Diplomacy and Power in New Delhi
MTA
Inside the diplomatic enclave, ministries, and the making of national policy
New Delhi’s geography of power, from the monumental axis of Raisina Hill to the planned enclave of Chanakyapuri, creates a stage where formal state institutions and diplomatic missions coexist, shaping interactions through spatial design, security zones, and access protocols. The city’s layout—monumental administrative core, planned diplomatic enclave, and connective arteries—facilitates both ceremonial displays of authority and the practical necessities of governance, while informal spaces like hotels, clubs, and residences enable relationship-building and intelligence gathering beyond official channels.
Policy emerges from a complex interplay of bureaucratic workflows (files, noting, e-office), ministerial hierarchies, and political direction, ultimately funneled through Cabinet Committees and the Prime Minister’s Office as gateways of decision. Parliament serves as a crucial arena for policy signaling and accountability, while political parties, coalition dynamics, and state governments inject regional and electoral pressures. The security establishment (MEA, NSA, intelligence agencies) and economic ministries (Finance, Commerce, Industry) integrate external and internal imperatives, especially in crisis response and strategic partnerships.
Contemporary diplomacy in New Delhi is increasingly shaped by technology-driven administrative reform, multilateral engagement on climate, health, and development, and the balancing act with great powers (US, EU, Russia, China). Instruments like development partnerships, soft power via civil society and diaspora, and defense procurement reflect India’s pursuit of strategic autonomy and global influence. Ongoing tensions between protocol and politics, alongside challenges of urbanization and decentralization, point to a future where power may become more networked and data-driven across a broader capital region.
This book is essential for political scientists seeking to understand the interplay of institutional design, spatial politics, and policy outcomes; resident and visiting diplomats needing a practical guide to New Delhi's power ecosystem beyond formal protocol; and students of governance aiming to grasp how administrative workflows, informal norms, and domestic politics shape national decision-making.
June 6, 2026
47,390 words
3 hours 19 minutes
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