| dc.contributor.author |
Durodie, Bill. |
| dc.date.accessioned |
2009-03-11T06:13:26Z |
| dc.date.accessioned |
2009-07-29T06:29:24Z |
| dc.date.available |
2009-03-11T06:13:26Z |
| dc.date.available |
2009-07-29T06:29:24Z |
| dc.date.copyright |
2008 |
| dc.date.issued |
2009-03-11T06:13:26Z |
| dc.identifier.uri |
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/4519 |
| dc.description.abstract |
A blame-game for the Mumbai attacks between two of the world's nuclear powers - India and Pakistan -- is not in anyone's interest. The target Mumbai -- the Indian city that best captures the sub-continent's aspiration for change and development -- suggests the perpetrators to have been more influenced by Western nihilism and pessimism than by anything else, no matter where they coame from. |
| dc.format.extent |
3 p. |
| dc.language.iso |
en |
| dc.relation.ispartofseries |
RSIS Commentaries ; 128/08 |
| dc.subject |
DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Terrorism. |
| dc.title |
Why Mumbai? |
| dc.type |
Commentary |
| dc.contributor.school |
S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies |
| dc.ispartofseries.report |
128/2008 |
| dc.description.version |
Accepted version |