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This is a guide book that showcases the commonest clinical problems
encountered in the inpatient setting concerning elderly patients.
Each chapter is based on a symptomatic theme and quizzes the reader
through the evolution of a patient scenario upon hospitalisation.
Engaging discussions occur after each quiz question, focusing on
approaches and diagnostic and therapeutic pearls.This practical
handbook will be exceedingly useful for both junior and senior
clinicians who deal with elderly inpatients on a day to day basis.
Medical students and other students of geriatric medicine will also
find it beneficial for their revision.Nationally and globally,
populations are ageing. We are seeing an increasing number of
elderly patients being admitted to the hospital for a variety of
medical problems. The government is placing increasing emphasis on
recruiting, training and retaining generalist clinicians
(hospitalists) who need to take care of elderly patients in
hospitals. As such, this book will be an extremely practical
resource for hospitalists around the world. Using a quiz format on
a background of an evolving patient scenario, the reader is led on
an exciting journey to discover one's gaps in diagnostic and
management aspects and to learn useful approaches and tips from our
experts.
This is a guide book that showcases the commonest clinical problems
encountered in the inpatient setting concerning elderly patients.
Each chapter is based on a symptomatic theme and quizzes the reader
through the evolution of a patient scenario upon hospitalisation.
Engaging discussions occur after each quiz question, focusing on
approaches and diagnostic and therapeutic pearls.This practical
handbook will be exceedingly useful for both junior and senior
clinicians who deal with elderly inpatients on a day to day basis.
Medical students and other students of geriatric medicine will also
find it beneficial for their revision.Nationally and globally,
populations are ageing. We are seeing an increasing number of
elderly patients being admitted to the hospital for a variety of
medical problems. The government is placing increasing emphasis on
recruiting, training and retaining generalist clinicians
(hospitalists) who need to take care of elderly patients in
hospitals. As such, this book will be an extremely practical
resource for hospitalists around the world. Using a quiz format on
a background of an evolving patient scenario, the reader is led on
an exciting journey to discover one's gaps in diagnostic and
management aspects and to learn useful approaches and tips from our
experts.
This book examines a selection of themes that have become salient
in contemporary debates on constitutional democracies. It focuses
in particular on the experiences of India and Germany as examples
of post-war and post-colonial constitutional democracies whose
trajectories illustrate democratic transitions and transformative
constitutionalism. While transformative constitutionalism has come
to be associated specifically with the post-apartheid experience in
South Africa, this book uses the transformative as an analytical
framework to transcend the dichotomy of west and east and explore
how temporally coincident constitutions have sought to install
constitutional democracies by breaking with the past. While the
constitution-making processes in the two countries were specific to
their political contexts, the constitutional promises and futures
converged. In this context, the book explores the themes of
Constitutionalism, Nationalism, Secularism, Sovereignty and Rule of
Law, Freedoms and Rights, to investigate how the contestations over
democratic transitions and democratic futures have unfolded in the
two democracies. It offers readers valuable insights into how the
normative frameworks of constitutional democracy take concrete form
at specific sites of democratic and constitutional imagination in
Dalit and Islamic writings, as well as the relationship between
state and religion in the writings of public intellectuals,
political and legal philosophers. The book also focuses on specific
sites of contestation in democracies including the relationship
between sovereignty and citizenship in post-colonial India, free
speech and sedition in liberal democracies, questions of land
rights in connection with economic and political changes in
contemporary contexts, and the rights of indigenous communities
with regard to international conventions and domestic law. Given
its scope, it will be of interest to students and scholars of
political theory, political philosophy, comparative
constitutionalism, law and human rights.
Successive amendments in the citizenship law in India have spawned
distinct regimes of citizenship. The idea of citizenship regimes is
crucial for making the argument that law must be seen not simply as
bare provisions but also examined for the ideological practices
that validate it and lay claims to its enforceability. While
citizenship regime in India can be distinguished from one another
on the basis on their distinct political and legal rationalities,
cumulatively they present a movement from jus soli to jus
sanguinis. The movement towards jus sanguinis has been a complex
process of entrenchment of exclusionary nationhood under the veneer
of liberal citizenship. This work argues that the contemporary
landscape of citizenship in India is dominated by the Citizenship
Amendment Act (CAA) 2019 and the National Register of Citizens
(NRC). The CAA 2019 and the NRC emerged as distinct tendencies from
the amendment in the citizenship law in 2003. These tendencies
subsequently become conjoined in an ideological alignment to make
citizenship dependent on lineage, spelling out ideas of belonging
which are tied to descent and blood ties. The NRC has invoked the
spectre of 'crisis' in citizenship generated by indiscriminate
immigration and the risks presented by 'illegal migrants', to
justify an extraordinary regime of citizenship. The CAA provides
for the exemption of some migrants from this regime by making
religion the criterion of distinguishability. The CAA 2019 and NRC
have generated a regime of 'bounded citizenship' based on the
assumption that citizenship can be passed on as a legacy of
ancestry making it a natural and constitutive identity. The
politics of Hindutva serves as an ideological apparatus buttressing
the regime and propelling the movement away from the foundational
principles of secular-constitutionalism that characterised Indian
citizenship in 1949.
This book examines a selection of themes that have become salient
in contemporary debates on constitutional democracies. It focuses
in particular on the experiences of India and Germany as examples
of post-war and post-colonial constitutional democracies whose
trajectories illustrate democratic transitions and transformative
constitutionalism. While transformative constitutionalism has come
to be associated specifically with the post-apartheid experience in
South Africa, this book uses the transformative as an analytical
framework to transcend the dichotomy of west and east and explore
how temporally coincident constitutions have sought to install
constitutional democracies by breaking with the past. While the
constitution-making processes in the two countries were specific to
their political contexts, the constitutional promises and futures
converged. In this context, the book explores the themes of
Constitutionalism, Nationalism, Secularism, Sovereignty and Rule of
Law, Freedoms and Rights, to investigate how the contestations over
democratic transitions and democratic futures have unfolded in the
two democracies. It offers readers valuable insights into how the
normative frameworks of constitutional democracy take concrete form
at specific sites of democratic and constitutional imagination in
Dalit and Islamic writings, as well as the relationship between
state and religion in the writings of public intellectuals,
political and legal philosophers. The book also focuses on specific
sites of contestation in democracies including the relationship
between sovereignty and citizenship in post-colonial India, free
speech and sedition in liberal democracies, questions of land
rights in connection with economic and political changes in
contemporary contexts, and the rights of indigenous communities
with regard to international conventions and domestic law. Given
its scope, it will be of interest to students and scholars of
political theory, political philosophy, comparative
constitutionalism, law and human rights.
Responding to a pressing need for a focussed study of India's
public institutions, Singh and Roy put together the first
comprehensive monograph-length study of the Election Commission
(EC) of India. They probe the consistent credibility that the EC
enjoys as a non-partisan constitutional body entrusted with the
responsibility of conducting elections in India. The EC is
generally seen as a regulatory body which enforces rules to conduct
elections effectively and efficiently. The authors argue that the
EC must be seen as performing a range of functions, not all of
which are regulatory. The EC is actively engaged in framing and
implementing rules to ascertain procedural certainty in order to
ensure the democratic principle of uncertainty of electoral
outcome. Innovations in conducting elections which are often seen
through the lens of electoral 'management' and 'electoral
integrity' have become part of the deliberative content of
elections. The work also examines the relationship between the
legal-institutional frameworks of electoral governance within the
larger institutional matrix of democracy, and the political field
in which they are located. The latter, the authors argue, both
limit and enable the effectiveness of the EC in the shared space of
democracy in India.
The idea of citizenship goes beyond a legal-formal framework to
denote substantive membership in the political community. While
citizenship is identified with an ideal condition of equality of
status and belonging, it gets challenged in societies marked by
inequalities. As an idea that inspires struggle, citizenship
remains an institution that is unbounded, changing, and always
incomplete. This short introduction lucidly describes the history
of citizenship in India, before moving on to the pluralities and
the contemporary landscapes of citizenship. It traces the
amendments in the Citizenship Act, 1955 and argues that the legal
enframing of the citizen involves a simultaneous production of its
other-the non-citizen. This book looks at the multiple margins that
constitute the sites of constant churnings, releasing powerful new
idioms, imaginaries, and practices of citizenship.
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