for the Future of India and South Asia, Washington DC. Aparna Pande received an MA in International Relations from Jawaharlal Nehru University (New Delhi) in 1999, an MA in History from St. Stephens College, Delhi University in 1995 and her BA( Hon) in History from St. Stephens College in 1993. Aparna worked with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) for 5 years before returning to academics.
Aparna has a diverse teaching experience during her 5 year stay at Boston. Aparna has taught courses on International Business at Boston University’s School of Management in addition to teaching courses on South Asia with a special focus on India and Pakistan. At Tufts University Aparna taught seminar classes on India and Pakistan.
In 2010 Aparna obtained her Doctorate in Political Science from Boston University and wrote her dissertation on Pakistan’s Foreign Policy. Her major field of interest is International Relations with a special focus on South Asia, foreign policy, security studies, religion in politics and Political Islam. Aparna has written for a number of online newspapers including 'The Weekly Standard,' 'Huffington Post,' 'The Friday Times,' 'The Daily Times,' 'Outlook India' and ‘Chowk.’
Aparna Pande's book titled "Explaining Pakistan's Foreign Policy Escaping India' was published by Routledge in April 2011.
Aparna has a diverse teaching experience during her 5 year stay at Boston. Aparna has taught courses on International Business at Boston University’s School of Management in addition to teaching courses on South Asia with a special focus on India and Pakistan. At Tufts University Aparna taught seminar classes on India and Pakistan.
In 2010 Aparna obtained her Doctorate in Political Science from Boston University and wrote her dissertation on Pakistan’s Foreign Policy. Her major field of interest is International Relations with a special focus on South Asia, foreign policy, security studies, religion in politics and Political Islam. Aparna has written for a number of online newspapers including 'The Weekly Standard,' 'Huffington Post,' 'The Friday Times,' 'The Daily Times,' 'Outlook India' and ‘Chowk.’
Aparna Pande's book titled "Explaining Pakistan's Foreign Policy Escaping India' was published by Routledge in April 2011.
less
InterestsView All (7)
Uploads
Books by Aparna Pande
Forming the core of the ongoing global economic and strategic transitions are a rising and assertive China, an eastward shifting economic locus, and the faltering of Western-led multilateral institutions. These converge with domestic development and national security objectives to demand that India strive to expand its presence, reach, and voice both on land and in the sea in its extended neighbour hood. Today, New Delhi is actively seeking to create opportunities for mutual development in the Indo-Pacific, in the Arabian Sea and in Africa even as it engages like-minded nations in the pursuit and preservation of a rules-based order that promotes transparency, respect for sovereignty and international law, stability, and free and fair trade. In both these endeavours, the United States is an appropriate and willing partner. As Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stated in his address to the US Congress in 2016, “[a] strong India-US partnership can anchor peace, prosperity, and stability from Asia to Africa and from the Indian Ocean to the Pacific.
Papers by Aparna Pande
Forming the core of the ongoing global economic and strategic transitions are a rising and assertive China, an eastward shifting economic locus, and the faltering of Western-led multilateral institutions. These converge with domestic development and national security objectives to demand that India strive to expand its presence, reach, and voice both on land and in the sea in its extended neighbour hood. Today, New Delhi is actively seeking to create opportunities for mutual development in the Indo-Pacific, in the Arabian Sea and in Africa even as it engages like-minded nations in the pursuit and preservation of a rules-based order that promotes transparency, respect for sovereignty and international law, stability, and free and fair trade. In both these endeavours, the United States is an appropriate and willing partner. As Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stated in his address to the US Congress in 2016, “[a] strong India-US partnership can anchor peace, prosperity, and stability from Asia to Africa and from the Indian Ocean to the Pacific.