In a two-part series, Manisha Priyam analyses the gruesome tragedy of 23 children who died in a Bihar village, Gandaman, after consuming a school lunch served under India’s flagship mid-day meal scheme. In part one, Priyam provides a narrative account of the tragedy, including voices from the grieving poor. In part two, she analyses the local political economy in areas where schools for India’s most poor and vulnerable people are located as well as the formidable challenge in realising rights as entitlements
For the first time in decades, food has become an object of concern for all the world’s people, and ...
UNICEF estimated that nearly 2.6 million children, who die due to malnutrition each year, are equiva...
The Indian state of Maharashtra has been lauded as a ‘success story’ for its rapid and significant d...
In the second of this two part series, Manisha Priyam analyses how realising the right to schooling ...
This case study is about the politics of malnutrition and the role of public action in fighting the ...
Malnutrition has a far more powerful impact on child mortality than is generally appreciate. It invo...
A recent IGC Working Paper by Andrew Fraker, Neil Buddy Shah, and Ronald Abraham assesses the perfor...
Using the nationwide school-feeding programme—the Mid Day Meal Scheme (MDMS)—in India as its anchor,...
The prevalence of underweight children in Bihar is higher than in any country in the world, and the ...
In 1925 the Madras Municipal Corporation introduced an innovative scheme to provide free midday meal...
In 2001, the Indian Government made the right to food a legal entitlement through various interim or...
Speaking at LSE on June 11, UCLA’s Professor Gupta theorised the role of bureaucratic procedures in ...
Using the nationwide school-feeding programme—the Mid Day Meal Scheme (MDMS)—in India as its anchor,...
In February 2002 India made international headlines when the words “genocide” and “ethnic cleansing”...
Background: Rates of child malnutrition and mortality in India remain high. We tested the hypothesis...
For the first time in decades, food has become an object of concern for all the world’s people, and ...
UNICEF estimated that nearly 2.6 million children, who die due to malnutrition each year, are equiva...
The Indian state of Maharashtra has been lauded as a ‘success story’ for its rapid and significant d...
In the second of this two part series, Manisha Priyam analyses how realising the right to schooling ...
This case study is about the politics of malnutrition and the role of public action in fighting the ...
Malnutrition has a far more powerful impact on child mortality than is generally appreciate. It invo...
A recent IGC Working Paper by Andrew Fraker, Neil Buddy Shah, and Ronald Abraham assesses the perfor...
Using the nationwide school-feeding programme—the Mid Day Meal Scheme (MDMS)—in India as its anchor,...
The prevalence of underweight children in Bihar is higher than in any country in the world, and the ...
In 1925 the Madras Municipal Corporation introduced an innovative scheme to provide free midday meal...
In 2001, the Indian Government made the right to food a legal entitlement through various interim or...
Speaking at LSE on June 11, UCLA’s Professor Gupta theorised the role of bureaucratic procedures in ...
Using the nationwide school-feeding programme—the Mid Day Meal Scheme (MDMS)—in India as its anchor,...
In February 2002 India made international headlines when the words “genocide” and “ethnic cleansing”...
Background: Rates of child malnutrition and mortality in India remain high. We tested the hypothesis...
For the first time in decades, food has become an object of concern for all the world’s people, and ...
UNICEF estimated that nearly 2.6 million children, who die due to malnutrition each year, are equiva...
The Indian state of Maharashtra has been lauded as a ‘success story’ for its rapid and significant d...