|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
This insightful volume examines the politics and contestations
around urban space in India's national capital, Delhi. Moving
beyond spectacular megaprojects and sites of consumption, this book
engages with ordinary space and everyday life. Sites and
communities analysed in this volume reveal the processes,
relations, and logics through which the city's grand plans are
executed. The contributors argue that urbanization is negotiated
and muddled, particularly in the spaces occupied by informal
labour, resettled communities, and small-scale investors. The
critical analyses in this volume shed light on the disjunctures
between planning and ideology, narratives of growth and realities
of immobility, and facades of modernity and the spaces and
practices produced in its pursuit. The book is organized in four
parts - (I) Dis/locating Bodies, (II) Claims at the Urban Frontier,
(III) Informalization and Investment, and (IV) Gendered Mobility.
The studies report current empirical work from a variety of sites,
investigating the dynamics of capital investment, state planning
and citizen response in these spaces. These studies, set in
ordinary spaces in Delhi, reveal a subliminal disarray of thought
and action, stemming from the impetus to make the city attractive
to capital, while having to manage marginality and reorganize
welfare functions. The volume provides fresh insights into the
nature of urban planning and governance in an Indian megacity two
decades after the neoliberal shift.
This book discusses air pollution in Delhi from scientific, social
and entrepreneurial perspectives. Using key debates and
interventions on air pollution, it examines the trajectories of
environmental politics in the Delhi region, one of the most
polluted areas in the world. It highlights the administrative
struggles, public advocacy, and entrepreneurial innovations that
have built creative new links between science and urban
citizenship. The book describes the atmosphere of collaboration
that pervades these otherwise disparate spheres in contemporary
Delhi. Key features: · Presents an original case study on urban
environmentalism from the Global South · Cuts across science,
policy, advocacy and innovation · Includes behind-the-scenes
discussions, tensions and experimentations in the Indian air
pollution space · Uses immersive ethnography to study a topical
and relevant urban issue As South Asian and Global South cities
confront fast-intensifying environmental risks, this study presents
a dialogue between urban political ecology (UPE) and science and
technology studies on Delhi’s air. The book explores how the
governance of air is challenged by scales, jurisdictions, and
institutional structures. It also shows how technical experts are
bridging disciplinary silos as they engage in advocacy by
translating science for public understanding. The book serves as a
reminder of the enduring struggles over space, quality of life, and
citizenship while pointing to the possibilities for different urban
futures being negotiated by variegated agents. The book will
interest scholars and researchers of science and technology
studies, urban studies, urban geography, environmental studies,
environmental politics, governance, public administration, and
sociology, especially in the Global South context. It will also be
useful to practitioners, policymakers, bureaucrats, government
bodies, civil society organisations, and those working on air
pollution advocacy.
Cyber security is one of the most critical problems faced by
enterprises, government organizations, education institutes, small
and medium scale businesses, and medical institutions today.
Creating a cyber security posture through proper cyber security
architecture, deployment of cyber defense tools, and building a
security operation center are critical for all such organizations
given the preponderance of cyber threats. However, cyber defense
tools are expensive, and many small and medium-scale business
houses cannot procure these tools within their budgets. Even those
business houses that manage to procure them cannot use them
effectively because of the lack of human resources and the
knowledge of the standard enterprise security architecture. In
2020, the C3i Center at the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur
developed a professional certification course where IT
professionals from various organizations go through rigorous
six-month long training in cyber defense. During their training,
groups within the cohort collaborate on team projects to develop
cybersecurity solutions for problems such as malware analysis,
threat intelligence collection, endpoint detection and protection,
network intrusion detection, developing security incidents, event
management systems, etc. All these projects leverage open-source
tools, and code from various sources, and hence can be also
constructed by others if the recipe to construct such tools is
known. It is therefore beneficial if we put these recipes out in
the form of book chapters such that small and medium scale
businesses can create these tools based on open-source components,
easily following the content of the chapters. In 2021, we published
the first volume of this series based on the projects done by
cohort 1 of the course. This volume, second in the series has new
recipes and tool development expertise based on the projects done
by cohort 3 of this training program. This volume consists of nine
chapters that describe experience and know-how of projects in
malware analysis, web application security, intrusion detection
system, and honeypot in sufficient detail so they can be recreated
by anyone looking to develop home grown solutions to defend
themselves from cyber-attacks.
Many small and medium scale businesses cannot afford to procure
expensive cybersecurity tools. In many cases, even after
procurement, lack of a workforce with knowledge of the standard
architecture of enterprise security, tools are often used
ineffectively. The Editors have developed multiple projects which
can help in developing cybersecurity solution architectures and the
use of the right tools from the open-source software domain. This
book has 8 chapters describing these projects in detail with
recipes on how to use open-source tooling to obtain standard cyber
defense and the ability to do self-penetration testing and
vulnerability assessment. This book also demonstrates work related
to malware analysis using machine learning and implementation of
honeypots, network Intrusion Detection Systems in a security
operation center environment. It is essential reading for
cybersecurity professionals and advanced students.
This book discusses air pollution in Delhi from scientific, social
and entrepreneurial perspectives. Using key debates and
interventions on air pollution, it examines the trajectories of
environmental politics in the Delhi region, one of the most
polluted areas in the world. It highlights the administrative
struggles, public advocacy, and entrepreneurial innovations that
have built creative new links between science and urban
citizenship. The book describes the atmosphere of collaboration
that pervades these otherwise disparate spheres in contemporary
Delhi. Key features: * Presents an original case study on urban
environmentalism from the Global South * Cuts across science,
policy, advocacy and innovation * Includes behind-the-scenes
discussions, tensions and experimentations in the Indian air
pollution space * Uses immersive ethnography to study a topical and
relevant urban issue As South Asian and Global South cities
confront fast-intensifying environmental risks, this study presents
a dialogue between urban political ecology (UPE) and science and
technology studies on Delhi's air. The book explores how the
governance of air is challenged by scales, jurisdictions, and
institutional structures. It also shows how technical experts are
bridging disciplinary silos as they engage in advocacy by
translating science for public understanding. The book serves as a
reminder of the enduring struggles over space, quality of life, and
citizenship while pointing to the possibilities for different urban
futures being negotiated by variegated agents. The book will
interest scholars and researchers of science and technology
studies, urban studies, urban geography, environmental studies,
environmental politics, governance, public administration, and
sociology, especially in the Global South context. It will also be
useful to practitioners, policymakers, bureaucrats, government
bodies, civil society organisations, and those working on air
pollution advocacy.
|
|