Tourism as Soft Power: A Political-Economic Theory of Cultural Capital and Regional Development in India
| dc.contributor.author | Mohd. Faiz, Dr. Amjad Kamal ,Imran, Tahir Hussain Ansari, Mohd Anas Wajid | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2026-07-11T06:22:46Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2026 | |
| dc.description | Book Title: Indian Economy: Challenges and Opportunities Book Author(s)/Editor(s): Prof. (Dr.) Dharmendra Kumar Singh Dr. Krishna Bajpai Dr. Vandana Sharma Dr. Prashant Dwivedi Dr. Vivek Kumar Singh | |
| dc.description.abstract | Against the backdrop of a volatile global order, this study reconfigures the discourse on Indian tourism, positioning it not merely as a tertiary service sector but as a dual-engine of soft power projection and regional structural transformation. Deploying a novel political-economic framework that synthesizes Joseph Nye’s soft power paradigm with Pierre Bourdieu’s theory of cultural capital, the research identifies a specific “conversion mechanism” wherein intangible heritage assets, spanning UNESCO enclaves and syncretic festivals, are transmuted into tangible diplomatic influence and decentralized economic equity. Empirical analysis of the sector’s post-pandemic “V-shaped” recovery supports a linear projection model suggesting that Foreign Exchange Earnings (FEEs) could potentially double by 2029, validating the sector’s capacity to function as a hard-economic pillar of statecraft. By examining policy interventions like the Swadesh Darshan scheme, the paper demonstrates how tourism acts as an interstitial development force, generating employment in peripheral regions while embedding Indian cultural narratives within bilateral ties. However, the study cautions against the risks of “cultural commodification,” proposing a “cultural equity index” and participatory governance models to ensure that economic ascendancy does not erode the authenticity of the very assets it leverages. Ultimately, this framework establishes tourism as the vanguard of India’s trajectory toward Viksit Bharat, harmonizing civilizational resonance with inclusive 21st- century economic growth. | |
| dc.identifier.isbn | 978-93-6729-631-8 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://136.232.12.194:4000/handle/123456789/1928 | |
| dc.language.iso | en_US | |
| dc.publisher | Indu Book Services Pvt. Ltd. | |
| dc.subject | Soft Power | |
| dc.subject | Cultural Capital | |
| dc.subject | Tourism Economy | |
| dc.subject | Regional Development | |
| dc.subject | Equitable Growth | |
| dc.subject | India | |
| dc.title | Tourism as Soft Power: A Political-Economic Theory of Cultural Capital and Regional Development in India | |
| dc.type | Book chapter |
