Takshashila Institution
All Things Policy
Ever wondered how automation will change the world? Maybe you puzzle over what India could do to ease traffic congestion, or how China's aircraft carriers will transform Indian Ocean geopolitics? All Things Policy, a daily podcast brought to you by the Takshashila Institution, brings you all the answers. Every weekday, our researchers break down complex economic and geopolitical ideas through the lens of current events. For everyone from the busy executive to the curious student, All Things Policy is all you'll need to understand the world (and appreciate your breakfast) better.
Author
Takshashila Institution
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Jul 10, 2026
Where to listen?
Podcasts in the app Replaio Radio Coming soonPodcasts are coming to the app soon. Install now and be the first to see a whole new take on podcasts
Episodes
Disruption in the Global Economic Order — Bretton Woods No More 10.07.2026 1:29:54
For eighty years, a single architecture has run the global economy with important institutions at the helm, including the IMF, the World Bank, the WTO, and the US dollar at the centre of it all. Today, that architecture is under more strain than at any point in living memory: tariff walls are rising, finance is being turned into a weapon, and supply chains are being torn up and re-stitched along t...
Beyond Talks or No Talks: Rethinking India-Pakistan Engagement 09.07.2026 24:26
Kavya Rai sits down with Aishwaria Sonavane (Pakistan Studies) and Raja Karthikeya (West Asia Studies, UN peace mediation veteran) to unpack why India's Pakistan policy has stayed more consistent than it gets credit for, why the current diplomatic freeze runs deeper than past standoffs, and why grand gestures keep failing while quiet back-channels persist. All Things Policy is a daily podcast...
The Trap of Unenforceable Rights 08.07.2026 37:27
The Supreme Court's recent recognition of the right to walk as a fundamental right has been celebrated as a landmark victory for pedestrians in India. In this episode of All Things Policy, Sowmya Prabhakar and Shreya Ramakrishnan examine the current state of India's footpaths, the competing interests and governance challenges that shape them, and the gap between constitutional ideals and a...
When Companies Go to War 07.07.2026 27:53
Wars were once fought with hardware that governments owned. Today, some of the most vital assets in warfighting belong to private companies. Ashwin Prasad Rao and Abhishek Kadiyala discuss how militaries are drafting commerce into war and what that means for the companies, the battlefield, and India. Explore the strategic side of space with Takshashila's Expert Capsule Course on Space Power: h...
The Indian Radius: Flowers are Blooming 06.07.2026 28:25
In this episode of All Things Policy , titled "Flowers are Blooming" - a phrase dating back to a discreet, bloodless Indian naval operation in the Seychelles that marked an early milestone in India’s role as a regional security provider - Vanshika Saraf and Anisree Suresh delve deep into India’s strategic relationships blossoming across the globe. Together, they critically analyse the la...
The On/Off Switch for Frontier AI 03.07.2026 32:39
In June 2026, two of the world's most powerful AI models were pulled off the shelf by government directive and then switched back on two weeks later, just as abruptly. In this episode, Shobhankita Reddy and Bharath Reddy discuss what the Fable 5 saga reveals about how Washington and Beijing actually think about artificial intelligence. Recommended readings: https://indianexpress.com/article/...
The Advance of China's Arms 02.07.2026 44:06
Beijing’s rise as a major arms exporter and the internal and external deficiencies in its arms trade engagements present the paradox at the heart of China's military-industrial statecraft. In this episode of 'All Things Policy', Bhumika Sevkani quizzes Anushka Saxena on how China got catapulted to the position of the 5th largest arms exporter in the world, how well its weapons have wor...
Energy Realism for India 01.07.2026 27:29
Amidst the escalating conflict in West Asia and the resulting constriction of oil and gas supply, the urgency to deploy renewable energy for enhanced energy security has grown. However, emerging economies like India must adopt a pragmatic approach to reconcile their increasing energy demands with their decarbonisation commitments. Join Bhumika Sevkani, Research Analyst with the Geostrategy Program...
Two Tigers, One Mountain: Understanding China and Japan's Rivalry 30.06.2026 21:56
How should we understand the growing rivalry between two 'tigers', Japan and China? The tension between both countries reached a critical point following Prime Minister Takaichi Sanae’s November 2025 declaration that a Chinese attack on Taiwan constitutes a "survival-threatening situation". Such developments, inter alia, demonstrate how Japan's military and diplomatic engage...
4 I's of 2026 US Mid-terms 29.06.2026 34:38
With the U.S. midterm elections on 3 November 2026 fast approaching, voter sentiment has crystallised around four overlapping national fault lines: inflation, institutional trust, the Iran war, and immigration. In this episode of All Things Policy, Bhumika Sevkani is joined by Abhishek Kadiyala to examine how each of these pressures is reshaping the congressional battleground and what they collect...
Are All Minerals Critical In The Same Way? 26.06.2026 28:59
India lists 51 minerals in its critical mineral list. This is 67% of all commercially mined minerals. And globally too, critical mineral lists are swelling. But not all critical minerals are critical in the same way. In any case, if 2/3rds of the periodic table is deemed critical, this strips any nuance for informed policy action and mineral prioritisation. In this episode of All Things Policy, Ta...
Rich Capitals, Richer Commitments? 25.06.2026 36:01
The G7 summit recently unfolded in France, bringing together rich democracies across the either sides of the Atlantic that also included Japan (the only G7 member from Asia) and invitees like India. But what did the summit achieve in the current turbulent geopolitical context? In this episode of All Things Policy, tech geopolitics researcher Lokendra Sharma is joined by Anushka Saxena, Takshashila...
Critical Minerals Partnerships 24.06.2026 24:00
On May 26th, India and the US signed a bilateral critical minerals framework; the same day, the QUAD unveiled a $20 billion initiative spanning mining, processing and recycling of critical minerals. These join a growing list of critical mineral partnerships like the FORGE, Pax Silica, the bilateral TRUST and the Strategic Mineral Recovery Initiative. Shobhankita Reddy and Tannmay Baid, researchers...
China's Legal Architecture of Economic Statecraft 23.06.2026 34:35
What are the complex web of regulations driving China's economic statecraft? Set against the backdrop of intensifying US-China technological competition and the race for frontier AI models, Kripa Koshy (Staff Programme Manager) and Amit Kumar (Staff Research Analyst, Geostrategy Programme) explore how Beijing is systematically codifying its ability to use its economy for geopolitical leverage....
The Paradox of Pakistan’s Kashmir Narrative 22.06.2026 27:34
As Pakistan gains diplomatic attention in West Asia, unrest has intensified in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, exposing the deeper questions about the region's governance, representation, and political marginalisation. In this episode, Aishwaria Sonavane is joined by Malik Moin Abbas to understand the roots of the protests, the controversy over reserved seats, and the gap between Pakistan’s interna...
The Indian Radius: New Actors, Old Neighbourhood 19.06.2026 31:52
The past couple of weeks have been interesting and eventful in terms of India’s foreign policy visits. From Myanmar, Nepal, Venezuela to the UK, France, Slovakia and the G7, Indian diplomats have been busy hosting and traversing the world. Join Vanshika Saraf and Anisree Suresh as they assess the various agendas behind each meeting, outcomes achieved, and the different approaches used to advance I...
How Can Biotechnology Strengthen Military Resilience? 18.06.2026 26:37
Biotechnology is more likely to shape warfare through improvements in health protection, sensing, and distributed manufacturing than through exotic ‘super soldier’ technologies. In this episode, Shambhavi Naik discusses with Sarthak Pradhan how biotechnology can make a difference at the individual soldier, operational unit, and theatre levels. The episode is based on Shambhavi's recent pape...
Japan’s Defence Transformation 17.06.2026 37:26
Japan spent most of the last eighty years as the textbook case of a pacifist state. A constitution that renounces war, a one percent cap on defence spending, a ban on selling weapons abroad. That picture is now changing fast. Tokyo has built counterstrike missiles, started exporting lethal equipment, and set out to double its defence budget. Join Arindam Goswami and Vanshika Saraf in this episode...
India's Orbit Problem Isn't Pakistan 16.06.2026 28:25
A recent investigation argues that Pakistan, with Chinese support, has rapidly expanded its Earth-observation satellite network, creating the ability to monitor Indian territory with increasing frequency. At the same time, India is building its own ambitious space-based surveillance architecture. So what should we really be worried about? Is this a story about satellites? About data? About militar...
How Securitised is the Quad? 15.06.2026 31:53
How relevant or securitised is the Quad? Is the Quad doing enough? These are recurrent questions that dominate the narrative around the grouping. When the foreign ministers of the four countries gathered recently for their 11th meeting in New Delhi, these questions again made headlines. And the criticism isn’t without substance. Tune in to this episode of ATP, where Bhumika Sevakani is joined by A...
India’s Push for Drone Procurement 12.06.2026 26:34
After Operation Sindoor, there was a significant push to increase the use of drones in India’s military operations. Since then, drones have been used extensively in conflicts globally, giving us a chance to see how they can be deployed and a front-row seat to the rapid evolution of drone technology. In light of the pace of these developments, Adya Madhavan and Ashwin Prasad Rao unpack the unique c...
Why India Hit Pause on Starlink 11.06.2026 24:45
Days before SpaceX's record-breaking IPO, India froze Starlink's launch in the country. In this episode, hosted by Adya Madhavan, Ashwin Prasad Rao, co-author of the Takshashila Institution's April paper "Starlink and Risks for India", explains what satellite internet actually is, and why the world's most impressive constellation comes with a problem no regulation can fi...
Street Dogs: Public Safety or State Failure? 10.06.2026 39:12
India has 3.7 million dog bites a year. It accounts for 36% of global rabies deaths. In May 2026, the Supreme Court ruled that civic authorities may euthanise rabid or demonstrably aggressive stray dogs, calling the right to walk public spaces without fear a fundamental right under Article 21. Is this a landmark ruling or a shortcut that papers over 65 years of governance failure? Malathi Renati (...
Heat: An Invisible Threat to National Security 09.06.2026 29:55
In this episode, host Devyani Rao interviews Dr Y. Nithyanandam, professor and head of the Geospatial Research Program at the Takshashila Institution, about one of India's most underestimated policy challenges: extreme heat. They explore why heat is a spatial problem, the gaps in India's heat action plans, and how geospatial intelligence can better protect vulnerable communities, making th...
India’s West Asian War Tightrope 08.06.2026 32:13
When the US and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran in late February 2026, India's abstract strategic interests in West Asia transformed into an immediate, high-stakes emergency. With nine million nationals in the Gulf, forty billion dollars in annual remittances on the line, and oil prices surging past a hundred and twenty dollars a barrel, New Delhi found itself walking a razor-thin...
Similar podcasts
Replaio is not a podcast publisher; show names, artwork and audio belong to their authors and are distributed through public RSS feeds.