Sophia Besch sits down with Darshana Baruah to discuss maritime security and great power competition in the Indian Ocean.
Darshana M. Baruah is a nonresident scholar with the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace where she directs the Indian Ocean Initiative. Under the Initiative, Baruah convenes the annual Indo-Pacific Islands dialogue bringing together the islands of the Indian Ocean and the Pacific to highlight and discuss issues of importance to island nations. In her current role, Baruah conceptualized the Indian Ocean interactive map designed to convey the strategic importance of the region’s geographic features, trading routes, and maritime security. Baruah’s primary research focuses on maritime security in the Indo-Pacific and the role of islands in shaping great power competition. Her work examines the impact of maritime security in foreign policy engagements, naval strategy, maritime partnerships in the Indo-Pacific, and island agency in shaping great power competition. Baruah has spent time in think tanks in Delhi, Tokyo, Canberra, and Sydney before moving to Washington D.C. working on issues of maritime security, Indian Ocean, and the Indo-Pacific.
Baruah currently also holds an expert affiliate with the National Security College, Australian National University, and is a Non-Resident Fellow with the Sea Power Centre-Australia.
Previously, Baruah was a visiting resident fellow at the Sasakawa Peace Foundation, Tokyo, working on a project exploring the role of islands in maritime security. Prior to that, Baruah was the associate director and senior research analyst at Carnegie India where she led the center’s initiative on maritime security. Baruah was also a visiting fellow at the Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA) Tokyo and a 2016 national parliamentary fellow at the Australian parliament and a visiting fellow at the Lowy Institute (Sydney), where her research was centered on India-Australia maritime collaboration in the Indo-Pacific.
Sophia Besch sits down with Darshana Baruah to discuss maritime security and great power competition in the Indian Ocean.
A discussion about Japan's evolving role in the Indian Ocean.
Darshana Baruah’s new book discusses the Indian Ocean region.
What is the strategic significance of the Indian Ocean to Australia? What challenges and opportunities does the region present for Australia and its partners? And how much can Australia realistically achieve in such a vast region?
One reason Pacific Island countries continue to borrow from China is their huge demand for infrastructure.
In recent years, Beijing has emerged as a key economic and security player for Pacific island nations. At the same time, Pacific island states face a multitude of challenges, from the impact of climate change to rising great power competition.
The author of Sea Change explains the frustration, grief, and anger of the people at the forefront of the environmental crisis.
The third annual Summit of Indian and Pacific Ocean island nations, with a focus on the issues that affect them most.
This report lays out a case and provides a menu of policy options for how the Quad can pursue a collective approach to Indo-Pacific maritime security, with a particular focus on regional deterrence and defence.
A discussion on the importance of viewing the Indian Ocean region as one continuous theater, and the emergence of China, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Russia as players in the region.