Pursuing Permanent Membership: India’s Contemporary Approach To United Nations Security Council Reform (2014–2024)

28 Mar

Authors: T. Raymond Touthang

Abstract: The United Nations Security Council (UNSC), created in 1945, continues to embody the geopolitical realities of the immediate post–Second World War era, which increasingly diverge from the dynamics of today’s multipolar international system. Growing demands for reform—particularly the enlargement of permanent membership—reflect mounting pressure from emerging powers seeking more equitable representation in global decision-making. India, as the world’s largest democracy, an expanding economic force, and one of the foremost contributors to UN peacekeeping operations, has positioned itself prominently within this reform movement. This study explores India’s diplomatic engagement between 2014 and 2024 in promoting reform of the UNSC. It evaluates India’s efforts through platforms such as the G4, the L.69 coalition, BRICS, the G20, and its outreach to the Global South. The analysis demonstrates how India has articulated Security Council reform not merely as a national objective, but as a broader commitment to fairness, inclusivity, and balanced representation in global governance structures. Simultaneously, it assesses the obstacles confronting this agenda, including procedural stagnation within the UN system, intensifying major-power competition, and resistance from influential member states. The paper contends that although India has succeeded in reinvigorating and internationalizing the reform discourse, the attainment of substantive change remains uncertain, revealing both the potential and the structural constraints of contemporary multilateral diplomacy.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19284194