Littoral South Asia
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![]() | This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: Both the text and the thinking behind it are confusing and opaque: does this include the mainland (as suggested in the passage that the area is contested between China and India)? Entire nations (that are overwhelmingly on the mainland) are listed as part of the area. The map doesn’t help clarify any of this, either. (April 2025) |
Littoral South Asia or Maritime South Asia is the region of the Indian subcontinent which borders the Indian Ocean. It includes the South Asian republics of Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan, as well as the South Asian island countries of the Maldives and Sri Lanka. It is contested between China and India as a part of what is sometimes referred to as an alleged "String of Pearls" strategy by China to contain India.[1][2][3] This has resulted in an increasing maritime collaboration between the United States and India.[4]
The effects of climate change, such as flooding, are also expected to cause hundreds of millions of dollars of damage per year to coastal cities and potentially create tens of millions of climate migrants.[5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Singh, Abhijit (2019-05-04). "Sino-Indian Dynamics in Littoral Asia – The View from New Delhi". Strategic Analysis. 43 (3): 199–213. doi:10.1080/09700161.2019.1598083. ISSN 0970-0161.
- ^ Chakma, Bhumitra (2019-05-04). "The BRI and India's Neighbourhood". Strategic Analysis. 43 (3): 183–186. doi:10.1080/09700161.2019.1607030. ISSN 0970-0161.
- ^ "Maritime Geopolitics in Indian Ocean: China's Bid for Regional Dominance", Proceedings of the 17th International RAIS Conference on Social Sciences and Humanities, Scientia Moralitas Research Institute, pp. 296–302, retrieved 2024-01-08
- ^ "India's Maritime Stakes in the South Asian Littoral | The National Bureau of Asian Research (NBR)". Retrieved 2025-04-29.
- ^ "Building a climate resilient future for coastal South Asia". www.cascades.eu. Retrieved 2025-04-29.