For details see, KesavanK. V., ed., Economic Libealisation in India: Japanese and Indian Perspectives, New Delhi, ICSSR, 2001; and Rajaram Panda and Kazuo Ando, eds., India and Japan; Multi dimensional Perspectives, New Delhi, The Japan Foundation, 1997.
2.
For emerging bilateral commonality of interest, see NaiduG.V.C., Indo-Japan Relations: An Analysis of Issues of Common Concern, New Delhi, IDSA, 2001, Delhi Papers No. 18.
3.
DubeyMuchkund, “Perspectives of India and Japan on Disarmament and Security Issues” in KesavanK. V.VermaLalima, eds., Japan-South Asia: Security and Economic Perspectives, New Delhi, Lancers, 2000, pp. 58–70.
4.
CordonnierIsabelle, “Japan and India: Are they Inter-related Security Concerns”India Defence Review, 15(2), April-June 2000, pp. 59–61.
5.
IqbalAlam Badar, “Indo-Japanese Economic Relations in the 90s”, India Quarterly, 52(1–2), January-June 1996, p. 52.
6.
BhatTaranath P., “Outlook on Trade, Investment and Technology Transfer” in Panda and Ando, n. 1, p. 100.
7.
EshoHideki, “India's New Economic Policy and the Japanese Response” in Kesavan and Verma, n. 3, p. 232.
8.
Naidu, n. 2, p. 81.
9.
EshoHideki, “The Japanese Response to India's New Economic Policy” in Kesavan, n. 1, pp. 30–31.
10.
SarmaR.V.S. RamaChopraV.D., Japan: Super Economic Power, New Delhi: Gyan, 1998, p.205.
11.
12.
GuptaS.P., “India-Japan Investment Coorporation” in PandaRajaramAndoKazuo, eds., India and Japan: Intellectual Perspective, New Delhi: The Japan Foundation, 1998, p.182.
13.
For India's policy in the Indian Ocean, see YadavR. S., “India and the Indian Ocean in the 1990s,”Asian Profile, 20(5), October 1992.
14.
Times of India, April 29, 2002.
15.
LiayeS., “Sushi and Samojas: Indo-Japanese Relations after the Cold War”, in GordonS.HenninghamS., eds., India Looks East: An Emerging Power and its Asia-Pacific Neighbours, Canberra, 1995, p. 165.
16.
Times of India, July 28, 1997.
17.
PuriMohan Madan, “Central Asian Geopolitics: The Indian View”, Central Asian Survey16(2), 1997. Also see R.S. Yadav, ”Democratization of Central Asian Republics and India”, Kurukshetra University Research Journal, 18–19, 1994–95; and his “India and the Central Asian Republics”, World Focus, 20 (10–11–12), 1999.
18.
Cordonnier, n. 4, p. 59.
19.
For details, see YadavR.S., “Contemporary Non-Proliferation Regime and South Asia: A Study of India's Response to CTBT”, in SinghGopal, ed., South Asia: Democracy, Discontent and Societal Conflicts, New Delhi: Anamika, 1998.
20.
KesavanK.V., “Japan's Nuclear Policy and South Asia”, in Kesavan and Verma, n. 3, p. 71.
21.
Dubey, n. 3, pp. 62–66.
22.
“Japan Discontinues Economic Measures Against India”, Japan Calling, October-November 2001, p. 2.
23.
Frontline, January 4, 2002, p. 50.
24.
JoshiSanjana, “Prospects for Security Cooperation Between India and Japan”, Strategic Analysis, 25(2), May 2001, pp. 190–192.
25.
Cordonnier, n. 3, p. 65.
26.
“Ambassador Hirabayashi Addresses the Foreign Correspondents Club of South Asia”, Japan Calling, August-September, 2001, p. 3.
27.
28.
Japan has raised its contribution from 17.98 per cent in 1998 to 20.57 per cent in the 2000.
29.
Joshi, n. 23, pp. 192–193.
30.
Cordonnier, n. 3, p. 59.
31.
For details see Joshi, n.23, p. 188. Also see, Hindustan Times, April 24, 1996.
32.
Times of India, April 27, 2002.
33.
YadavR.S., “India's Role in UN Peace-keeping”, World Focus, 18 (10–12), Oct.-December 1997, pp. 21–24.