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New Delhi, October 6 (IANS), with the educational and diplomatic leaders of India, with the inauguration of the Aravalli Summit to imagine the role of the nation by 2047, along with increasing the geopolitical disorder and the dynamics of power as the world.
Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) was hosted in collaboration with the Ministry of External Affairs by the School of International Studies (SIS), the two -day program has been a symbol of the 70th anniversary of SIS, the foundation of India’s strategic idea since its establishment in 1955.
Themed “India and the World Order: Preparing for 2047,” the summit attracted policy makers, scholars and diplomats to bridge the tradition with modernity and craft an Indian-centric tale for global engagement.
External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar in his main address set a tone, emphasizing that India’s climb should navigate deep global changes from disintegration of supply chain to weapons of technology and finance.
Minister Jaishankar said, “India should work in a multi-polar environment, while preparation should be prepared as a pole,” Minister Jaishankar said, extending the “margin of power” with balance-off-power diplomacy, underlined the shift in the aged growing competition.
He highlighted risks such as concentration of global manufacturing in a geography-Chinese and growing globalism feelings, urge India to prioritize national interest above all in foreign policy.
The Union Minister also addressed the dynamics of the neighborhood, except for the efforts to “de-hyhefate” India from rivals like Pakistan in power and capacity, while neighbors only adjusted to the extent of the allowance of national interests only.
The initial comments of the summit echoed these subjects, JNU Chancellor Kanwal Sibal warned of a “managed disorder” in international relations, after 1945 orders – was terminated by many architects in the United States.
“This disorder is being fuel by a country, whose global order made in 1945 was the biggest hand in fashion,” Sibal said, pointing to the benefit of globalization, pointing to the benefit of globalization, such as interconnected supply chain and technology transfer, growing inequalities and power shifts towards the east.
He highlighted China’s emergence as a direct neighbor with the world’s second largest economy and unresolved regional controversies, presenting “major implications” to India.
Sibal praised JNU as the “most appropriate platform” for the summit, congratulating the organizers for the “detailed program” on contemporary issues.
Professor Santishree D Pandit, the Vice Chancellor of JNU and the first female alumni to organize the post, reflected on the legacy of Sis’s legacy from Kashmir to Kanyakumari, Hina Kungroo and Dr. to highlight religion principles in international studies. Credited stallwarts like Apa Abdul Durai.
“Aravalli Summit is the place where we want to break the boundaries of knowledge and develop Indian-centric narratives of our religious civilization,” he announced, “the tradition with modernity, region with region, myths with reality, myths, and principle with theory.”
Pandit appreciated Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government for “breaking three glasses” – an indication to break institutional obstacles – and “to be more revolutionary than” [the] Left to pursue progressive reforms.
His comment celebrated a 70 -year -old milestone, in which Sis development was seen with alumni in major diplomatic roles, in the hub that shaped India’s global approach. Chinton Research Foundation President Sheeshir Priyadarshi-Eu Youth Think Tank focuses on evidence-based policy-India’s journey exceeded 7 percent before contributing less than 3 percent of global production in independence, it was ranked third as the fourth largest economy in the world.
“What is India in research in 2047? An emerging economy that reacts to the agenda installed in far-flung banks, or a developed nation that sets the agenda … anchor in fairness and equity?” He posed, calling on the ethos in front of the summit.
Drawing the World Trade Organization (WTO) for 25 years, Priyadarshi converted India’s change into an unavoidable voice from an unseen contestant, credited to leaders like former Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar to develop foreign policy with “strategic autonomy with vigilant engagement”.
He aligned with the collaborative spirit of the summit, to promote “cross-propagated ideas” and overall solutions during trade, atmosphere and geopolitics.
The event, held at JNU’s Convention Center and organized at Live-Stream on YouTube, includes only the invitation to invitation with the invitation to include economic flexibility, strategic autonomy and panels on digital diplomacy.
As SIS has recalled seven decades of promoting India’s international expertise-its origin from its origin as a center for a modern engine of innovation as a center for the non-monotonous idea of ​​innovation underlines a significant moment.
With global instability – from tariff wars to AI rivals – intense, speakers converted to a clear call: India should seize a multi -polar future on its terms the “pen” of fate for the author.
The summit continues on Tuesday, promising deep divers in these challenges among the world, where Em Jaishankar of India said, “The world is watching more competition and less compact.”
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SKTR/Dan