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1

Oceano indiano occidentale : Scorci di storia. Milano : Polimetrica, 2009.

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2

Romanis, Federico De. Cassia, cinnamomo, ossidiana : Uomini e merci tra Oceano indiano e Mediterraneo. Roma : "L'Erma" di Bretschneider, 1996.

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3

Indian Ocean and India's security. Delhi, India : Mittal Publications, 1986.

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4

Athawale, Sanhita. India's Indian Ocean islands : A study in India's Indian Ocean islands, their geographic, demographic, political, and strategic importance. New Delhi : ABC Pub. House, 1991.

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5

Singh, Anil Kumar. India's security concerns in the Indian Ocean region. New Delhi : Har-Anand Publications, 2003.

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6

Indian Ocean. Minneapolis, MN : Bellwether Media, Inc., 2016.

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7

Prevost, John F. Indian Ocean. Minneapolis : Abdo Pub. Co., 2003.

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8

Green, Jen. Indian Ocean. Milwaukee, WI : World Almanac Library, 2006.

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9

W, Gotthold Donald, dir. Indian Ocean. Oxford, England : Clio Press, 1988.

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Spilsbury, Louise. Indian Ocean. London : Raintree, 2015.

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11

Gupta, Manoj. Indian Ocean Region. New York, NY : Springer New York, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-5989-8.

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Gray, Susan Heinrichs. The Indian Ocean. Chicago : Childrens Press, 1986.

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Pam, Max. Indian Ocean journals. Göttingen : Steidl, 2000.

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14

Penny, Malcolm. The Indian Ocean. Austin, Tex : Raintree Steck-Vaughn, 1997.

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15

The Indian Ocean. New York : Routledge, 2003.

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16

Prithvish, Nag, et National Atlas & Thematic Mapping Organisation (India), dir. Indian Ocean atlas. Calcutta : National Atlas & Thematic Mapping Organisation, Department of Sciene & Technology, Government of India, 1998.

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17

The Indian Ocean. London : Routledge, 2003.

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18

Taylor, L. R. The Indian Ocean. Woodbridge, Conn : Blackbirch Press, 1999.

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19

United States. Dept. of State. Bureau of Public Affairs, dir. Indian Ocean region. [Washington, D.C.?] : Bureau of Public Affairs, Dept. of State, 1987.

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20

National Maritime Foundation (New Delhi, India), dir. Securing the oceans : An Indian Ocean perspective, seminar proceedings, 04 June 2005. New Delhi : National Maritime Foundation, 2006.

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21

Scott, David. The Indian Ocean as India’s Ocean. Sous la direction de David M. Malone, C. Raja Mohan et Srinath Raghavan. Oxford University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198743538.013.34.

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This chapter discusses India’s role in the Indian Ocean and the role that the Indian Ocean plays in Indian foreign policy. In effect this represents a ‘look south’ policy for developing India’s sea power in its extended neighbourhood. Six sections look in turn at India’s official frameworks, geopolitics and geoeconomics, location and oceanic holdings, blue-water naval projective capabilities, diplomatic position in the Indian Ocean, and relations with extra-regional powers. The chapter concludes by looking beyond the present into the near future where India will probably maintain and extend its regional pre-eminence, but will face the challenge of maintaining required financial outlays. It also concludes by looking at the implication for India and the Indian Ocean of ‘Indo-Pacific’ strategic formulations.
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22

Indian Ocean (Seas & Oceans). Hodder Wayland, 1996.

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23

The Indian Ocean (Oceans). Bridgestone Books, 2002.

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24

The Indian Ocean (Oceans). Capstone Press, 2003.

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25

Hargreaves, Pat. The Indian Ocean (Seas & Oceans). Hodder Wayland, 1999.

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26

Brewster, David. A Contest of Status and Legitimacy in the Indian Ocean. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199479337.003.0002.

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This chapter examines Indian and Chinese perspectives of each other as major powers and their respective roles in the Indian Ocean. It focuses on the following elements: (a) China’s strategic imperatives in the Indian Ocean Region, (b) India’s views on its special role in the Indian Ocean and the legitimacy of the presence of other powers, (c) China’s strategic vulnerabilities in the Indian Ocean and India’s wish to leverage those vulnerabilities, (d) the asymmetry in Indian and Chinese threat perceptions, and (d) Chinese perspectives of the status of India in the international system and India’s claims to a special role in the Indian Ocean. The chapter concludes that even if China were to take a more transparent approach to its activities, significant differences in perceptions of threat and over status and legitimacy will produce a highly competitive dynamic between them in the maritime domain.
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Hameed, Saji N. The Indian Ocean Dipole. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228620.013.619.

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Discovered at the very end of the 20th century, the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) is a mode of natural climate variability that arises out of coupled ocean–atmosphere interaction in the Indian Ocean. It is associated with some of the largest changes of ocean–atmosphere state over the equatorial Indian Ocean on interannual time scales. IOD variability is prominent during the boreal summer and fall seasons, with its maximum intensity developing at the end of the boreal-fall season. Between the peaks of its negative and positive phases, IOD manifests a markedly zonal see-saw in anomalous sea surface temperature (SST) and rainfall—leading, in its positive phase, to a pronounced cooling of the eastern equatorial Indian Ocean, and a moderate warming of the western and central equatorial Indian Ocean; this is accompanied by deficit rainfall over the eastern Indian Ocean and surplus rainfall over the western Indian Ocean. Changes in midtropospheric heating accompanying the rainfall anomalies drive wind anomalies that anomalously lift the thermocline in the equatorial eastern Indian Ocean and anomalously deepen them in the central Indian Ocean. The thermocline anomalies further modulate coastal and open-ocean upwelling, thereby influencing biological productivity and fish catches across the Indian Ocean. The hydrometeorological anomalies that accompany IOD exacerbate forest fires in Indonesia and Australia and bring floods and infectious diseases to equatorial East Africa. The coupled ocean–atmosphere instability that is responsible for generating and sustaining IOD develops on a mean state that is strongly modulated by the seasonal cycle of the Austral-Asian monsoon; this setting gives the IOD its unique character and dynamics, including a strong phase-lock to the seasonal cycle. While IOD operates independently of the El Niño and Southern Oscillation (ENSO), the proximity between the Indian and Pacific Oceans, and the existence of oceanic and atmospheric pathways, facilitate mutual interactions between these tropical climate modes.
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Yuan, Jingdong. Managing Maritime Competition between India and China. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199479337.003.0003.

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This chapter provides a perspective on China’s growing security presence in the Indian Ocean and the strategic imperatives behind it and then India’s responses to these initiatives. The author argues that despite the apparent threats this presence presents to India, there are approaches that India and China can explore to reduce the risk of conflict. Jingdong Yuan also reviews China’s growing security presence in the Indian Ocean and the strategic imperatives behind it and India’s responses to these initiatives. Yuan argues that it is imperative that policymakers in both New Delhi and Beijing make concerted efforts to ensure that these two emerging powers can manage, if not completely avoid, their overlapping interests and ever-closer encounters in the Indian Ocean.
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Baruah, Darshana M. India’s Evolving Maritime Domain Awareness Strategy in the Indian Ocean. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199479337.003.0010.

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Darshana Baruah, an emerging Indian maritime security analyst, examines India’s heightened focus on improving maritime domain awareness in the coastal domain, EEZ and far seas. This is increasingly being driven by growing naval presence in the Indian Ocean. Of particular concern is India’s ability to monitor the passage of PLA Navy submarine passages to Pakistan and elsewhere in the Indian Ocean. Despite improved maritime situational awareness in coastal waters, India still has difficulty in tracking surface and subsurface vessels transiting its EEZ or neighbouring waters. This will likely require coordination and collaboration with friendly states. Baruah concludes that despite India’s traditional attachment to strategic autonomy, the difficulties in any one country developing maritime domain awareness across the Indian Ocean will be a key driver in greater defence cooperation with the United States and its allies.
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30

The Indian Ocean (Oceans of the World). Riverstream Pub, 2019.

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31

Medcalf, Rory. India and China. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199479337.003.0014.

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Rory Medcalf is Australia’s most prominent commentator on the Indo-Pacific region, and has played an important role in popularizing the concept throughout the region. In this chapter, he explores the forces that are leading to a greater Chinese naval presence in the Indian Ocean and India’s options in responding to that presence. Medcalf argues that for India, and for other resident powers of the Indian Ocean, the accelerated arrival of China as a security player should be cause neither for panic nor complacency. There is still scope to ensure that China in the Indian Ocean becomes neither destabilizingly defensive nor dangerously dominant. In particular, India needs to take the initiative in building maritime security cooperation with a range of capable Indian Ocean-going powers that are well-disposed to its rise in order to create a stable strategic environment in which China will play an important role.
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32

Ji, You. The Indian Ocean. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199479337.003.0006.

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This chapter gives a compelling view from one of China’s leading naval analysts on China’s evolving naval strategy in the Indian Ocean. You Ji provides an unusually cogent analysis of the evolution of Chinese naval strategy over the last several decades, its concerns about US strategies to contain China within the First and Second Island Chains and the imperatives that are driving China into the Indian Ocean. You argues that China’s long term strategy in the Indian Ocean is to move from selective sea denial to a strategy of selective sea control. This will likely require a chain of logistical facilities across the Indian Ocean, although somewhat different from the ‘String of Pearls’ narrative. You argues that while China’s strategy is not intended to challenge India’s interests in the Indian Ocean, it also rejects the idea of the Indian Ocean being India’s.
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33

Wood, Laurie M. Archipelago of Justice. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300244007.001.0001.

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An examination of France’s Atlantic and Indian Ocean empires through the stories of the little known people who built it. This book is a groundbreaking evaluation of the interwoven trajectories of the people, such as itinerant ship-workers and colonial magistrates, who built France’s first empire between 1680 and 1780 in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. These imperial subjects sought new political and legal influence via law courts, with strategies that reflected local and regional priorities, particularly regarding slavery, war, and trade. Laurie M. Wood focuses largely on appellate courts in Martinique and Île de France (now Mauritius) and shows how the courts appealed to French citizens owing to their strategic place at the center of the largest and most dynamic oceanic zones of trade during the early modern era. Through court records and legal documents, she reveals how the courts became liaisons between France and its new colonial possessions, and how subjects used the courtrooms as gateways to other courtrooms in the Atlantic, the Indian Ocean, and in France.
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Brewster, David, dir. India and China at Sea. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199479337.001.0001.

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China and India are emerging as major maritime powers as part of long-term shifts in the regional balance of power. As their wealth, interests, and power grow, the two countries are increasingly bumping up against each other across the Indo-Pacific. China’s growing naval presence in the Indian Ocean is seen by many as challenging India’s aspirations towards regional leadership and major power status. How India and China get along in this shared maritime space—cooperation, coexistence, competition, or confrontation—will be one of the key strategic challenges for the entire region. India and China at Sea is an essential resource in understanding how the two countries will interact as major maritime powers in the coming decades. The essays in the volume, by noted strategic analysts from across the world, seek to better understand Indian and Chinese perspectives about their roles in the Indian Ocean and their evolving naval strategies towards each other.
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35

Chaudhuri, Pramit Pal. The China Factor in Indian Ocean Policy of the Modi and Singh Governments. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199479337.003.0004.

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This chapter explores the evolution of top Indian foreign policy-makers towards China’s role in the Indian Ocean. Chaudhuri gives a New Delhi insider’s view on the efforts by Indian leaders to engage with China on these issues under the previous Congress government. He argues that by the end of the Singh administration, Indian policy makers had concluded that China was an ‘autistic power’ and that their approach of engagement had failed. Chaudhuri tracks the further changes in India’s approach under Narendra Modi, including India’s decision to align with the United States and Japan. He argues that Modi’s major challenge in the Indian Ocean is now primarily one of implementation of India’s announced policies.
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36

Li, Zhu. The Maritime Silk Route and India. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199479337.003.0012.

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Zhu Li, a leading expert on China’s economic engagement with the Indian Ocean region, gives a Chinese perspective on the impact of China’s Maritime Silk Road (MSR) initiative on South Asia. Li considers the differing Chinese and Indian perspectives on MSR, particularly what he calls the ‘cognitive divergence’ between China’s economic perspectives and India’s tendency to see Chinese initiatives in highly securitized terms. Li then examines India’s main options in responding to the MSR. Li argues that it will be in India’s interests to play an active role in the project. India has only to gain in economic terms from participating and the MSR could well become a focus for cooperation between the two countries. On the other hand, while the MSR would be negatively affected by India’s non-participation the MSR would not end. India does not have a veto over the MSR.
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37

The Indian Ocean : A Myreportlinks.Com Book (Oceans of the World). Myreportlinks.com, 2004.

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Spilsbury, Louise, et Richard Spilsbury. Indian Ocean. Capstone, 2021.

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Pearson, Michael N. Indian Ocean. Taylor & Francis Group, 2003.

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Gleisner. Indian Ocean. Jump ! Incorporated, 2022.

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Gordon, Lauren. Indian Ocean. Seahorse Publishing, 2022.

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Gleisner. Indian Ocean. Jump ! Incorporated, 2022.

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Pearson, Michael N. Indian Ocean. Taylor & Francis Group, 2003.

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Spilsbury, Louise, et Richard Spilsbury. Indian Ocean. Capstone, 2015.

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Spilsbury, Louise, et Richard Spilsbury. Indian Ocean. Capstone, 2015.

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Kissock, Heather, et Helen Lepp Friesen. Indian Ocean. Lightbox, 2019.

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Spilsbury, Louise, et Richard Spilsbury. Indian Ocean. Capstone, 2015.

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Pearson, Michael N. Indian Ocean. Taylor & Francis Group, 2003.

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Gordon, Lauren. Indian Ocean. Seahorse Publishing, 2022.

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Indian Ocean. Routledge, 2003.

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