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Updated to cover events between 1986 and 1992, including the
destruction of the mosque at Ayodhya in December 1992, the book
analyses the secessionist crisis in Punjab which led to Indira
Gandhi's murder and examines larger themes of ethnic conflict and
threats to Indian unity. The Punjab example sheds light on
processes at work in the rest of India, as the introduction to the
new edition of the book points out. It also considers the domestic
implications for India of a world in which 'socialism' and
'non-alignment' have lost much of their meaning.
In 1990 approximately ten per cent of Indian babies died in their
first year - but in Kerala state on the southwestern coast, infant
mortality was less than three per cent. Kerala also boasted India's
longest life expectancy and highest female literacy in India. Yet
Kerala's per capita income was less than the lowly national
average. The so-called Kerala Model has teased scholars and
policy-makers since the 1970s. Is it possible to achieve a
tolerable standard of living without the immense costs of
industrial or political revolutions? This book argues that the
disintegration of matrilineal social structure and a rigid system
of caste generated widespread politicization. In this process,
though women both lost and gained, they have retained a position of
autonomy unique in India. This book explains how this combination
of politics and women has produced the supposed "well-being"
associated with the Kerala Model. For people interested in
comparative politics, development policy and the position of women
in society, this book examines key issues. Historians of South Asia
will also find a social history that pushes beyond the conventional
stopping date of 1947 - into the 1990s and the
Since the publication of the 2005 Human Security Report, scholars
and policy-makers have debated the causes, interpretation and
implications of what the report described as a global decline in
armed conflict since the end of the Cold War. Focusing on the
Asia-Pacific region, this book analyses the causes and patterns of
this decline. In few regions has the apparent decline in conflict
been as dramatic as in the Asia-Pacific, with annual recorded
battle deaths falling in the range of 50 to 75 percent between 1994
and 2004. Drawing on a wide range of case studies, this book looks
at internal conflicts based on the mobilization of ethnic and
nationalist grievances, which have been the most costly in human
lives over the last decade. The book identifies structures, norms,
practices and techniques that have either fuelled or moderated
conflicts. As such, it is an essential read for students and
scholars of international relations, peace and conflict studies and
Asian studies.
Since the publication of the 2005 Human Security Report, scholars
and policy-makers have debated the causes, interpretation and
implications of what the report described as a global decline in
armed conflict since the end of the Cold War. The Human Security
Project argues that 'the world is becoming less war-prone. In few
regions has the apparent decline in conflict been as dramatic as in
the Asia-Pacific, with annual recorded battle deaths falling in the
range of 50 to 75 percent between 1994 and 2004. Drawing on such a
wide range of case studies, this volume analyses the causes and
patterns of this decline in armed conflict by focusing on that
sub-set of conflicts that in the Asia-Pacific have been most costly
in human lives over the last decade: internal conflicts based on
the mobilization of ethnic and nationalist grievances. Diminishing
Conflicts in Asia and the Pacific identifies structures, norms,
practices and techniques that have either fuelled or moderated
conflicts. As such, it is an essential read for students and
scholars of international relations, peace and conflict studies and
Asian studies.
In India, you can still find the kabaadiwala, the rag-and-bone man.
He wanders from house to house buying old newspapers, broken
utensils, plastic bottles-anything for which he can get a little
cash. This custom persists and recreates itself alongside the new
economies and ecologies of consumer capitalism. Waste of a Nation
offers an anthropological and historical account of India's complex
relationship with garbage. Countries around the world struggle to
achieve sustainable futures. Assa Doron and Robin Jeffrey argue
that in India the removal of waste and efforts to reuse it also lay
waste to the lives of human beings. At the bottom of the pyramid,
people who work with waste are injured and stigmatized as they deal
with sewage, toxic chemicals, and rotting garbage. Terrifying
events, such as atmospheric pollution and childhood stunting, that
touch even the wealthy and powerful may lead to substantial changes
in practices and attitudes toward sanitation. And innovative
technology along with more effective local government may bring
about limited improvements. But if a clean new India is to emerge
as a model for other parts of the world, a "binding morality" that
reaches beyond the current environmental crisis will be required.
Empathy for marginalized underclasses-Dalits, poor Muslims,
landless migrants-who live, almost invisibly, amid waste produced
predominantly for the comfort of the better-off will be the
critical element in India's relationship with waste. Solutions will
arise at the intersection of the traditional and the cutting edge,
policy and practice, science and spirituality.
Professional, Ethical, Legal, and Educational Lessons in Medicine:
A Problem Based Approach provides a comprehensive review of the
complex and challenging field of professional medical practice. Its
problem-based format incorporates a vast pool of practical,
board-exam-style multiple-choice questions for self-assessment, and
is an ideal resource for exam preparation as well as ongoing
clinical education among trainees and clinicians The practice of
medicine is not only about clinical care of patients. Physicians
must navigate ethical conundrums, legal pitfalls, and quality
improvement issues while maintaining scrupulous professionalism and
being exemplary educators. This volume addresses common issues in
the realm of professional medical practice not typically covered in
other texts. Each of the 73 chapters presents a problem-based case
that branches out into an oral board examination type stem
questions. A discussion section with brief review articles
summarizes the most recent literature. Multiple-choice questions
with answers allows for comprehensive self-assessment or
interactive group quizzes. This book will appeal to medical and
allied health professionals in all specialties of medicine. It is
an excellent and hands-on reference for the related but diverse
domains associated with professional healthcare practice by
students, physicians, and other healthcare providers compacted into
one volume.
Updated to cover events between 1986 and 1992, including the
destruction of the mosque at Ayodhya in December 1992, the book
analyses the secessionist crisis in Punjab which led to Indira
Gandhi's murder and examines larger themes of ethnic conflict and
threats to Indian unity. The Punjab example sheds light on
processes at work in the rest of India, as the introduction to the
new edition of the book points out. It also considers the domestic
implications for India of a world in which 'socialism' and
'non-alignment' have lost much of their meaning.
The cheap mobile phone is arguably the most significant personal
communications device in history. In India, where caste hierarchy
has reinforced power for generations, the disruptive potential of
the mobile phone is even more striking than elsewhere. In 2001,
India had 35 million telephones, only four million of them mobiles.
Ten years later, it had more than 800 million phone subscribers;
more than 95 per cent were mobile phones. In a decade,
communications in India have been transformed by a device that can
be shared by fisherfolk in Kerala, boatmen in Banaras, great
capitalists in Mumbai and power-wielding politicians and
bureaucrats in New Delhi. Village councils banned unmarried girls
from having mobile phones. Families debated whether new brides
should surrender them. Cheap mobile phones became photo albums,
music machines and radios. Religious images and uplifting messages
flooded tens of millions of phones each day. Pornographers and
criminals found a tantalising new tool. In politics, organisations
with cadres of true believers exploited a resource infinitely more
effective than telegrams, postcards and the printing press for
carrying messages to workers, followers and voters. Jeffrey and
Doron focus on three groups - controllers: the bureaucrats,
politicians and capitalists who wrestle over control of radio
frequency spectrum; servants: the marketers, agents, technicians,
tower-builders, repairers and second-hand dealers who carry mobile
phones to the masses; and users: the politicians, activists,
businesses and households that adapt the mobile phone to their
needs. The book probes the whole universe of the mobile phone -
from the contests of great capitalists and governments to control
radio frequency spectrum, to the ways ordinary people build the
troublesome and addictive device into their daily lives.
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