The Indian Journal of Asian Affairs (IJAA), launched in 1988, is a bi-annual, double-blind peer-reviewed journal, published in June and December.
Aims and Scope
Devoted to an objective analysis of important contemporary and current Asian affairs, IJAA covers theoretical, empirical, historical and policy issues from a wide range of perspectives and critical appraisals within a multidisciplinary framework. IJAA is committed to generating debate, dialogue and discourses in the field of foreign policy, defense, security, peace, conflict and development, bearing upon "Asia and the world." It welcomes articles, essays and short research notes from scholars engaged in multiple disciplines in order to offer new findings, new interpretations and innovative approaches to problems and issues confronting the Asian region.
TABLE OF CONTENTS (Vol. 35, No. 2, December 2022)
ARTICLES
The Geopsychology of Pakistan’s Taliban Misadventure
Vinay Kaura
Ukraine-Russia Conflict: A Geopsychological Analysis
Kalpana S. Agrahari
Re-emergence of the Taliban: Challenges to India’s Multilateralism Policy toward Afghanistan
Nitish Kumar and Amit Kumar
Relative Autonomy of Nepal: Revisiting Nepal’s Foreign Policy toward India and China
Basudeb Das
COMMENTARY
The 2019 Anti-Extradition Movement: The Rise of Political Consumerism in Hong Kong
Katherine Kane and Joseph Tse-Hei Lee
BOOK REVIEWS
China’s Soft Power and Higher Education: Rationale, Strategies and Implications (New York: Routledge, 2021)
China and the Ports of the Indian Ocean (Leiden: International Institute for Asian Studies, 2022)
Partnership with JSTOR
Full texts of IJAAs content, beginning from the first issue, are available in JSTOR, a digital archive. In collaborating with JSTOR, IJAA shares in its commitment to a "long-term preservation" of scholarship. The texts are archived in JSTOR's Arts & Sciences XII Collection, Asia Collection, JSTOR Archival Journal & Primary Source Collection, and Security Studies Extension.
Users can access the content in JSTOR by logging in through their institutions/libraries. As independent researchers, they have "alternate access options" via personal accounts or subscriptions to JPASS.