Well-travelled international law teachers, students, and practitioners know there are a few countries that defy mastery. Repeated trips to such countries across decades, and still the sense of wonder, indeed inscrutability, prevails. At or near the top of this short list of countries that overwhelm even the most seasoned scholarly sojourners is India. Finding a book that explains in a clear, comprehensive manner any of the principal dimensions of India and its civilization is nearly impossible. However, for the reader in need of a single source about the Indian economy, the search is over
Swati Dhingra of London School of Economics and Political Science reviews, “Reforms and Economic Tra...
The need to negotiate effectively with India is only growing as its power rises, and in the literatu...
Drawing on his extensive fieldwork and experience of Indian politics,Sumantra Bose tells the story o...
Well-travelled international law teachers, students, and practitioners know there are a few countrie...
What policies and policy reforms can put India on the path of rapid and sustained economic growth an...
India Means Business is an excellent contribution to the current debate on the Indian economy and it...
Seventy years after its adoption, the Indian Constitution appears increasingly irrelevant in adjudi...
In Beyond South Asia: India’s Strategic Evolution and the Reintegration of the Subcontinent, Neil Pa...
Drawing on the chance discovery of a number of letters exchanged during the period, in India and the...
In An Economist In The Real World: The Art of Policymaking in India, Chief Economist of the World Ba...
The Indian subcontinent displays a spectrum of culture and geography, the history of which reflects ...
Rudra Chaudhuri’s book aims to examine a series of crises that led to far-reaching changes in India’...
The book is based on the authors’ work for over a decade in India in the field of vocational educati...
The book under review, “The Post American World” has been written by an Indian born poli...
This ‘part-thesis’ and ‘part-memoir’ guided by thoughtful analysis and reassessment of the most crit...
Swati Dhingra of London School of Economics and Political Science reviews, “Reforms and Economic Tra...
The need to negotiate effectively with India is only growing as its power rises, and in the literatu...
Drawing on his extensive fieldwork and experience of Indian politics,Sumantra Bose tells the story o...
Well-travelled international law teachers, students, and practitioners know there are a few countrie...
What policies and policy reforms can put India on the path of rapid and sustained economic growth an...
India Means Business is an excellent contribution to the current debate on the Indian economy and it...
Seventy years after its adoption, the Indian Constitution appears increasingly irrelevant in adjudi...
In Beyond South Asia: India’s Strategic Evolution and the Reintegration of the Subcontinent, Neil Pa...
Drawing on the chance discovery of a number of letters exchanged during the period, in India and the...
In An Economist In The Real World: The Art of Policymaking in India, Chief Economist of the World Ba...
The Indian subcontinent displays a spectrum of culture and geography, the history of which reflects ...
Rudra Chaudhuri’s book aims to examine a series of crises that led to far-reaching changes in India’...
The book is based on the authors’ work for over a decade in India in the field of vocational educati...
The book under review, “The Post American World” has been written by an Indian born poli...
This ‘part-thesis’ and ‘part-memoir’ guided by thoughtful analysis and reassessment of the most crit...
Swati Dhingra of London School of Economics and Political Science reviews, “Reforms and Economic Tra...
The need to negotiate effectively with India is only growing as its power rises, and in the literatu...
Drawing on his extensive fieldwork and experience of Indian politics,Sumantra Bose tells the story o...