Speaking at LSE on June 11, UCLA’s Professor Gupta theorised the role of bureaucratic procedures in perpetuating chronic poverty across India
A wit (I forget who) once explained the contrasting economic fortunes of India and East Asia by the ...
This title is published in Open Access with the support of the University of Helsinki.In comparison ...
Even as some households are coming out of poverty, other households are concurrently falling into po...
The book attempts to answer a central question for India, but also for all political science: in thi...
LSE’s Alpa Shah recently joined Professor Akhil Gupta (UCLA) and Laurie Taylor for the BBC Radio 4 s...
La antropología del estado desde Akhil Gupta: a propósito de Red Tape. Burocracia, violencia estru...
At a recent lecture at LSE, Professor Amartya Sen explored the persistence of extreme poverty and ta...
Speaking in the Constituent Assembly in January 1947 Jawaharlal Nehru offered a vision of independen...
The fact that Poverty is a bane that checks the growth of any to any developing nation as well as an...
This paper analyses academic discourses about factors that cause/perpetuate or eliminate poverty. It...
Hegel used to say that “poverty is a social phenomenon’’. Mahatma Gandhi thought that poverty was th...
Lacking assets is both a cause and an outcome of poverty. Poor health, deficient skills, scant acces...
Most developing countries have been involved in planning in one form or the other since their indepe...
As a result of “GLOBALIZATION”, the “Earth” turns into a small village. Moreover, this is needless t...
Poverty in India is one of the biggest issue we are facing today. Almost every third poor in the wor...
A wit (I forget who) once explained the contrasting economic fortunes of India and East Asia by the ...
This title is published in Open Access with the support of the University of Helsinki.In comparison ...
Even as some households are coming out of poverty, other households are concurrently falling into po...
The book attempts to answer a central question for India, but also for all political science: in thi...
LSE’s Alpa Shah recently joined Professor Akhil Gupta (UCLA) and Laurie Taylor for the BBC Radio 4 s...
La antropología del estado desde Akhil Gupta: a propósito de Red Tape. Burocracia, violencia estru...
At a recent lecture at LSE, Professor Amartya Sen explored the persistence of extreme poverty and ta...
Speaking in the Constituent Assembly in January 1947 Jawaharlal Nehru offered a vision of independen...
The fact that Poverty is a bane that checks the growth of any to any developing nation as well as an...
This paper analyses academic discourses about factors that cause/perpetuate or eliminate poverty. It...
Hegel used to say that “poverty is a social phenomenon’’. Mahatma Gandhi thought that poverty was th...
Lacking assets is both a cause and an outcome of poverty. Poor health, deficient skills, scant acces...
Most developing countries have been involved in planning in one form or the other since their indepe...
As a result of “GLOBALIZATION”, the “Earth” turns into a small village. Moreover, this is needless t...
Poverty in India is one of the biggest issue we are facing today. Almost every third poor in the wor...
A wit (I forget who) once explained the contrasting economic fortunes of India and East Asia by the ...
This title is published in Open Access with the support of the University of Helsinki.In comparison ...
Even as some households are coming out of poverty, other households are concurrently falling into po...