Indian Polity & Governance·Basic Structure

Neighbourhood Relations — Basic Structure

Constitution VerifiedUPSC Verified
Version 1Updated 5 Mar 2026

Basic Structure

India's neighbourhood relations encompass diplomatic, economic, and security relationships with eight immediate neighbours (Pakistan, China, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Afghanistan) and maritime neighbours like Maldives.

Guided by constitutional Article 51's directive to promote international peace, the policy has evolved through various doctrines: Nehru's Panchsheel, Indira Doctrine, Gujral Doctrine emphasizing unilateral concessions, and current Neighbourhood First Policy prioritizing immediate neighbours.

Key multilateral frameworks include SAARC (established 1985, hampered by India-Pakistan tensions) and BIMSTEC (formed 1997, connecting South and Southeast Asia). Major challenges include unresolved territorial disputes (China border, Kashmir), cross-border terrorism from Pakistan, water sharing conflicts (Indus, Teesta, Brahmaputra), and China's growing influence through Belt and Road Initiative.

Opportunities exist in economic integration, connectivity projects like BBIN Motor Vehicle Agreement, shared challenges requiring collective responses (climate change, pandemics), and cultural connections facilitating people-to-people ties.

Success stories include India-Bangladesh Land Boundary Agreement (2015), India-Bhutan hydropower cooperation, and post-war reconstruction assistance to Sri Lanka. Current priorities focus on development partnerships, digital connectivity, disaster management cooperation, and countering great power competition while maintaining strategic autonomy.

The neighbourhood remains central to India's great power aspirations, requiring sustained engagement despite periodic setbacks and domestic political constraints.

Important Differences

vs Bilateral Relations

AspectThis TopicBilateral Relations
ScopeRegional focus on immediate and extended neighbours sharing geographical proximityGlobal focus covering all countries regardless of geographical location
Strategic PriorityHighest priority due to direct security and economic implicationsVariable priority based on strategic, economic, or political importance
Policy FrameworkNeighbourhood First Policy with specific doctrines like Gujral DoctrineMulti-alignment policy with country-specific approaches
Institutional MechanismsRegional organizations like SAARC, BIMSTEC, and sub-regional initiativesBilateral treaties, agreements, and diplomatic missions
ChallengesHistorical legacies, territorial disputes, cross-border terrorism, water conflictsTrade disputes, technology transfer, strategic competition, diplomatic differences
Neighbourhood relations represent a specialized subset of bilateral relations characterized by geographical proximity, shared history, and direct security implications. While bilateral relations can be managed independently, neighbourhood relations are interconnected, where developments in one relationship affect others. The neighbourhood requires sustained engagement and cannot be ignored, unlike distant bilateral relationships that can be deprioritized. Success in neighbourhood relations is essential for India's regional leadership aspirations and global power projection.

vs Multilateral Groupings

AspectThis TopicMultilateral Groupings
Membership BasisGeographical proximity and shared regional identityCommon interests, values, or functional cooperation needs
Integration LevelDeeper integration potential due to geographical and cultural proximityVariable integration based on specific cooperation areas
Conflict ResolutionDirect bilateral disputes can paralyze entire regional cooperationBilateral disputes less likely to affect broader multilateral cooperation
Economic InterdependenceNatural economic complementarities and trade potentialFunctional cooperation in specific sectors or issues
Political SensitivityHigh political sensitivity due to sovereignty and security concernsLower political sensitivity in functional cooperation areas
Neighbourhood-based multilateral groupings like SAARC and BIMSTEC differ fundamentally from global multilateral groupings like BRICS or G20 in their integration potential and conflict susceptibility. Regional groupings face unique challenges from bilateral disputes that can paralyze entire organizations, but also offer greater potential for deep integration due to geographical proximity and shared challenges. The success of neighbourhood multilateralism depends on managing bilateral tensions while building functional cooperation.
Featured
🎯PREP MANAGER
Your 6-Month Blueprint, Updated Nightly
AI analyses your progress every night. Wake up to a smarter plan. Every. Single. Day.
Ad Space
🎯PREP MANAGER
Your 6-Month Blueprint, Updated Nightly
AI analyses your progress every night. Wake up to a smarter plan. Every. Single. Day.