Jayita Sarkar

img

Archive data: Person was Visiting Fellow at IDSA

Jayita Sarkar is a doctoral candidate at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva. She holds a Masters in Sociology from the University of Paris IV-Sorbonne and another in International Relations with specialization in Peace and Conflict Studies from Jadavpur University in Calcutta. She is a visiting fellow at the IDSA for the summer months of June – August 2011 as part of the ongoing National Strategy Project and IDSA’s Nuclear Cluster. Her research interests include nuclear histories, strategic cultures, grand strategies and theories of international relations.


Visiting Fellow

Email: jayita[dot]sarkar[at]graduateinstitute[dot]ch
Phone: +91 11 2671 7983

Publication

India’s Nuclear Limbo and the Fatalism of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Regime, 1974–1983

India's relationship with the nuclear non-proliferation regime deteriorated sharply after its 1974 underground nuclear test which, according to India, was a peaceful nuclear explosion, but which was not accepted as such by the regime. That it did not follow up with immediate weaponisation challenged the core logic of the non-proliferation regime which operates on a Murphy's Law of ‘nuclear fatalism’, i.e. if a country has the know-how to produce nuclear weapons, it will certainly produce them.