Global South Strategy Lab: Institutions, Alignments, and Development Pathways
Global South Strategy Lab: Institutions, Alignments, and Development Pathways
This program situates India at the center of debates about multipolar order and development sovereignty. Students begin by unpacking the conceptual ambiguity of the Global South. Is it a moral claim, a diplomatic coalition, or a structural economic category?
Historical sessions trace European dominance, extraction economies, and the architecture of post war global governance. A comparative doctrine lab uses the Monroe Doctrine to examine how great powers historically rationalize spheres of influence.
In an economic hub module, students analyze development models, trade partnerships, and growth narratives. Policy reading sessions examine India China tensions, stabilization efforts, and the limits of alignment politics.
Returning to New Delhi, students synthesize geopolitical, economic, and institutional insights into structured strategy memos grounded in comparative analysis.
The journey concludes with comparative synthesis, examining divergence between policy design and field realities.
Students will:
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Distinguish between rhetorical solidarity and institutional cooperation within South–South frameworks.
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Analyze development finance and trade partnerships as instruments of geopolitical leverage.
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Compare historical power doctrines with contemporary strategic autonomy narratives.
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Ask critical questions such as:
- Who benefits from multipolar rhetoric and who bears its costs?
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Evaluate claims of Global South leadership through sector-specific case studies including maritime diplomacy, energy security, and digital infrastructure.
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Construct a structured policy memo assessing whether the Global South constitutes a durable geopolitical category.
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Translate historical and economic analysis into forward-looking strategic recommendations.
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