India and the Russia-Ukraine War: The Paradox of Military Dependence, Traditional Loyalty, and Strategic Autonomy

Arndt Michael
Arndt Michael

India, long-established as the world’s most populous democracy, has been quite instrumental over the years in assisting various countries dealing with democratic struggles. This support has included a blend of bilateral and multilateral initiatives, and especially economic development projects. Yet, India’s recent attitude toward the Russian attack on Ukraine and its concomitant behavior in the United Nations Security Council (as a non-permanent member) seems to contradict its support of democracy.

Stunted Structural Transformation in the Indian Economy

Kalaiyarasan A.
Kalaiyarasan A.

It has been more than six months since the Samyukta Kisan Morcha (SKM)—the umbrella organization representing protesting Indian farmers—ended its 15-month-long agitation at Delhi’s borders against the three farm laws. Some of their demands were met, while their demand for a Minimum Support Prices (MSP) guarantee remains unfulfilled. These developments do little to address the longstanding economic problems of agriculture in India. The farm sector needs reform to raise productivity, enhance farmers’ income, build market infrastructure, and address declining soil fertility.

How Clean is My Metro?

Usha Rao
Usha Rao

The commencement of the first metro line in 2008 has left Bangalore in a state of flux, with a process that never seems to end. With every line added, places and landmarks disappear leaving rubble, remains of dismembered trees, and fractured spaces in its wake. The protests never cease but neither does the metro. It slides across the city blind to the textures, colors, and the living city it passes. From inside its glassy tube, one can only see out and beyond.

Bolstering Security Ties on the 70th Anniversary of India-Japan Relations

Vindu Mai Chotani
Vindu Mai Chotani

This year marks the 70th anniversary of diplomatic relations between India and Japan. Over the years, this bilateral partnership has steadily progressed, with New Delhi and Tokyo becoming “Special Strategic and Global” partners in 2015. However, with the growing rivalry between the U.S. and China, the region risks being consumed by these fast-changing balance-of-power dynamics.

Moving Mountains: Weathering Climate Change and Land Politics in the Indian Himalaya

Ritodhi Chakraborty
Ritodhi Chakraborty

In Uttarakhand, land is a political flashpoint. A controversial 2018 law introduced by state legislature now allows outsiders to buy land in the Himalayan state. In 2018, as these laws were coming into force, I asked Bhim, an elderly lower caste man, what he thought about it all.

Swagato Ganguly

Swagato Ganguly is Senior Fellow at The Convergence Foundation and a CASI Non-Resident Fellow. Previously, he was a CASI Spring 2022 Visiting Fellow. He obtained his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature and Literary Theory from the University of Pennsylvania in 1998, and has worked since then on editorial pages of Indian newspapers, commenting on national politics and international affairs. He was Editorial Page Editor of The Times of India from 2009-21.

Last updated: 06/11/2025