38 results
Search Results
2. Khadi Textiles, Women and Rural Development: An Analysis from Past to Present.
- Author
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Aravind, Vrinda and S. B., Girisanker
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RURAL development , *RURAL women , *KHADI , *COLONIAL administration ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The paper aims at bringing out the cultural, economic, and political importance that Khadi has for India from pre-colonial times, during the colonial rule and after independence till the present times. The paper brings out Khadi's potential in rural development by solving the pressing concerns of unemployment and working conditions in developing countries like India. In spite of this, Khadi's potential at rural development is subsided by the contemporary threats the industry faces due to the different agents of neoliberalism, discussed in the paper. The questionnaire report on workers collected at the Cheriyakonni production unit and information collected at the District Project Office Trivandrum; brings out that rural women are the largest workforce victims of these threats, as the industry is slowly showing signs of degradation. Methodology: The research paper is based on both quantitative and qualitative data analysis. Data is collected from Kerala Khadi and Village Industries Board (KVIB) Project Office Thiruvananthapuram through interviews. Questionnaire is conducted on workers of Cheriyakonni Production Unit, Thiruvananthapuram that operates under the board. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Survival Games: Understanding Journalistic and Extra-Journalistic Practices and Pursuits of Small-Town Stringers in South India.
- Author
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Bhargav, Nimmagadda and Downey, John
- Subjects
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PROFESSIONAL identity , *ETHNOLOGY research , *PRECARITY , *PRODUCTIVE life span , *SMALL cities ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The precarity of journalistic labour has received significant scholarly attention globally, leading to a plethora of studies that attempt to theorise changing journalistic roles, practices, and norms. Whereas precarity in newswork is formulated as the "new normal" in the Global North, the precarious situation of marginal(ised) newsworkers in the Global South has been simply normal. Based on ethnographic research in two small-town formations in South India, this article presents how stringers working in Indian-language newspapers have developed a complex professional identity and shared norms through journalistic and extra-journalistic practices to survive in the field. In doing so, we develop, in a novel way, Bourdieu's concept of illusio to understand the formation of a professional identity that spans adjacent fields. This paper's critical engagement with the difficult working lives of stringers and their invisible labour has learnings for analysis of precarity in journalism across the Global North and South. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Determinants of Private Tutoring Demand in Rural India.
- Author
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Agrawal, Ankush, Gupta, Parul, and Mondal, Debasis
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TUTORS & tutoring , *EVIDENCE gaps , *GENDER inequality , *ENVIRONMENTAL quality , *CLASSROOM environment ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Private tutoring participation is increasing in several developing countries, and this expansion has attracted the interest of scholars spanning disciplines of economics, sociology and history. This paper presents a theoretical model of private tutoring demand. The model incorporates the household and school characteristics in a developing country context and demonstrates the source of gender gaps in access to private tutoring. Using a recent database from India and employing a hurdle model approach, the paper also provides estimates of the drivers of private tutoring participation and spending for pre-secondary students. Our results indicate evidence of gender gaps in private tutoring access, and that the socio-economic profile of a student is positively correlated with tutoring demand. Further, school quality indicators are negatively correlated with tutoring participation, suggesting that students at 'better' schools rely less on tutoring. Overall, the findings suggest that tutoring demand is influenced by a mix of demand-side (household, community drivers) and supply-side (school quality and learning environment) factors. The results bring into focus the equity implications of tutoring growth and the need to improve school quality in order to reduce the dependence on private tutoring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Exploring the use of mobile phones by children with intellectual disabilities: experiences from Haryana, India.
- Author
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Jindal, Nikhita and Sahu, Sudhansubala
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EDUCATION of children with disabilities , *CELL phones , *SPECIAL education , *COVID-19 , *PARENTS of children with disabilities , *INTERNET , *RESEARCH methodology , *MOBILE apps , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *SMARTPHONES , *PUBLIC administration , *INTERVIEWING , *GAMES , *PSYCHOLOGY of teachers , *ETHNOLOGY research , *SCREEN time , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ASSISTIVE technology , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SCHOOLS , *STUDENTS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *COMMUNICATION , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *STAY-at-home orders , *THEMATIC analysis , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *VIDEO recording , *CHILDREN ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Covid-induced lockdowns have increased the importance of technology in education. Though access to technology as well as availability of the internet remain a major concern for a lot of children in the global south, children with intellectual disabilities are disadvantaged even more as most of the e-content is developed keeping in mind the average learner. Unstructured interviews were conducted with children with intellectual disabilities studying in government schools in Haryana as well as their teachers and parents. Thematic analysis of the interviews was conducted to understand the use-patterns of mobile phones by children with intellectual disabilities. Findings suggest that these children are learning to use mobile phones on their own or with some support and are able to navigate the complexities of these smartphones quite well. They use these devices mostly for their entertainment. This paper then reflects on the need and strategies to develop these technologies in ways that they can be used as effective tools for teaching children with intellectual disabilities, especially in the inclusive education system in developing countries. The paper reflects on the need to develop technology and tools using flexible and exploratory designs to enhance the learning processes for children with intellectual disabilities from the lower income strata. This study highlights the importance of being able to use mobile phones by children with intellectual disabilities belonging to low income families. Following this, the article argues for designing of mobile phones suitable for use by children with intellectual disabilities using playfulness and explorations, and Building e-content keeping the elements of playfulness and exploration which can enhance the learnings of this group of students which is often ignored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Embracing the uncertain—figuring out our own stories of flexibility and ethics in the field.
- Author
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Biswas, Ritwika
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MORAL judgment , *RESEARCH ethics , *ETHICS , *MANUFACTURING processes ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In this paper, I document my fieldwork struggles in Kolkata India, to propose some common guiding notions of flexibility in the field. I argue that in moments of uncertainty, ethical judgment of the researcher should be a central guiding force while figuring out what flexibility looks like in the field. By detailing how I improvised research methods and ethics in the field based on the context of place, everyday lives of people in global South, and the political moment when the research was conducted, I offer two insights in the paper. First, I suggest that, apart from focusing on the prospects of information collection, it is important to be mindful of the daily practices of the potential research participants and the context of place while choosing qualitative methods, if the place is known to us prior to the fieldwork. However, having this awareness might not ensure that all methods choices will work in the field. Therefore, second, during the process of adapting to challenges and (re)strategizing research methodologies, I argue that being flexible should be viewed as more in line with being ethical and maintaining good practice in the field. In doing so, this paper calls for a broader ethical understanding that prioritizes compassion towards participants as well as oneself, which might necessitate going beyond institutionally defined regulations, to create a more inclusive geographical knowledge production process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. Globalization, crisis and right-wing populists in the Global South: the cases of India and Turkey.
- Author
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Kumral, Şefika
- Subjects
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RIGHT-wing populism , *INTERNATIONAL competition , *GLOBALIZATION , *CRISES ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper provides a critique of perspectives that see the recent global rise of right-wing populism as a direct reaction to the disastrous effects of neoliberalism. By turning attention to the uneven development of capitalism and international competition, in this paper, I present a distinction between 'offensive' and 'defensive' types of right-wing populism that take place in different zones of the world economy. Through a comparative analysis of India and Turkey, this paper discusses the particularities of the rise of 'offensive' populists in emerging powers of the Global South in a period of economic growth. The comparative-historical framework employed in the paper allows us to understand how the world-hegemonic crisis empowered populists by providing opportunities for upward mobility for emerging powers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. "Millet" as a postcolonial-masculinist sign of difference: tracing the effects of ontological-epistemic erasure on a food grain.
- Author
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Chandrasekaran, Priya Rajalakshmi
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MILLETS , *GREEN Revolution , *SEED exchanges , *WOMEN farmers , *FARMERS' attitudes , *RAGI , *INDIAN women (Asians) ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In this paper, I use deconstructive theory to analyze the category of "millet" and the endangerment of food grains in India. I argue that "millet" cohered as a sign of difference from the 1960s through India's Green Revolution, which created a national infrastructure for the materialization of colonial and masculinist ideology. In the hills of Uttarakhand and through the food grain regionally known as mandua, we see how India's postcolonial success relied on the ontological-epistemic erasure of women's food/land practices and assaulted the intertwined "rootedness" (place-making faculties) of women and the crops they cultivate. Reading mandua as "millet" under erasure (millet) reveals how mixed crop systems and practices of socio-ecological reciprocity eroded in the face of Green Revolution ideology and functioned as a bulwark against it. I turn finally to the counterhegemonic potential of "millet," as Uttarakhandi seed activists link with decentralized third world networks, which are exchanging seeds and building power across and from marginalized places. This opens a potential space of visibility and belonging for Uttarakhandi women farmers in the national arena at a time when the ecological and alimentary value of "millet" has entered national and global conversations, infusing the sign of difference with new meaning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. North–South digital divide: A comparative study of personal and positional inequalities in USA and India.
- Author
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Mammen, Jeffin Thomas, Rugmini Devi, M, and Girish Kumar, R
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DIGITAL divide , *GLOBAL North-South divide , *HUMAN Development Index , *COVID-19 pandemic ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic created one of the biggest disruptions in human life. We were all confined within the walls of our homes or offices with day-to-day life worldwide seriously affected. In this context, access to and efficient use of technology determined the course of daily life for vast sections of the world's population. However, there was (and still is) a severe pre-existing global divide between the Global North and Global South vis-à-vis digital access. This paper attempts to understand this digital divide and how it has widened during the pandemic in the Global North and Global South with reference to India and the United States (US). This is initiated by analyzing certain factors within each country, namely positional and personal categorical inequalities. Through the cases of the US and India, the authors conclude that the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the global digital divide between the two worlds, affecting core social sectors like education and health. The larger implication of this is a broadening inequality between the Global North and Global South in leading development indicators like the Human Development Index. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. The governance of plastic in India: towards a just transition for recycling in the unorganised sector.
- Author
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Nagarajan, Aravindhan
- Subjects
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PLASTIC scrap , *PLASTIC recycling , *WASTE management , *WASTE minimization , *PLASTIC scrap recycling , *PLASTICS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In the case of plastic waste regulations, existing policy frameworks ignore that recycling in developing countries is largely undertaken within the unorganised sector. To add to this policies such as Single Use Plastic (SUP) bans disproportionately penalise unorganised sector recycling units and workers employed within them. This paper seeks to identify the global framework of waste minimisation and the lacunae in its implementation in the case of plastic waste in India. This will be based on analysis of national level regulations on plastic waste, court cases in the High Courts of India, and results of a primary field survey of unorganised sector plastic recycling units in Mumbai. By doing so, this paper seeks to explain the importance of recycling as a productive activity, and the need to incorporate concerns of workers and small-scale enterprise owners from the unorganised sector, in order to achieve a just transition to sustainable plastic waste management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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11. Forever fields: studying knowledge practices in the global North: a view from the global South.
- Author
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Kanagasabai, Nithila
- Subjects
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WOMEN scholars , *DOCTORAL degree , *WOMEN'S studies , *DOCTORAL students , *STUDENT activism ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
While there is a multitude of academic work with respect to cross-border collaborations between South Asian countries and the US, almost all of it is produced by scholars located in US universities, either as tenured faculty or as doctoral students. Much of this work is predicated upon the access these scholars have to stakeholders in both countries, which is dependent on the predominantly one-way flow of gaze/theory from the global North. Based on in-depth interviews with Indian doctoral scholars enrolled in Women's Studies and allied disciplines in universities in the US, but whose research fields are in India, this paper examines the ways in which coloniality structures the knowledges thus produced. Particularly, it examines how the construction of the 'field' is contingent upon complex processes such as visa regimes, funding opportunities to travel, and disciplinary framings. It argues that despite the increased focus on a globalised academia and movement of scholars and students around the world, material inequities continue to frame certain locations as 'forever fields'. Finally, unpacking the politics of mapping a field, it poses the possibility of activating a disruption in the ways in which the category 'field' is perceived. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. Global value chains and product sophistication in developing countries; the case of Indian manufacturing.
- Author
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Banga, Karishma
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GLOBAL value chains , *PROPENSITY score matching , *COMMERCIAL policy , *PRODUCT improvement , *FOREIGN investments ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper examines whether linking into Global Value Chains (GVCs) can facilitate product upgrading in developing country firms, enabling them to climb up the value-chain ladder. The analysis is conducted using an unbalanced panel of Indian manufacturing firms in the period 2001–2015. Extensive data at the product-firm level is used to construct a sales-weighted average product sophistication level of Indian firms. To account for econometric issues of endogeneity and self-selection, the study employs the System GMM estimator and Propensity Score Matching (PSM). Findings indicate that linking into GVCs boosts the average product sophistication level of Indian firms by roughly 2 percent. Younger, more innovative, and more embedded GVC firms capture higher product sophistication gains from GVCs, while no significant impact is found for foreign investment. Results are robust to the use of different measurement techniques, model and lag specifications and methodologies. Findings suggest that designing trade policies in developing countries to increase GVC integration can enable product upgrading but there is a need to boost internal innovative capabilities to maximise gains from linking into GVCs. Further, the study raises important concerns regarding the future of export sophistication in India, demonstrating a shift in India's GVC trade towards the Global South and its tendency to export less sophisticated goods to Southern partners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. Building institutional capacity for addressing climate and sustainable development goals: achieving energy efficiency in India.
- Author
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Malhotra, Abhishek, Mathur, Ajay, Diddi, Saurabh, and Sagar, Ambuj D.
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SUSTAINABLE development , *CLIMATE change mitigation , *RESOURCE mobilization ,ENERGY efficiency of household appliances ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Capacity-building is acknowledged as an essential requirement for addressing environmental and developmental challenges in developing countries. In particular, the capacity to manage technological change is an important prerequisite for climate change mitigation, adaptation and green growth. Despite the importance of such capacity, there are surprisingly few empirical accounts unpacking its different dimensions and exploring how it might be built in developing countries in the context of climate and sustainable development challenges. In this paper, we contribute to this sparse literature through an in-depth qualitative case study on energy efficiency in India. Specifically, we take a systemic and evolutionary perspective to investigate how the Bureau of Energy Efficiency developed and implemented its programs to promote energy efficiency in household appliances, light-emitting-diode lamps and energy-intensive industries – and how in doing so, both drew upon existing capacity within and outside the country, and also built new capacity, to achieve significant energy savings. Key policy insights Since the capacity to manage technological change is distributed among a range of actors, policymakers require the ability to understand capacity needs from multiple actors' perspectives. Policymakers need to respond to evolving capacity needs over the course of a program – from strategic program design, trust-building and resource mobilization in early stages, to administration in later stages. 'System operators/integrators' can play a crucial role during the early stages of a program by helping develop capacity and sustaining it by creating a demand for such capacity, as well as bringing together actors, enabling coordination, and building coalitions among them. Preliminary analysis suggests that the Bureau of Energy Efficiency programs investigated in this paper resulted in significant energy savings and CO2 emission reductions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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14. Speaking through Manbhum films: between song, dance and peripheral video industries.
- Author
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Mukherjee, Madhuja
- Subjects
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BENGALI language , *VIDEOS , *DIGITAL video , *NARRATION , *SONGS , *POPULAR music ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper grows from the research conducted on the video industry located in Purulia District, West Bengal, India, namely 'Manbhum videos'. 'Manbhum' signifies both place and idiom, and the videos are imagined and produced in relation as well as in opposition to its big Other(s), which include Bollywood, and reputable Bengali language cinema. Manbhum feature-lenghth videos, comprise discreet episodes, which are intercepted by songs and dances; working within popular narrative strategies and modes of address, some of these videos use unique voices, of both singers and dubbing artists, to tell the story. Such application of music and voice do not only re-present specific conditions of production, but also inform us about the ways in which the actor's 'body' and 'voice' may be used within parallel industrial practices. Therefore, besides addressing the industrial contexts and proliferation of video industries across Global South in the era of the digital, this paper considers subjects of language, community, culture, geography, politics and the problem of Jhumur (songs) transfiguring into a so-called 'vulgar' form, and thereby, examines particular videos to study the characteristics of production, and the question of narration and recounting, in such intermittent videos. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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15. Addressing the norms gap in international security through the India-US nuclear relationship.
- Author
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Saha, Aniruddha
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INTERNATIONAL security , *DEVIANT behavior , *NUCLEAR research , *POLICY discourse , *INTERNATIONAL relations ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
While scholars (mainly from the Global North) in International Relations have been turning to a (critical) constructivist agenda in norms research, the field has increasingly become devoid of applying this area of research in understanding the nuclear behavior of deviant states from the Global South. The paper therefore attempts to bridge this research gap by using the case of the India-US nuclear relationship. To do so, the paper: i) identifies the probable convergences of the existing literature on nuclear policy and the research on constructivist norms, ii) highlights India's racial treatment as a Southern nuclear state in academia and policy discourse, and iii) recognizes plausible avenues for the expansion of the Western dominated normative research agenda by analyzing India's nuclear relationship with the US ― with a specific focus to norm contestation and normative change. In bringing together (critical) constructivists and scholars in nuclear politics to further our understanding of how we perceive security of non-western states, this work makes an epistemological and ontological contribution in the field of international security studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Mini-Grids at the Interface: The Deployment of Mini-Grids in Urbanizing Localities of the Global South.
- Author
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Guillou, Emmanuelle and Girard, Bérénice
- Subjects
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RENEWABLE energy transition (Government policy) , *RURAL geography , *GRIDS (Cartography) , *GREY literature ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Based on fieldwork conducted in Senegal, Tanzania, and India, this article argues for a territorialized approach to mini-grids. One of the most sought-after solutions to electrification and transition to renewable energies in the Global South, mini-grids can be defined as decentralized collective systems of electricity supply. Whereas the academic and grey literature has mostly focused on their presence in rural areas, this paper looks at their development in urbanizing localities. It documents access to electrical service in these spaces and shows that, behind the rather uniform vision associated with the mini-grid object, the service provided takes different forms depending on the environment in which it is deployed. The presence of mini-grids also raises issues of social and territorial equity of access to essential services. A territorialized approach to mini-grids, therefore, furthers our understanding of the complex energy changes at work in cities of the Global South. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Rocking Shallow Foundations on Geogrid-reinforced Ganga Sand Bed: An Experimental Study.
- Author
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Burnwal, Monu Lal and Raychowdhury, Prishati
- Subjects
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SHALLOW foundations , *BEARING capacity of soils , *EARTHQUAKE resistant design , *SHAKING table tests , *GEOGRIDS , *SUSTAINABLE design , *SAND ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The efficiency of polyester and bamboo geogrids in reducing the seismic settlement of low-rise buildings has been investigated in this paper. A series of shake table experiments was carried out for this purpose. It was observed that the beneficial attributes of a rocking foundations in reducing the flexural deformation and column moment remained unchanged after inclusion of geogrids. However, the settlement, a primary adverse consequence of a rocking foundation, reduced significantly (as much as 70–75%). In a developing country like India, natural material-like bamboo threads combined with geo-polymers may be utilized for safe and sustainable seismic design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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18. Emergence, adherence and proliferation of industry level standards: A case study of Aligarh padlock industry, India.
- Author
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Jain, Shekhar
- Subjects
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PADLOCKS , *VALUE chains , *STANDARDS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Industry in developing nations has not attracted much attention from standard theorists. One of the reasons is that developing countries are considered 'standard takers.' As a result, the limited scholarship on standards in the context of developing countries largely remains occupied with global value chains and standards. Besides, industries in these countries are often marked with various degrees of informality. Due to this, the innate structure and governance of these industries depend a lot on socio-economic relations, over and above the formal legal and regulatory structures. This makes operationalization of standards much more complex than simple adoption of standards in codified and documented form, dominantly considered in mainstream discourse on standards. This paper attempts to answer a few of the limitations highlighted and adds to the scholarship on standards in the context of developing countries by considering the case of Aligarh padlock industry. The paper explores the socio-economic dynamics which govern the emergence, adherence and proliferation of these standards. To this end, the paper considers standards as a form of knowledge that brings order to an industry. Further, adapting upon the literature on global value chain and its role in standard proliferation and informality, the paper explores the role of local value chain in the proliferation of industry-level standards. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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19. Co-Production or Contested Production? Complex Arrangements of Actors, Infrastructure, and Practices in Everyday Water Provisioning in a Small Town in India.
- Author
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Chatterjee, Suchismita and Kundu, Ratoola
- Subjects
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SMALL cities , *METROPOLITAN areas , *NON-state actors (International relations) , *IRON , *GREEN infrastructure ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper critically analyses complex arrangements of actors, infrastructure technologies and practices to argue that co-production of urban service delivery entails a mutual, but contested dependence of state and non-state actors. We present two empirical cases based on in-depth qualitative fieldwork highlighting the role of Councillors regulating formal hydraulics and the fragile, volatile relations of private water provisioning in Baruipur Municipality, a small, peripheral town in the Kolkata Metropolitan Area. Characterised by groundwater arsenic, iron risks and heterogeneous urban waterscape, our analysis shows that powerful socio-political intermediaries shape everyday provisioning and access, 're-politicisation' complicating notions of collaborative alliances, equitable benefits and sustainable, material improvements. While gaps in piped water provisioning in the global South cities do find nascent community-led, collective service delivery efforts, in a socio-political context where water is understood as a public right, a state provision, does the continued reliance on the state allow joint service delivery to manifest? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Between metis and techne: politics, possibilities and limits of improvisation.
- Author
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Kumar, Ankit
- Subjects
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PRACTICAL politics , *POWER (Social sciences) , *PARTICIPANT observation , *POSSIBILITY ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Geographers, especially those working in developing country contexts have often encountered improvisation because it plays a critical social and cultural role. Engaging with anthropologist James Scott's conceptualisation of metis – contextual, practical and flexible skills and knowledge – and techne – universal technical knowledge – this paper furthers the geographical scholarship on the politics of improvisation. The paper makes three main contributions. First, using metis and techne, it provides a new conceptual repertoire for making sense of improvisation. The paper places improvisation at the nexus of metis and techne. Second, it pushes the understanding of the morality of improvisation by attending to the role of relationships of power in morally and materially legitimising improvisations. Third, although states and experts celebrate and actively engage with improvisation, this paper demonstrates that they also create limits and boundaries for improvisation. These limits demonstrate a contradiction in experts' actions. This paper is based on a nine months ethnographic research on two energy projects carried out in 2012–13 in five villages in Bihar, an eastern state of India. It used participant observations, home tours, interviews and group discussions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Environmental governance in rural India: diffusion of solar powered irrigation technologies.
- Author
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Sharma, Aviram
- Subjects
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IRRIGATION , *TECHNOLOGY transfer , *SUSTAINABILITY , *GREEN technology ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Developmental actors are pushing the diffusion of solar powered irrigation technologies using different technology diffusion models in resource-constrained, underdeveloped agrarian regions of the Global South. Among the varied models, the hybrid model of technology diffusion and environmental governance has gained a lot of traction and support among the technology promoters in recent years. In this article, we analyse two cases of hybrid environmental governance employed for the diffusion of solar powered irrigation technologies in rural Bihar, India. The promoters of solar powered irrigation technologies wish to achieve environmental sustainability, enhance farmers income and mitigate climate change through promoting renewable-based technologies. The top-down framing of technology and environment in hybrid environmental models often uncritically negates the place-based embedded experiences of end-users and non-users. The paper argues that the role of end-users and non-users in hybrid environmental governance need to be understood using the bottom-up approach. The paper makes a case for acknowledging and incorporating the views and environmental subjectivities of end-users and non-users while planning developmental interventions. The paper ends up suggesting a few policy-relevant suggestions for hybrid models of technology and environmental governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Smart city place-based outcomes in India: bubble urbanism and socio-spatial fragmentation.
- Author
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Prasad, Deepti, Alizadeh, Tooran, and Dowling, Robyn
- Subjects
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SMART cities , *URBAN growth ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Despite the bourgeoning of smart city initiatives across the Global South, their implementation and place-based outcomes remain understudied. This paper presents empirical studies in three Indian cities of Bhubaneswar, Pune and Chennai; three of the first 20 smart cities prioritized for implementation in the Smart Cities Mission. It investigates the place-based outcomes utilized to create smart cities under three categories of mega-, placemaking, and lighthouse projects. The results show varying levels of urban interventions contributing to 'bubble urbanism' – a fragmented combination of large-scale mega-projects and small-scale revitalization projects – with complex socio-spatial implications for smart city development in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Health information systems in developing countries: some reflections on information for action.
- Author
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Walsham, Geoff
- Subjects
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INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *REFLECTIONS , *ROLE theory , *DATA quality ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This short paper offers some reflections on the role, effectiveness and challenges for health information systems in developing countries. It is argued that such systems need to support the use of information for action, but that this is often compromised by poor quality data. In addition, good data and related ICTs are inadequate by themselves since effective action also needs knowledgeable people and supportive institutions. Some approaches are discussed on software philosophy, educating people and changing institutions. The paper also includes a brief reflection on theory and its role in relation to action in health information systems, and ends with some reflections for practice. Illustrative examples in the paper are drawn mainly from India, but the issues discussed are relevant to engagement across the globe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Development finance 2.0: do participation and information technologies matter?
- Author
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Singh, J. P.
- Subjects
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INFORMATION technology , *PARTICIPATION , *FINANCE , *BUSINESS enterprises ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This essay critically examines the discourse of participation in development finance directed at the poor in the Global South from national and international development agencies. This discourse, often termed financial inclusion, posits the ability of development actors to reach the poor involving them in important economic decisions affecting their lives, provides access to products that improve their material conditions, and ensures their credit worthiness through highly nuanced information technology and social media tools. The paper presents evidence from two ethnographically inspired studies undertaken by the author in India and Kenya to ascertain the ways in which the participatory discourse in finance is understood among societal participants themselves. The paper presents relevant epistemes for analyzing what 'grassroots' actors understand as their participation in development-oriented financial inclusion projects. The study forwards two major conclusions: (1) 'habits of authority' among various development actors thwart effective participation; (2) technology platforms that allow for successive innovations and interconnections from businesses and other organizations encourage financial inclusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. An enhanced approach for informal settlement extraction from optical data using morphological profile-guided filters: A case study of madurai city.
- Author
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Prabhu, R. and Parvathavarthini, B.
- Subjects
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OPTICAL images , *PIXELS , *GEOMETRIC modeling , *INFORMATION modeling ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Informal settlements are now becoming an unavoidable and growing phenomenon in the global south, whose locations are inappropriate in official statistics and maps. The distinctive spectral signature of informal settlements in high-resolution optical images causes difficulties in finding automatic approaches. This paper investigates the Multi-Shape Multi-Size Morphological Profile-Guided filter (MShMSiMP-GF) approach for detecting the informal settlements from high-resolution optical images. The development of the proposed approach was inspired by the Superpixel-based Guided Filter (SGF) approach, which uses superpixels to construct the guidance image. Though the superpixel based guidance image extracts detailed contextual information (scale, size), it fails to model geometrical information (shapes, structures) in an image. In order to incorporate the geometrical information, the MShMSiMP-GF approach generates multi-shape multi-size morphological profiles with increasing radius of guided filters. Quantitative and qualitative results of the proposed approach are investigated by four different images of Madurai city, India acquired by Kompsat-2 and WorldView-2 sensors. From the classified maps, it is observed that the proposed MShMSiMP-GF approach achieves an overall accuracy of 91.37%, 90.19%, 93.46% and 99.36% for the subsets 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Causal Impact of Women's Age at Marriage on Domestic Violence in India.
- Author
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Roychowdhury, Punarjit and Dhamija, Gaurav
- Subjects
- *
DOMESTIC violence , *MARRIAGE age , *WOMEN'S education , *ABUSED women , *VICTIMS of domestic violence , *SOCIAL policy , *SEXUAL assault ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This study examines the causal effect of women's age at marriage on prevalence of domestic violence using newly available household data from India. The paper employs an empirical strategy that utilizes variation in age at menarche to obtain exogenous variation in women's age at marriage. The results show robust evidence that a one-year delay in women's marriage causes a significant decline in physical violence, although it has no impact on sexual or emotional violence. Further, the study provides suggestive evidence that the effect of women's marital age on physical violence arises because older brides, as compared to younger brides, are more educated and are married to more educated men. Overall, the findings underscore the importance of better enforcement of existing social policies that seek to delay marriages of women, as well as formulation of newer interventions, to reduce the prevalence of domestic violence in developing countries. HIGHLIGHTS The study examines the causal effect of marital age on exposure to domestic violence. It utilizes recent household data from India. Variation in age at menarche is used to obtain exogenous variation in age at marriage. Results show one-year delay in women's marriage causes a decline in physical violence. The study conducts further analysis to shed light on underlying mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Examining hopes, aspirations, and future plans of women in non-brothel-based sex work in Kolkata, India.
- Author
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Sinha, Sunny and Prasad, Indulata
- Subjects
- *
SEX work , *SEX workers , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *FINANCIAL security ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Sex work can offer a quick way of making money and is the only profession in which women may earn more in fewer hours when compared to other available jobs. However, most studies with sex workers in India are based on socially biased assumptions about sex work; that is, women are either coerced or trafficked into sex work. Limited attention has been paid to the voices of non-brothel-based sex workers in India. Drawing data from a larger ethnographic study conducted between December 2009 and July 2010, this paper analyses how women sex workers operating from non-brothel-based sex work settings in Kolkata, India, foresee their future. Unlike the popular 'victim imagery' of women sex workers in the Global South, this study found that women are not passive recipients of the trade; instead, they employ agency - sometimes transgressing the normative boundaries and at times reinscribing these boundaries to secure a future for themselves and their families. Therefore, to promote HIV preventive behaviour programmes reaching out to sex workers, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) must proactively inquire about women's future plans and assist them in materialising their future goals, which are mostly concerned with their children's future, a life free of stigma/shame, and financial security in old age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Impact of education on health-beliefs in an emerging economy: Understanding urban vs. rural differences and the moderating effect of social capital.
- Author
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Jaikumar, Saravana, Sharma, Yukti, and Silal, Prakrit
- Subjects
- *
INDIAN women (Asians) , *HEALTH education , *WELL-being , *RURAL conditions , *SOCIAL capital , *ECONOMICS , *HEALTH attitudes , *HYPOTHESIS , *METROPOLITAN areas ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In this paper, we assert the critical influence of education on health-beliefs among women from India, an emerging economy. We further examine the urban vs. rural differences and the role of social capital in shaping health-beliefs of women. Using nationally representative data of eligible women from India, we find education to have a positive influence on health-beliefs. We find this effect to be higher in rural regions. Further, we find social capital to negatively moderate the effect of education. Our findings stress the importance of education, especially in rural regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The smart feature phone revolution in developing countries: Bringing the internet to the bottom of the pyramid.
- Author
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James, Jeffrey
- Subjects
- *
SMARTPHONES , *INTERNET telephony , *LOW-income countries , *HOME wireless technology , *INTERNET access , *INTERNET of things ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Until recently, the only way for the population of developing countries to access the Internet was through expensive smartphones, designed in and for developed countries. In the past few years, however, a major new innovation has emerged, the smart feature phone with Internet connectivity, which was specifically designed for those with low incomes in developing countries. This paper explains the development process for the smart feature phone, how this has influenced the nature and extent of adoption, and its use by low-income groups, including their demonstrated preference for uses related to entertainment rather than more traditional "work-related" goals. The focus is on the case of India, where the JioPhone has already reached millions of people with low incomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Recent Techno-Economic Potential and Development of Solar Energy Sector in India.
- Author
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Digambar Singh, A., Yog Raj Sood, B., and Deepak, C.
- Subjects
- *
ENERGY development , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *SOLAR energy , *POTENTIAL energy ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Solar energy is an abundantly available free eco-friendly renewable energy source (RES). Solar energy holds great potential for providing a solution to the long-standing energy issues continuously faced by developing countries like India. The gap between power generation and demand is widening at an alarming rate in developing countries, especially in India. This gap can be filled by expansion of solar energy generation which has adequate potential to provide electricity. The current trends towards technical and economical potential of solar energy in India considering availability, current scenario, promotion scheme, recent investment, and strategies adopted for solar power generation has been presented in this paper. A detailed description of policies put forward by the Indian government in various states to encourage solar generation has been presented. In addition, the major achievements and future potential of RESs have also been described. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The permaculture movement in India: a social movement with Southern characteristics.
- Author
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Fadaee, Simin
- Subjects
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SOCIAL movements , *SUSTAINABLE communities , *PERMACULTURE , *SUSTAINABLE design ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Permaculture is an attempt to design and develop sustainable communities in harmony with natural ecosystems. It embraces solution-oriented approaches to contemporary social and environmental problems. Originating in Australia, permaculture was initially considered a design system but it has become a global social movement and it is practiced in different countries in various forms and at multiple scales. It is manifested in numerous networks of local practitioners, teachers, promoters, demonstration sites, organisations and magazines where various ideas and practices converge. Despite its popularization scant attention has been given to analysis of permaculture as a social movement. Moreover, the few academic writings which analyse permaculture as a social movement do not systematically engage with its manifestation and adaptation in the global South. The latter is the main contribution of this article. Based on original research this paper narrates the origins of the permaculture movement in India, and it pays close attention to its contextual adaptation by a diverse group of practitioners. It demonstrates that these diverse actors and their strategies have clear linkages to the independence movement; they are influenced by the incomplete project of Indian liberal democracy; they operate on the sphere of civil and political society; and they engage middle and lower classes in a formal and informal political nexus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Implementation of new electricity regulatory norms for deviation settlement mechanism: A case study of India.
- Author
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Gupta, Manju, Gupta, Sushma, Thakur, Tripta, and Meng, Wei
- Subjects
- *
AUTOMATIC control systems , *CASE studies , *INDEPENDENT regulatory commissions , *TARIFF ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In this research paper, an innovative solution by proposing a novel mechanism for implementation of regulatory approach—based new deviation settlement scheme for frequency control is suggested. Power systems of many developing countries have to face sustained generation deficiency, large frequency fluctuations and are susceptible to even small disturbance. Operating such a system is a difficult task and innovative solutions are needed to solve this situation. To overcome this situation, India has adopted commercial mechanism known as Availability-based Tariff (ABT), which has a component linked with frequency. A commercial mechanism is a paradigm shift in the operational strategies from the conventional frequency control to new deviation control. This proposed scheme satisfies Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) criteria and inclusive future norms. The MATLAB used to enable to analyze proposed rules and the strength of the approach, is to segregate the conventional Automatic Generation Control (AGC) with new UI-based AGC. The enhancement of AGC algorithms is to meet increased demand by efficient implementation of algorithm for generators rescheduling, as per new CERC norms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Migrant Networks in the Urban Labour Market: Evidence from India.
- Author
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Sharma, Ajay and Das, Mousumi
- Subjects
- *
MIGRANT labor , *LABOR market , *JOB hunting , *EMPLOYMENT ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper analyses the informal channels of the job search process through migrant networks in the urban labour markets in developing countries. Using a novel approach and nationwide sample survey, we measure various aspects of migrant networks such as size, diversity, efficiency and experience content and estimate their effect on probability of employment. Our findings suggest that migrant stock (having experience content) has an inverted-U relationship with the probability of finding a job for a migrant. The share of employed workers in a migrant network (efficiency) and different origin identity (diversity) positively affect the employment outcome through weak ties. Further, the migrant network effect is more active in larger cities as compared to smaller urban areas. The implications of this study indicate towards the importance of non-market informal channels in job searches and the need for integrating labour markets to harness the benefits of larger positive network externalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. India's new globalization strategy and its consequences for urban development: the impact of the 2010 Commonwealth Games on Delhi's transport system.
- Author
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Kassens-Noor, Eva and Kayal, Priyamvada
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC globalization , *COMMONWEALTH Games , *ECONOMIC development , *TRANSPORTATION , *HOSTING of sporting events , *ECONOMICS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Developing nations increasingly seek mega-events in the pursuit of globalization. India has recently renewed such aspirations by hosting the XIX Commonwealth Games in Delhi in 2010. The purpose of the paper is to assess Delhi's urban transport development through a sporting mega-event as a globalization strategy for a developing country. Therefore, the authors comparatively analyse the transport plans pre-bid (2003) and transport legacies (2013). The authors argue that the alignment of the mega-event needs with Delhi's urban master plan was partially fulfilled as many infrastructural projects were catalysed. However, the Games also compelled the city to invest in developments that were required for the successful delivery of the Games. This paper contributes to the discussion on how mega-events influence urban planning and points out significant challenges and opportunities developing cities face when preparing for a sporting mega-event. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Are we Building a Better World with ICTs? Empirically Examining this Question in the Domain of Public Health in India.
- Author
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Sahay, Sundeep
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION & communication technologies , *PUBLIC health , *BUILDING trade employees , *SOCIAL scientists , *INFORMATION technology research - Abstract
As social scientists engaged in Information Technologies for Development (IT4D), a question we need to necessarily engage with is “are we building a better world with Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs)?” This question, first posed by Professor Geoff Walsham in the IS field, was the topic of my plenary discussion at the IFIP 9.4 meeting in Jamaica 2014, and had now been further developed to this “view from practice” paper for this journal. A first step in this paper has been the reformulation of the question which Professor Walsham raised: “What distortions and obstacles are created by the historical, material, and institutional conditions, and how these shape our efforts of ICTs creating a better world?” This reformulation is done to bring in more explicitly the political dimension into the question, and to nuance the technological deterministic argument implied in the question of technology (always) creating a better world. Taking an empirical example of an ICT intervention from the public health sector in India, deliberately chosen to emphasize distortions typically seen is similar Information and Communication Technologies for Development (ICT4D) projects, the analysis focuses on understanding the conditions of distortions, why they occur, and what can be done differently to contribute to our notion of a better world. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Policy making for renewable energy in India: lessons from wind and solar power sectors.
- Author
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Chaudhary, Ankur, Krishna, Chetan, and Sagar, Ambuj
- Subjects
- *
RENEWABLE energy sources , *WIND power , *SOLAR energy , *CLIMATE change ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
It is clear that developing countries will have to be part of the global mitigation effort to avoid ‘dangerous climate change’, and, indeed, many of them are already undertaking significant actions on multiple fronts to help address this problem, even if they have not yet taken on legally binding commitment under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Since the deployment of GHG-mitigating technologies is already a significant part of this effort and likely to be even more so in the future, drawing lessons from existing programmes can help accelerate and enhance the effectiveness of this deployment process. Accordingly, this article aims to examine the deployment of wind and solar power in India, paying specific attention to the role of public policy in incentivizing and facilitating this deployment, how these policies have evolved over time, what has shaped this evolution, and what the learning has been over this period. Through this analysis, the intention is to draw out key lessons from India's experience with deployment policies and programmes in these two sectors and highlight the issues that will need to be given particular consideration in the design of future domestic policies and international cooperation programmes to enhance the move towards climate-compatible development in India. Many of these lessons should also be relevant for other developing countries that are attempting to balance their climate and developmental priorities through the deployment of renewable energy technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. ICT-driven financial inclusion initiatives for urban poor in a developing economy: implications for public policy.
- Author
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Bisht, Shailendra Singh and Mishra, Vishal
- Subjects
- *
BANKING industry , *ALGORITHMS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *INFORMATION technology , *LITERACY , *MATHEMATICAL models , *METROPOLITAN areas , *POVERTY , *SELF-efficacy , *THEORY , *DATA analysis software ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
A key agenda of policy-makers in both the developing and the developed worlds is to have an inclusive growth. Financial services have been recognised as one of the fundamental services that have the potential to achieve this objective and help move towards a more just and equitable society. This paper attempts to assess the impact of three information and communication technology-driven initiatives in the field of financial services by differentiating them on the basis of service design. This study goes beyond the stated objective of these services and uses Sen’s capability perspective to study their impact across three non-economic outcome variables viz. literacy, service-specific well-being and empowerment. The data for the study are collected from the urban poor across different locations in a large metropolitan city in South India where the three different services are being offered. The study follows a quasi-experimental design (field study) and ensures matching of the treatment and control groups through propensity score matching. The matched data are analysed using an independent samplet-test. The result of the analysis shows that service design plays a key role in increasing service literacy, improving service-specific well-being and empowering end users. The study suggests that the true challenge for providers (government and partner agencies) of these services is in designing a service that ensures a balance of structure and flexibility without constraining the choice of end users through innovative service blueprints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Characteristics of household activity and travel patterns in the Mumbai metropolitan region.
- Author
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Subbarao, S.S.V. and Rao, K.V.K.
- Subjects
- *
VOYAGES & travels , *HOUSEHOLDS , *PUBLIC transit , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Activity-based modelling approaches require a typical survey instrument which can collect the finer details of activities of each individual over both time and space. This paper focuses on the design of a new survey instrument called an activity-travel diary; examines its method of administration; and analyses activity-travel behaviour in the context of developing countries. The Mumbai Metropolitan Region in India is selected as the study area. With the aim of understanding the activities of each individual over a period of time, a pilot survey was conducted in a continuous time frame for a period of 15 days, followed by a main survey. The analysis of data collected by the instrument reveals some interesting facts regarding the relationships between socioeconomic attributes, activities and trip making behaviour. Identification of interactions among households and other members were also facilitated by the newly designed diary, which is not a well-versed topic for research in the context of a developing economy like Mumbai's. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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