World Public Summit India Signals India’s Emerging Role as a Global Bridge
Global leaders gather in New Delhi for the World Public Summit India, highlighting India’s growing role in shaping dialogue-driven global cooperation.
By Srajan Agarwal | 2026-03-26T13:26:34.954285+05:30

In a world increasingly defined by fragmentation, New Delhi this week became a space for something quieter but significant—conversation. The World Public Summit is less about declarations of power and more about India positioning itself as a facilitator of dialogue in a shifting global order.
At its core, the gathering reflects a subtle transition: from geopolitical competition to an attempt, however tentative, at shared frameworks of cooperation.
The Reality
The World Public Summit: India, held from March 23 to 26 at the Hyatt Regency in New Delhi, has brought together a wide mix of global actors—policymakers, business leaders, academics, and civil society representatives.
Organised by the World Peoples Assembly and the BRICS Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the summit marks the first leg of a multi-region initiative that will extend through 2026 across the Arab world, Latin America, Africa, and Europe.
The choice of India as the starting point is not incidental. With its upcoming BRICS presidency and an increasingly visible role in multilateral forums, India is being cast—not entirely uncritically—as a connector between regions rather than a bloc-bound power.
Among the participants are figures such as Sameep Shastri, Deputy Chairman of the BRICS Chamber; Sergey Cheryomin from the Moscow government; Union Minister Raksha Khadse; Russian cosmonaut Oleg Skripochka; and media entrepreneur Parul Mahajan, alongside diplomats and domain experts.
The discussions have spanned a broad and somewhat ambitious agenda—ranging from cultural diplomacy and ethical economic models to the role of media in shaping global narratives. Sessions such as “Media and Shared Values: Shaping a Common Future” and “India: Unity in Diversity—Values That Unite” reflect an attempt to anchor geopolitics in softer, less transactional ideas.
Svetlana Smirnova, Chairman of the General Council of the World Peoples Assembly, underscored the summit’s broader significance, stating: “A new world is emerging, one defined by dialogue, trust, and shared values and this summit reflects that transformation in action.”
The summit is expected to conclude with the Delhi Declaration, a document that aims to outline frameworks for future cooperation and inform subsequent summits later this year.
The Undercurrent
Beneath the language of “shared values” and “collective futures” lies a more complex question: can dialogue-led platforms meaningfully influence a world still driven by strategic interests?
India’s role here is particularly instructive. It is increasingly being positioned as a bridge between the Global South and established powers—but bridging requires credibility on both sides. Forums like this help build that narrative, but they also test it.
There is also a quiet recalibration underway in global discourse. The emphasis on culture, trust, and values suggests a recognition that economic and military frameworks alone are insufficient to hold an unstable world together. Whether such conversations translate into policy—or remain aspirational—is an open question.
For India, however, the significance is immediate. Hosting and shaping these conversations allows it to expand its influence not through assertion, but through convening power—a softer, but often more enduring form of leadership.
As the summit moves toward its closing declaration, its real impact may not lie in what is signed, but in whether these conversations continue beyond the conference rooms—and whether India can sustain its role as a space where competing worlds still choose to speak.
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