The North-South divide, the digital agenda and digital diplomacy
With Juan Pablo Prado Lallande in The Oxford Handbook of Digital Diplomacy, Corneliu Bjola and Ilan Manor (eds.), Oxford University Press, 2024.
Medio millón de muertos: la mala hora de América Latina
“Medio millón de muertos: la mala hora de América Latina” en Panorama Estrategico 2021, Instituto Español de Estudios Estratégicos, (Ministerio de Defensa. Secretaría General Técnica: 2021).
Una relacion en un punto de inflexion
“Una relacion en un punto de inflexion” en Andrés Bórquez, Dorotea López y Felipe Muñoz, eds., Relaciones entre Chile y China: un enfoque integral.
¿Un Mundo (y un orden mundial) al revés?
“¿Un Mundo (y un orden mundial) al revés?” en El Mundo Antes y Después del COVID-19: Reflexiones Intelectuales Sobre la Política, la Diplomacia y las Relaciones Internacionales , Gian Luca Gardini (Coord.), European Institute of International Studies, pp. 23-27.
A World (Order) Turned Upside Down?
“A World (Order) Turned Upside Down?”, in The World Before and After COVID-19: Intellectual Reflections on Politics, Diplomacy, and International Relations, Gian Luca Gardini (Ed.), European Institute of International Studies, pp. 23-27.
Indian Foreign Policy: The Rise of the South and Indo-LAC Relations
with Hari Seshasayee
in Understanding Transition in South Asia: Economy, Politics and Society (Essays in Honour of Partha S. Ghosh), Anasua Basu Ray Chaudhury and Vikash Kumar, eds.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s opening address at the 48th Annual World Economic Forum in Davos in January 2018 was unique in many ways. It was the first time in 20 years that an Indian prime minister spoke in Davos, not since Prime Minister H. D. Deve Gowda had done so in 1997. The hour-long-speech was also delivered in Hindi, a departure from the usual practice of Indian leaders at major international fora, who would normally rely on the Queen´s English, which, after all, is one of India’s official government languages. The speech also made a passionate defence of globalisation, arguing against the many fractures that are bedevilling the contemporary world, and making the case for India as a stalwart of open economic policies and an ideal FDI destination.