Traditional and Non-Traditional Security Threats to Central Asian Security
2 contributors - Hardback
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Anuradha M. Chenoy is a Professor and former Dean of School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India. She has written extensively on international politics, Soviet/Russian foreign and security policy, political system and political processes in Russia, Indian foreign policy, human security and gender in international relations. Her books include Re-emerging Russia: Structures, Institutions and Processes (co-authored, 2017); The BRICS in International Development (2016); Maoists and Other Armed Conflicts (co-authored, 2010); Human Security: Concept and Implications (co-authored, 2006); Militarism and Women in South Asia (2002); and The Making of New Russia (2001).
Archana Upadhyay is a Professor in the Centre for Russian & Central Asian Studies, School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India. She has been the recipient of the Commonwealth Fellowship with affiliation to International Policy Institute, King’s College, London, UK. Her research interests include international relations with special focus on South Asian, Russian and Eurasian Issues. Her previous publications are India’s Fragile Borderlands: Dynamics of Terrorism in North-East India (2009); Multiparty System in the Russian Federation: Problems & Prospects (2000); and a monograph Human Rights (co-authored). Her recent publications are on religion and politics in post-Soviet societies.