Good on Description, Short on Analysis

Published on

While this book will prove 'a welcome addition to some libraries because of the volume of information it contains, editors Verghese and Iyer deliver much less than what they promise in the title. Because negotiations on the Eastern Himalayan rivers have seen extremely limited progress "for a variety of reasons", they write, the time seemed right for an "objective, nonofficial study by scholars uninhibited by political compulsions and able to examine and propose a range of possible options".

Unfortunately, this publication contains no definite proposals or development options. Instead, till past the halfway mark, the book belabours the background and describes the vast untapped potential of the Brahmaputra, Ganga and Meghna rivers — of which there has been no doubt. When the book eventually takes up the core issues related to regional cooperation and development strategies, the discourses are mostly restricted to records of past dialogues and country positions — as seen from an Indian perspective. There are no startling revelations or fresh insights in this 286-page work, which contains 22 papers by distinguished Indian experts on a range of topics.

Loading content, please wait...
Himal Southasian
www.himalmag.com