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LATEST
NEWS |
| 16th
September 2010 / Times of India / Mumbai Edition |
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IITs to keep an eye on key nations
COMPETITION WATCH
Mumbai: It was the ancient Chinese strategist Sun Tzu who spoke of the importance of knowing ones enemy. India has evidently decided to take a cue from that principle : it will now keep a keen eye on its competitors on the global stage. And it will do this through its best centres of excellencethe Indian Institutes of Technology.
Each IIT, which is free to pick the country it wants to study, will establish an observatory and study the developments of nations strategic to India. IIT-Madras, which mooted the proposal, is setting up a centre that will follow Chinaright from Mao Tse Tungs revolution and Deng Xiopings reforms to every step that the dragon takes today. The idea was approved by HRD minister Kapil Sibal.
A centre of studies on a foreign country may be established with a view to developing expertise on countries of strategic importance, says the note shared in the meeting with Sibal.
Each IIT may concentrate on a particular country. As in the US, such centres will be able to advise the government, especially in terms of strategic negotiations... Such centres will necessarily have advisory boards of former foreign secretaries and ambassadors.
The idea of such centres is borrowed from the West. Asias upward surge recently saw several American and British universities starting observatories that most commonly watched India and China. No longer are neighbours and nations just that;enmeshed among countries are multiple complex ties, making foreign policy a frontal issue.
Experts say that observatories are as much international watchdogs as they are vehicles for turbo-charging bi-lateral relations.
In its pitch, IIT-Madras stated: China has been and will continue to be important in geo-political terms. China and India also compete on the world stage for the leadership of the developing world, providing competing models of economic growth and politics. The two are also in the race for securing energy resources for their expanding economies. An engaged study of policy would provide a sound basis for creating an interpretative framework within which China may be understood.
Each IIT director is now slated to take up the proposal with the respective board of governors and firm up plans on the country to concentrate on.
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