Abstract

South Asia has emerged as a major challenge in dealing with COVID-19 virus in terms of its demographics, economy, social values, political ambition and geographical location. The pandemic viewed through the prism of non-traditional security (NTS) threat presents new challenges and demands reworking of conventional governance mechanisms. India is the South Asian hegemon, and China is the single largest immediate neighbour with expansionist ambition in the region. Two most populous countries—one has been the epicentre of the virus, while the other is one of the most widely affected. Their public health and governance trajectory during the pandemic and their health diplomacy in the region have overtures for security architecture of South Asia in post-COVID-19 world. A lone statist approach and legal–institutional officialdom fail to appreciate the instrumentalities of an unconventional security threat like COVID-19. This calls for a more inclusive and comprehensive approach to deal with NTS threat, in general, and epidemiological disease, in particular. This by no means indicating a retreat of the state rather a proactive role in articulating interests of more inclusive categories and, in doing so, the state consolidates its role of governance and becomes a significant point of integration.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 has firmly established itself as the single largest security disrupter of this century in non-traditional sense

  • It has necessitated a recalibration of securitisation framework, governance mechanisms and diplomatic manoeuvres hitherto employed by States

  • The article strives to find if the existing non-traditional security (NTS) management (COVID-19) measures are sufficient for the present pandemic, or the vocabulary of security governance warrants an expansion in unconventional terms

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 has firmly established itself as the single largest security disrupter of this century in non-traditional sense. Keywords Pandemic, non traditional security, governance, health diplomacy, India-China relations, South Asia Considering the context of South Asia, Indian and Chinese engagement during the pandemic raises many perspectives on the management of, and mobilisation around, the disease.

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