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Showing 1 - 7 of 7 matches in All Departments
The book discusses contemporary issues such as global financial architecture and regulatory practices, trade, investment and the multilateral process, the future of work, the role of technology for adaptation and mitigation of climate change, and financing infrastructure for sustainable development. With increasing global connectivity, events in one part of the world immediately affect or spread to the other parts. In this context, G20 has proved to be an effective forum, particularly after the Asian financial crises. Furthermore, over recent decades, G20 has been instrumental in managing financial crises and international conflicts by deploying global cooperation as a functional tool. As a body responding to crises, the G20 has played a central role in providing the political momentum for the strong international cooperation that ensured greater policy coherence and helped ease situations that could otherwise have been decidedly worse. The G20's agendas have encompassed short-term but critical issues of economic recovery, the sovereign crisis of Europe, high unemployment and financial sector regulation. But since moderate stabilization in the global economic environment, the focus of the group has also embraced long-term areas of governance and development. For emerging economies, such as India, the G20 has been an important platform framework to promote an inclusive global economic architecture that seeks to achieve equitable outcomes. This book reviews the past 20 years of the G20, since it was conceptualized as a replacement for the G-7. While issues such as global financial order have been a constant area of discussion, one of the failures has been not recognizing and acknowledging the importance of issues like trade, climate change and future of work. Featuring academic papers by experts in the area, this book provides a platform for the necessary discourse on these issues.
This book explores ways in which India can negotiate the low carbon path up until 2030, when it is expected to be the largest economy after the US and China. It comprehensively reviews the low climate pathways for India and provides a guide to the pathways that the country can adopt. India's population, energy demands and emissions will increase significantly, and the challenge is to restrict its CO2 emissions and walk the low carbon path. Through its Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs), India has pledged to reduce its emissions significantly. Addressing the question of which low carbon paths India can adhere to without compromising its growth, the book identifies the key factors that feed into existing models of climate change and discusses the cost of action versus inaction. It also examines key issues concerning India's environment through the lens of the transport, industry and water sectors. The book concludes by looking at policy implications for low carbon growth in India.
South Asia's developing nations have been enjoying moderate to
high growth over the past decade before the global recession began.
This new edition provides an up-to-date guide to the growing
markets in South Asia. It offers an analysis of the changes and
consequences of high sustainable growth, investigating what has
been achieved in the region during the last ten years from a
macroeconomic viewpoint, identifying new challenges and clearly
defining what has driven the boom. It is widely recognised that globalisation enhanced global
trade, and that trade further increased the region's prosperity.
Embracing the view that economists can no longer regard themselves
as technocratic guardians of neutral policy advice, the book
advocates for a shift in focus from policy reform per se to the
more challenging task of implementing institutional reform that
will invigorate the capability of the political leadership to bring
about rapid, sustained and poverty-reducing growth in South Asia.
The central task would be to re-direct the focus of governments in
South Asia in order to ensure that the core functions of the state
stable, non-distortionary policy climate, a secure foundation of
law, investment in basic education, health and infrastructure,
protection of the vulnerable and adapting with the climate change
are efficiently provided. At the same time, the reform agenda must
be sensitive to the goal of ensuring that durable democratic
institutions, traditions and values are preserved. This is a
fundamental challenge, but one that must be met in order to secure
the emergence of a prosperous South Asia in the early part of the
twenty-first century.
This book explores ways in which India can negotiate the low carbon path up until 2030, when it is expected to be the largest economy after the US and China. It comprehensively reviews the low climate pathways for India and provides a guide to the pathways that the country can adopt. India's population, energy demands and emissions will increase significantly, and the challenge is to restrict its CO2 emissions and walk the low carbon path. Through its Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs), India has pledged to reduce its emissions significantly. Addressing the question of which low carbon paths India can adhere to without compromising its growth, the book identifies the key factors that feed into existing models of climate change and discusses the cost of action versus inaction. It also examines key issues concerning India's environment through the lens of the transport, industry and water sectors. The book concludes by looking at policy implications for low carbon growth in India.
South Asia's developing nations have been enjoying moderate to
high growth over the past decade before the global recession began.
This new edition provides an up-to-date guide to the growing
markets in South Asia. It offers an analysis of the changes and
consequences of high sustainable growth, investigating what has
been achieved in the region during the last ten years from a
macroeconomic viewpoint, identifying new challenges and clearly
defining what has driven the boom. It is widely recognised that globalisation enhanced global
trade, and that trade further increased the region s prosperity.
Embracing the view that economists can no longer regard themselves
as technocratic guardians of neutral policy advice, the book
advocates for a shift in focus from policy reform per se to the
more challenging task of implementing institutional reform that
will invigorate the capability of the political leadership to bring
about rapid, sustained and poverty-reducing growth in South Asia.
The central task would be to re-direct the focus of governments in
South Asia in order to ensure that the core functions of the state
stable, non-distortionary policy climate, a secure foundation of
law, investment in basic education, health and infrastructure,
protection of the vulnerable and adapting with the climate change
are efficiently provided. At the same time, the reform agenda must
be sensitive to the goal of ensuring that durable democratic
institutions, traditions and values are preserved. This is a
fundamental challenge, but one that must be met in order to secure
the emergence of a prosperous South Asia in the early part of the
twenty-first century.
Researchers are continually challenged to find new ways of investigating political, economic and social issues in Africa. This book includes new research designs and a comprehensive discussion of research ethics. In this way the book continues to provide an up-to-date and accessible text on social research methods and applications within African contexts. Fundamentals of Social Research Methods – An African Perspective spans a broad spectrum and areas of focus include agriculture, public health, community development and regional planning. The material is compatible with the syllabi of social science methods courses in many African training institutions. The text presents clearly and concisely the fundamentals of research methods in a range of social sciences, including sociology, economics, political science, psychology and education. The content is illustrated throughout with actual examples of social research conducted in various African countries. This text has been written for the non-professional researcher and the student of research methods. It will prove invaluable to university students, government administrators, development planners, business managers, social workers, educationists and all those interested in conducting social research, including novices.
The book discusses contemporary issues such as global financial architecture and regulatory practices, trade, investment and the multilateral process, the future of work, the role of technology for adaptation and mitigation of climate change, and financing infrastructure for sustainable development. With increasing global connectivity, events in one part of the world immediately affect or spread to the other parts. In this context, G20 has proved to be an effective forum, particularly after the Asian financial crises. Furthermore, over recent decades, G20 has been instrumental in managing financial crises and international conflicts by deploying global cooperation as a functional tool. As a body responding to crises, the G20 has played a central role in providing the political momentum for the strong international cooperation that ensured greater policy coherence and helped ease situations that could otherwise have been decidedly worse. The G20's agendas have encompassed short-term but critical issues of economic recovery, the sovereign crisis of Europe, high unemployment and financial sector regulation. But since moderate stabilization in the global economic environment, the focus of the group has also embraced long-term areas of governance and development. For emerging economies, such as India, the G20 has been an important platform framework to promote an inclusive global economic architecture that seeks to achieve equitable outcomes. This book reviews the past 20 years of the G20, since it was conceptualized as a replacement for the G-7. While issues such as global financial order have been a constant area of discussion, one of the failures has been not recognizing and acknowledging the importance of issues like trade, climate change and future of work. Featuring academic papers by experts in the area, this book provides a platform for the necessary discourse on these issues.
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