I fail to understand the correlation between general euphoria among Indians over recent nuclear tests and a feeling of Western alienation and bias among Indian scientists. The general public in India has little or no idea how the Western press depicts India. Hence, one cannot attribute the euphoria over nuclear explosions to Western alienation. Various points and personal experiences mentioned by Padmanaban are not specific to India or to any Indian scientist. They are common for anyone from a developing countr
Although its precise definition is contested, the concept of the ‘Anglosphere’ has grown in politica...
The media in India did not critically examine India’s decision in 1998 to openly go nuclear. Its cov...
The article compares the status of Indian science with other countries and its trend over a period o...
I fail to understand the correlation between general euphoria among Indians over recent nuclear test...
The recent nuclear test explosions have created a tremendous euphoria in India and expected condemna...
STS scholars studying anti-nuclear activism in the context of nations in the Global North have obser...
This paper enquires into the deliberations of why India has been overtaken by the West in science an...
Modern science, which was an indigenous product of Western culture, is now being practised in many n...
The Indian nuclear tests were prompted by domestic political changes. But the sentiment and motivati...
AbstractThis article examines the relationship between India's nuclear programme and its postcolonia...
India's nuclear breakout in 1998, foreshadowed as early as 1974, may have been understandable for re...
killing an innocent crow as its first victim. As one story has it, a crow that flew in and sat on to...
There is no denying the fact that developing countries, like India, would need energy to feed its de...
The concept of the ‘Anglosphere’ has grown in political discourse in the past decade, though exactly...
On May 11 and 13, 1998, India set off five nuclear devices at its test site in Pokhran in the northw...
Although its precise definition is contested, the concept of the ‘Anglosphere’ has grown in politica...
The media in India did not critically examine India’s decision in 1998 to openly go nuclear. Its cov...
The article compares the status of Indian science with other countries and its trend over a period o...
I fail to understand the correlation between general euphoria among Indians over recent nuclear test...
The recent nuclear test explosions have created a tremendous euphoria in India and expected condemna...
STS scholars studying anti-nuclear activism in the context of nations in the Global North have obser...
This paper enquires into the deliberations of why India has been overtaken by the West in science an...
Modern science, which was an indigenous product of Western culture, is now being practised in many n...
The Indian nuclear tests were prompted by domestic political changes. But the sentiment and motivati...
AbstractThis article examines the relationship between India's nuclear programme and its postcolonia...
India's nuclear breakout in 1998, foreshadowed as early as 1974, may have been understandable for re...
killing an innocent crow as its first victim. As one story has it, a crow that flew in and sat on to...
There is no denying the fact that developing countries, like India, would need energy to feed its de...
The concept of the ‘Anglosphere’ has grown in political discourse in the past decade, though exactly...
On May 11 and 13, 1998, India set off five nuclear devices at its test site in Pokhran in the northw...
Although its precise definition is contested, the concept of the ‘Anglosphere’ has grown in politica...
The media in India did not critically examine India’s decision in 1998 to openly go nuclear. Its cov...
The article compares the status of Indian science with other countries and its trend over a period o...