Avsnitt
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Across parts of South Asia, youth-led movements are exposing growing pressures on political legitimacy by challenging entrenched elites and demanding more responsive, competent governance. In Strategic Voices Episode 5, Dr. James M. Minnich, Professor Shyam Tekwani, and Professor Andrea Malji assess whether recent upheavals in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Nepal mark the beginning of durable political change—or simply another cycle of disruption without meaningful renewal.
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Critical minerals underpin modern economies and defense systems, but real power lies not in who owns the resources—it lies in who controls processing, pricing, and access across global supply chains. In Episode 4 of Strategic Voices, Professors James Minnich and Andrea Malji examine how market concentration, industrial policy, and Indo-Pacific dynamics are reshaping control over these essential materials.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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The Indo-Pacific is being reshaped by overlapping shocks, emerging structural divisions in access to critical systems, and intensifying competition among major and middle powers navigating a rapidly changing strategic environment. In Episode 3 of Strategic Voices, Professors James Minnich, Shyam Tekwani, and Andrea Malji examine how disruption, division, and competition are redefining regional stability and reshaping how states assess risk, build resilience, and pursue advantage in the Indo-Pacific.
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Strategic Voices examines whether South Korea’s interest in nuclear-powered submarines strengthens deterrence or exposes the limits of alliance and nonproliferation governance. The episode argues that absent disciplined integration with U.S. partnership frameworks and realistic industrial timelines, SSNs risk amplifying uncertainty and arms-race dynamics rather than delivering the strategic stability their advocates promise.
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India’s long-standing commitment to strategic autonomy is being tested in a world where partners increasingly value predictability and presence over ambiguity. In Episode 1 of Strategic Voices, Professors James Minnich, Shyam Tekwani, and Lami Kim examine whether India’s autonomy still delivers influence—or whether it is increasingly read as aloofness, with tangible downstream costs.