Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
Summary
The Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS) published a major work, Indian Communities in Southeast Asia, edited by the late Professor K.S. Sandhu and Professor A. Mani in the early 1990s. That study provided an extensive treatment of Indians in various Southeast Asian countries.
In the past decade, the economic rise of India; the migration of skilled Indian personnel across international borders; the changing perception of India in relation to its global role; and, more importantly, the slow transformation of its foreign policy have posed new scholarly and academic challenges for scholars of international political economy, in general, and ethnic studies, in particular.
ISEAS decided to take up the intellectual challenge of understanding the relationship between the rise of India and Indian communities in East Asia. It organized a two-day conference on the topic, “Rise of India and Indians in East Asia”, in October 2006. The conference also received support from the Indian Council of World Affairs (ICWA). The conference sought to answer several questions: what does “rising India” mean? How are members of the Indian communities in East Asia responding to the rise? How is India tapping into the energies of these Indians, such as by organizing the annual Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (Overseas Indian Day)? Will India pay greater attention to people of Indian origin? Will Indians in East Asia, in turn, identify themselves with their ancestral land, or will they view the identification as jeopardizing their links with the countries where they have settled? The present volume, which contains thirty-five chapters, is the product of that conference.
Like the volume published in the early 1990s, the study of Indians in East Asia adopts a country-based perspective. However, unlike the earlier volume, the country study of Indians in East Asia is interwoven into the phenomenon of India's rise. This is not a study of India's relations with overseas Indians, of the transformation of India's foreign policy, or of India's emergence as a great power. It is the study of Indian communities in East Asia in the context of a rising India. The term “Indian communities” refers to both those Indians who migrated and settled in different national settings during the colonial period, and those who have arrived, more recently, as skilled migrants.
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- Rising India and Indian Communities in East Asia , pp. xv - xviPublisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2008