Bangladesh: look at the iceberg and not its tip.
Mainstream, 54(32), 2016(30 Jul): p.23-24.
2268 Khan, Mustafa
The phenomenology of terrorism: Malegaon 2006-2016.
Mainstream, 54(36), 2016(27 Aug): p.13-16.
TOLERANCE
2269 Chakrabarti, Kunal
A history of Intolerance: the representation of Buddhists
in the Bengal Puranas.
Social Scientist, 44(5-6), 2016(May-Jun): p.11-27.
2270 Jha, D.N.
Brahmanical intolerance in early India.
Social Scientist, 44(5-6), 2016(May-Jun): p.3-10.
TRADE UNIONS
2271 Bhat, T.R.
Trade unions in banks remain relevant: a rejoinder.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(28), 2016(9 Jul):
p.57-60.
2272 Bino Paul G.D. and Mahurkar, Gupta
Are trade unions relevant in the Indian banking sector?
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(16), 2016(16 Apr):
p.69-79.
TRAINING
2273 Rao, Kasina V.
Examining learning and effectiveness of teaching cases in
evaluation of training programmes: a study of trainers in
public sector.
Indian Journal of Training and Development, 46(1), 2016
(Jan-Mar): p.5-12.
TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATION
2274 Fitzpatrick, Molly and Rutten, Mario
Contextualising transnationalism: local embedment and
global engagement amongst Gujarati Indians in Cape Town.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(30), 2016(23 Jul):
p.57-64.
TRIBES
2275 Dastider, Mollica
Marginalised as minority: tribal citizens and border
thinking in India.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(25), 2016(18 Jun):
p.48-54.
2276 Shahabuddin
The multiple lineages of 'Khetauris': a forgotten chapter
in the history of Santhal parganas.
University Research Journal: Social Sciences, Humanities
and Commerce, 1(1), 2016(Jan-Jun): p.65-74.
UNITED NATIONS
2277 Saighal, Vinod
Reappraising United Nations military interventions.
World Affairs, 20(2), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.24-32.
URBAN DESIGN
2278 Bartenberger, Martin and Szescilo, Dawid
The benefits and risks of experimental co-production: the
case of urban redesign in Vienna.
Public Administration, 94(2), 2016(Jun): p.509-525.
Building on the literature on co-production and the
(pragmatist) literature on experimentalist policy-making
we introduce and evaluate a novel form of co-production:
experimental co-production. We propose a model of this
specific form including a list of not only potential
benefits but also possible risks and costs. We illustrate
and examine this model of experimental co-production by
drawing on the case study of a major urban planning
initiative in Vienna, Austria that included an
experimental co-testing phase. We find that while the
expected benefits of experimental co-production were
partly realized for the citizens involved, the city
government faced major political costs. – Reproduced.
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
2279 Scholl, Hans Jochen and Aiawadhi, Suha
Smart governance as key to multi-jurisdictional smart
city initiatives: the case of the CityGov alliance.
Social Science Information , 55(2), 2016(Jun): p.255-277.
2280 D'souza, Paul
Clean India, unclean Indians beyond the Bhim yatra.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(26-27), 2016(25 Jun):
p.22-25.
2281 Garcia, Maria Angeles Huete, Rodriguez, Rafael Merinero and
Moreno, Rocio Munoz
Urban regeneration policy from the integrated urban
development model in the European Union: an analytical
approach based on the study of Spanish cities.
Local Government Studies, 42(2), 2016(Apr): p.267-286.
2282 Meera
Swachh Bharat and don't touch!: struggles of Balmikis in
Uttar Pradesh.
Social Action, 66(3), 2016(Jul-Sep): p.251-260.
2283 Meijer, Albert and Bolivar, Manuel Pedro Rodriguez
Governing the smart city: a review of the literature on
smart urban governance.
International Review of Administrative Sciences, 82(2),
2016(Jun): p.392-408.
Academic attention to smart cities and their governance
is growing rapidly, but the fragmentation in approaches
makes for a confusing debate. This article brings some
structure to the debate by analyzing a corpus of 51
publications and mapping their variation. The analysis
shows that publications differ in their emphasis on (1)
smart technology, smart people or smart collaboration as
the defining features of smart cities, (2) a
transformative or incremental perspective on changes in
urban governance, (3) better outcomes or a more open
process as the legitimacy claim for smart city
governance. We argue for a comprehensive perspective:
smart city governance is about crafting new forms of
human collaboration through the use of ICTs to obtain
better outcomes and more open governance processes.
Research into smart city governance could benefit from
previous studies into success and failure factors for e-
government and build upon sophisticated theories of socio
technical change. This article highlights that smart city
governance is not a technological issue: we should study
smart city governance as a complex process of
institutional change and acknowledge the political nature
of appealing visions of socio-technical governance. -
Reproduced.
2284 Roy, Souvanic
The smart city paradigm in India: issues and challenges
of sustainability and inclusiveness.
Social Scientist, 44(5-6), 2016(May-Jun): p.29-48.
2285 Vaddiraju, Anil Kumar
Urban governance and right to the city.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(32), 2016(Aug):
p.21-23.
URBANIZATION
2286 Kundu, Chinmoy and Malik, Uma Sankar
Role of census towns on urbanization in West Bengal.
Indian Journal of Regional Science, 48(1), 2016:
p.101-113.
2287 Mitra, Iman Kumar
Recycling the Urban: migration settlement and question of
labour in contemporary Kolkata.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(26-27), 2016(25 Jun):
p.55-62.
VACCINATION
2288 Baekkeskov, Erik
Same threat, different responses: experts steering
politicians and stakeholders in 2009 H1N1vaccination
policy making.
Public Administration, 94(2), 2016(Jun): p.299-315.
2289 Sharma, Suresh and Bothra, Manisha
Mission Indradhanush: progress and constraints.
Kurukshetra, 64(11), 2016(Sep): p.36-37.
VALUES EDUCATION
2290 Mao, Xavier P.
Value, education and social reconstruction.
Dialogue, 17(4), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.145-153.
VATSYAYAN, SACHCHIDANANDA HIRANANDA (AGYEYA)
2291 Acharya, Nandkishore
Agyeya-exploration into freedom .
Dialogue, 17(4), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.36-42.
2292 Shah, Ramesh Chandra
Agyeya: the ideal poet-philosopher of freedom.
Dialogue, 17(4), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.27-35.
VEHICLES
2293 Pavaskar, Ganeshprasad
Reviewing India's National Mission on Electric Vehicles.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(30), 2016(Jul):
p.19-22.
VIOLENCE
2294 Perkins, Nathan H. and O'Connor, Mary Katherine
Physical and emotional sibling violence: a necessary role
for social work.
Social Work, 61(1), 2016(Jan): p.91-93.
WAGES
2295 Begley, Jason, Geary, Frank and Stark, Tom
Convergence in the pre-1914 Atlantic economy: what really
happened to wages in Ireland between 1881 and 1911?
Cambridge Journal of Economics, 40(1), 2016(Jan):
p.43-67.
2296 Kaur, Puneet and Kaur, Kuldip
Male female wage gap differentials in the informal labour
market-a case study of Amritsar.
Indian Journal of Regional Science, 48(1), 2016:
p.92-100.
WAR
2297 Ahmed, Ali
War and what to do about it.
Economic and Political Weekly, 41(35), 2016(27 Aug):
p.10-12.
2298 Bloeria, Sudhir S.
Kargil 1999 - a perspective.
USI Journal, 145(604), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.206-218.
2299 Mukarji, Apratim
Fear of war rising in Europe.
Mainstream, 54(1), 2015(26 Dec): p.37-38.
WASTE TREATMENT
2300 Baby, K.
Waste to energy: some technical solutions.
Kurukshetra, 64(9), 2016(Jul): p.27-30.
2301 Gradus, Raymond, Dijkgraaf, Elbert and Schoute, Martijn
Is there still collusion in the Dutch waste collection
market?
Local Government Studies, 42(5), 2016(Oct): p.689-697.
2302 Rosaldo, Manuel
Revolution in the garbage dump: the Political and
Economic Foundations of the Colombian Recycler Movement,
1986-2011.
Social Problems, 63(3), 2016(Aug): p.351-372.
Flouting 150 years of reports on their political
impotence, millions of informal workers have recently
begun mobilizing for labor rights. What provoked this
unexpected development? This article analyzes the
Colombian informal recycler movementùa ''least likely''
case for successful mobilization due to the recyclers'
extreme marginality and the Colombian state's violent
repression of labor movements. The article argues that
the rise of neoliberalism and the consolidation of
democracy created political opportunities that
conventional perspectives on the informal economy would
not lead us to expect. Three specific links connected
these macro-level transformations to increases in the
recyclers' collective organizing capacity. First,
technical, financial, and symbolic backing from non-
governmental organizations (NGOs) enabled recyclers to
develop innovative organizing models. Second, new human
rights provisions contained in the Constitution of 1991
created an opening to challenge state policy. Third, the
privatization of waste management spurred recyclers to
action by leaving them with two clear-cut possibilities:
waste corporations might permanently displace them, or
recyclers might collectively organize to protect and
improve their livelihoods. - Reproduced.
WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
2303 Goswami, Paromita
Maharashtra water politics: fate of the regulation
authority.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(1), 2016(2 Jan):
p.10-12.
2304 Rao, Purba H., Jain, Sharad K. and Millin, Alan
Would private sector be inclined to take up initiatives
to address water crisis in India.
Vikalpa, 41(2), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.103-116.
WATER SUPPLY
2305 Singh, Rakesh Kumar
Water demand function of residents of Delhi (India): an
empirical analysis.
Artha Vijnana, 57(2), 2015(Jun): p.99-116.
2306 Sugam, Ruresh kumar
Rural water needs: challenges and neo-traditional
solutions.
Kurukshetra, 64(9), 2016(Jul): p.31-34.
2307 Zafra-Gomez, Jose Luis et al
Financial and political factors motivating the
privatisation of municipal water services.
Local Government Studies, 42(2), 2016(Apr): p.287-308.
WELFARE STATE
2308 Andrews, Rhys and Jilke, Sebastian
Welfare states and social cohesion in Europe: does social
quality matter?
Journal of Social Policy, 45(1), 2016(Jan): p.119-140.
WOMEN
2309 Agrawal, Manju and Hai, Kakul
Women courts: an alternative justice system for women.
Indian Journal of Social Work, 77(1), 2016(Jan): p.53-66.
2310 Bapna, Niharika
Draft national policy for women, 2016: repeating old
themes.
Economic and Political Weekly, 41(35), 2016(27 Aug):
p.22-25.
2311 Barnett, Jessica Penwell , Maticka-Tyndale, Eleanor and
Kenya, Trocaire
Stigma as social control: gender-based violence stigma,
life chances, and moral order in Kenya .
Social Problems, 63(3), 2016(Aug): p.447-462.
The stigma associated with gender-based violence (GBV)
exacerbates its physical and mental health impacts, as
well as the chances of experiencing additional violence.
We extend understanding of this stigma and its effects by
demonstrating how stigma operates as a mechanism of
social control at both interactional and structural
levels to preserve the moral order. We also further
general stigma theory by clarifying the conceptualization
of power that befits understanding stigma as a mechanism
of social control that has cognitive, interpersonal,
structural, and moral components. Analysis of data from 6
focus groups with women survivors of intimate partner
violence and 19 interviews with close others and key
informants in Kenya shows that the moral order, or what
matters most, is maintenance of the marital unit, to a
great degree because it is the institution that maintains
the economic survival of women and children. The cultural
belief that a woman experiencing spousal abuse has
violated normative gender and spousal expectations and is
therefore a threat to the moral order of the community
demands that both husbands and community members act to
protect the moral order. Protection of the moral order is
accomplished through discrimination against survivors
that is institutionalized through custom, law, and the
family. Thus stigma acts as a, albeit contested,
community process of social control that (re)produces
gendered power geographies. - Reproduced.
2312 Cavalcanti, Tiago and Tavares, Jose
The output cost of gender discrimination: a model-based
macroeconomics estimate.
Economic Journal, 126(590), 2016(Feb): p.109-134.
We use a growth model in which saving, fertility and
labour market participation are endogenous, to quantify
the cost that barriers to female labour force
participation impose in terms of an economy's output. The
model is calibrated to mimic the US economy's behaviour
in the long-run. We find that a 50% increase in the
gender wage gap leads to a 35% decrease in income per
capita in the steady state. Using independent estimates
of the female to male earnings ratio for a wide cross-
section of countries, we construct an economy with
parameters similar to those calibrated for the US
economy, except for the degree of gender barriers. For
several countries, a large fraction of the difference
between the country's output and the US output can be
ascribed to differences in gender discrimination. -
reproduced.
2313 Dwivedi, L.K. et al
Women's empowerment and domestic violence: findings from
17 states/UTs surveyed in phase 1 of NFHS-4 (2015-16).
Demography India, 43(1-2), 2014(Jan-Dec): p.63-69.
2314 Khurana, Vani
Communicative action and women: linguistic and social
'lack'.
Man in India, 96(4), 2016(Oct-Dec): p.1061-1066.
2315 Kumari, Amita
Gandhi and the 'Woman question': paradoxes and
resolutions .
University Research Journal: Social Sciences, Humanities
and Commerce, 1(1), 2016(Jan-Jun): p.1-14.
2316 Lenjiso, Birhanu Megersa, Smits, Jeroen and Ruben, Ruerd
Transforming gender relations through the market:
smallholder milk market participation and women's intra-
household bargaining power in Ethiopia.
Journal of Development Studies, 52(7), 2016(Jul):
p.1002-1018.
2317 Mohapatra, Gadadhara
Empowerment of women through Panchayati Raj
Institutions(PRIs) in Odisha: a review of issues and
evidence.
Indian Journal of Public Administration, 62(2), 2016(Apr-
Jun): p.294-308.
The term 'empowerment' is essentially an enabling process
to make people capable of taking decisions concerning
their development and for changing their lives for
better. The Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs), through
73rd Constitutional Amendment, have been designed to
empower the people at three appropriate levels. The
Amendment provided institutional mechanism and was meant
to rekindle the flame of self-governance. The basic
objective of the democratic decentralisation through
reactivation of the Panchayati Raj system was to realise
Gandhiji's concept of 'Gram Swaraj' (Aslam, 2007:79). The
most important aspect of the widening democratic
decentralisation has been the reservation of seats, for
the women and Dalits. Studies show that by extending
reservation to women, PRIs have certainly led to the
increased participation of women in panchayats as voters,
candidates, as elected members of PRIs taking part in
decision making, planning, implementation, and
evaluation. However, certain constraints which stem from
traditional village institutions and familial and socio-
cultural forces still remain (Mathur, 2008:84). In this
context, the article attempts to study the emerging
patterns of women's leadership and empowerment aspects
among the Dalit and tribal groups in the state of Odisha
in eastern India. - Reproduced.
2318 Nelson, Julie A.
Husbandary: a (feminist) reclamation of masculine
responsibility for care.
Cambridge Journal of Economics, 40(1), 2016(Jan): p.1-15.
2319 O'brien, Diana Z. and Rickne, Johanna
Gender quotas and women's political leadership.
American Political Science Review, 110(1), 2016(Feb):
p.112-126.
2320 Orso, Cristina Elisa and Fabrizi, Enrico
The determinants of women's empowerment in Bangladesh:
the role of partner's attitudes and participation in
microcredit programmes.
Journal of Development Studies, 52(6), 2016(Jun):
p.895-912.
2321 Singh, Amandeep
Gender equality for sustainable development.
Man in India, 96(4), 2016(Oct-Dec): p.927-933.
2322 Singh, Kirandeep
Urban working women in the reflection of Indian society.
Man in India, 96(4), 2016(Oct-Dec): p.969-974.
WOMEN IN AGRICULTURE
2323 Dewan, Ritu
Contextualising and visibilising gender and work in rural
India: economic contribution of women in agriculture.
Indian Journal of Agricultural Economics, 71(1), 2016(Jan
Mar): p.49-58.
2324 Dewan, Ritu
Economic contribution of women in agriculture .
Indian Journal of Agricultural Economics, 71(1), 2016(Jan
Mar): p.63-64.
WOMEN IN BUSINESS
2325 Field, Erica et al
Friendship at work: can peer effects catalyze female
entrepreneurship?
American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 8(2), 2016
(May): p.125-153.
WOMEN IN POLITICS
2326 Braniff, Maire and Whiting, Sophie A.
There's just no point having a token women': gender and
representation in the democratic unionist party in post-
agreement Northern Ireland.
Parliamentary Affairs, 69(1), 2016(Jan): p.93-114.
2327 Evans, Alice
For the elections, we want women: closing the gender gap
in Zambian politics.
Development and Change, 47(2), 2016(Mar): p.388-411.
2328 Nugent, Mary K. and Krook, Mona Lena
All-Women shortlist: myths and realities.
Parliamentary Affairs, 69(1), 2016(Jan): p.115-135.
2329 Swers, Michele L.
Women and legislative leadership in the US Congress:
representing women's interests in partisan times .
Daedalus, 145(3), 2016(Summer): p.44-56.
WOMEN PHYSICIANS
2330 Guha, Ambalika
The 'masculine' female: the rise of women doctors in
colonial India, c. 1870-1940.
Social Scientist, 44(5-6), 2016(May-Jun): p.49-64.
WOMEN WORKERS
2331 Kusakabe, Kyoko and Pearson, Ruth
Working through exceptional space: the case of women
migrant workers in Mae Sot, Thailand.
International Sociology, 31(3), 2016(May): p.268-285.
WOMENS EDUCATION
2332 Akula, Ravi and Reddy, M. Anuradha
Women in higher education in India: some statistics.
University News, 54(29), 2016(18 Jul): p.8-11.
2333 Singh, Jaya
A study of the trend and enrolment of women in higher
education .
University Research Journal: Social Sciences, Humanities
and Commerce, 1(1), 2016(Jan-Jun): p.15-26.
WOMENS RIGHTS
2334 Alok Prasanna Kumar
Securing women's right to free speech on social media.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(30), 2016(23 Jul):
p.10-11.
WORK EXPERIENCE PROGRAMMES
2335 Fuertes, Vanesa and Lindsay, Colin
Personalization and street-level practice in activation:
the case of the UK's work programme.
Public Administration, 94(2), 2016(Jun): p.526-541.
WORK STUDY
2336 Gjersoe, Heidi Moen
Regulating inflow or outflow: a comparison of the work
capability assessments in the UK and Norway.
Journal of Social Policy, 45(1), 2016(Jan): p.141-158.
WORKERS PARTICIPATION
2337 Vijayalakshmi and Das, V. Tulshi
Employee engagement strategies for effective human
capital utilisation: an empirical study.
Ashwattha, 9(1), 2015(Jan-Mar): p.9-17.
WORKING LIFE
2338 Bloom, Peter
Work as the contemporary limit of life: capitalism, the
death drive, and the lethal fantasy of 'work-life
balance'.
Organization, 23(4), 2016(Jul): p.588-606.
WORLD BANK
2339 Strand, Jonathan R. and Retzl, Kenneth J.
Did recent voice reforms improve good governance within
the World Bank?
Development and Change, 47(3), 2016(May): p.415-445.
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATIONS
2340 Banga, Rashmi
New issues in multilateral trade negotiations.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(21), 2016(21 May):
p.28-32.
YOGA
2341 Acharya, Ishwara N and Rastogi, Rajiv
Yoga: balancing healthy and stress-free life.
Yojana, 60, 2016(Jun): p.59-61.
2342 Basavaraddi, Ishwar V.
Yoga: modern lifestyle and international acceptability.
Yojana, 60, 2016(Jun): p.51-53.
2343 Dubey, Praveen, Sarva, Mahesh and Singh, Pavitar Prakash
The application of yoga on effective mind body and stress
reduction among students.
Man in India, 96(4), 2016(Oct-Dec): p.1163-1179.
2344 Nagendra, H.R.
Yoga: enriching health & quality of life.
Yojana, 60, 2016(Jun): p.63-65.
2345 Sahu, S.N.
Meaning of yoga.
Mainstream, 54(28), 2016(2 Jul): p.20-22.
2346 Singh, Ravi P. and Pande, Manish
Assessment and certification of yoga practitioners.
Yojana, 60, 2016(Jun): p.55-58.
YOUTH
2347 Adolescent health.
Kurukshetra, 64(10), 2016(Aug): p.49-52.
2348 Bhatt, Ela R.
Rural youth, work and empowerment.
Kurukshetra, 64(10), 2016(Aug): p.20-23.
2349 Das, Sunita
Empowering youth through financial inclusion schemes.
Kurukshetra, 64(10), 2016(Aug): p.46-48.
2350 Mandal, Sayantan
Development of education and skills for rural youth.
Kurukshetra, 64(10), 2016(Aug): p.14-18.
2351 Singh, Swadesh
Empowering rural youth: challenges and opportunities.
Kurukshetra, 64(10), 2016(Aug): p.10-12.
2352 Singh, Utsav Kumar
Roadway to accomplish sustainable development of rural
youth.
Kurukshetra, 64(10), 2016(Aug): p.5-9.
2353 Slesnick, Natasha, Zhang, Jing and Brakenhoff, Brittany
Homeless youths caretakers: the mediatiating role of
childhood abuse on street victimization and housing
instability.
Social Work, 61(2), 2016(Apr): p.147-165.
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