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This volume is an overview of, and commentary on, aspects of
contemporary India and its socio-economic policies. It focuses on
India’s economy and society in recent years, and in the process
it addresses structural issues of development such as those of
population, poverty, inequality, health, and social exclusion. It
reviews the adequacy and appropriateness of governmental response
to these problems, in terms of public policy, narrowly conceived,
and philosophical orientation, more broadly conceived. The concern
is not only with economic achievement and human development but
also with the framework of civic rights, personal liberty, and
institutional autonomy within which the exercise of governance is
perceived to be carried out. The essays in this volume were
originally written with the general-reader-as-involved-citizen very
much in mind as the intended target. However, it should also be of
interest to scholars of economics, political science, development
studies, and South Asian studies.
This volume is about economists, economics, and issues of concern
to Indian society. Some essays are expository, and some satirical.
Together, they offer a commentary on the state of the discipline of
economics today and on aspects of contemporary India’s society
and polity. The volume affords insights into, among other things, -
the pervasive influence of economists such as Kenneth Arrow and
Anthony Atkinson, and thinkers such as Tom Paine, Jonathan Swift,
and Dadabhai Naoroji; - the place of markets and game theory (and
even crime fiction!) in present-day economics; - the affectations
and convoluted mathematisation of a good deal of ‘mainstream’
economics; and - India’s recent political climate, and the
conduct of various arms of the legislature, the executive, and the
judiciary in the country. Engaging and lucidly written, this volume
should be of interest to scholars of economics, political science,
development studies, South Asian studies, and, above all, the
general reader.
Succeed on the AWS Machine Learning exam or in your next job as a
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Certified Machine Learning Study Guide: Specialty (MLS-CO1) Exam
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considering the pursuit of the prestigious Amazon Web Services
Machine Learning certification or a new career as a machine
learning specialist working within the AWS architecture. From exam
to interview to your first day on the job, this study guide
provides the domain-by-domain specific knowledge you need to build,
train, tune, and deploy machine learning models with the AWS Cloud.
And with the practice exams and assessments, electronic flashcards,
and supplementary online resources that accompany this Study Guide,
you'll be prepared for success in every subject area covered by the
exam. You'll also find: An intuitive and organized layout perfect
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professionals seeking a refresher on machine learning on the AWS
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machine learning and data science Access to the Sybex online
learning resources and test bank, with chapter review questions, a
full-length practice exam, hundreds of electronic flashcards, and a
glossary of key terms AWS Certified Machine Learning Study Guide:
Specialty (MLS-CO1) Exam is an indispensable guide for anyone
seeking to prepare themselves for success on the AWS Certified
Machine Learning Specialty exam or for a job interview in the field
of machine learning, or who wishes to improve their skills in the
field as they pursue a career in AWS machine learning.
This book covers diverse themes, including institutions and
efficiency, choice and values, law and economics, development and
policy, and social and economic measurement. Written in honour of
the distinguished economist Satish K. Jain, this compilation of
essays should appeal not only to students and researchers of
economic theory but also to those interested in the design and
evaluation of institutions and policy.
This book covers diverse themes, including institutions and
efficiency, choice and values, law and economics, development and
policy, and social and economic measurement. Written in honour of
the distinguished economist Satish K. Jain, this compilation of
essays should appeal not only to students and researchers of
economic theory but also to those interested in the design and
evaluation of institutions and policy.
This volume is an overview of, and commentary on, aspects of
contemporary India and its socio-economic policies. It focuses on
India's economy and society in recent years, and in the process it
addresses structural issues of development such as those of
population, poverty, inequality, health, and social exclusion. It
reviews the adequacy and appropriateness of governmental response
to these problems, in terms of public policy, narrowly conceived,
and philosophical orientation, more broadly conceived. The concern
is not only with economic achievement and human development but
also with the framework of civic rights, personal liberty, and
institutional autonomy within which the exercise of governance is
perceived to be carried out. The essays in this volume were
originally written with the general-reader-as-involved-citizen very
much in mind as the intended target. However, it should also be of
interest to scholars of economics, political science, development
studies, and South Asian studies.
This volume is about economists, economics, and issues of concern
to Indian society. Some essays are expository, and some satirical.
Together, they offer a commentary on the state of the discipline of
economics today and on aspects of contemporary India's society and
polity. The volume affords insights into, among other things, - the
pervasive influence of economists such as Kenneth Arrow and Anthony
Atkinson, and thinkers such as Tom Paine, Jonathan Swift, and
Dadabhai Naoroji; - the place of markets and game theory (and even
crime fiction!) in present-day economics; - the affectations and
convoluted mathematisation of a good deal of 'mainstream'
economics; and - India's recent political climate, and the conduct
of various arms of the legislature, the executive, and the
judiciary in the country. Engaging and lucidly written, this volume
should be of interest to scholars of economics, political science,
development studies, South Asian studies, and, above all, the
general reader.
The book is a collection of essays written since 2010, and dealing,
in one way or another, with the place of values in economic
analysis. The centrality of values in the collection is not
surprising, given that the thematic concerns informing the essays
in the book relate principally to methodological issues in economic
enquiry, to the normatively constrained aggregation of personal
preferences into collective choice, and to problems of logical
coherence and ethical appeal in the axiom systems underlying the
measurement of economic and social phenomena such as poverty,
inequality and literacy. While many of the essays are more or less
technical in nature, they are all explicitly motivated by
considerations that go beyond the formalisms of presentation to an
involvement with the role of moral reasoning in economic analysis.
In particular, the essays emphasize the importance of 'ought
propositions' in a science which is all too often regarded as being
wholly and exclusively 'positive' in its orientation. The book
should be of particular interest to researchers, students, and
public policy makers.
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Digital Connectivity - Social Impact - 51st Annual Convention of the Computer Society of India, CSI 2016, Coimbatore, India, December 8-9, 2016, Proceedings (Paperback, 1st ed. 2016)
S. Subramanian, R. Nadarajan, Shrisha Rao, Shina Sheen
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R2,377
Discovery Miles 23 770
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 51st Annual
Convention of the Computer Society of India, CSI 2016, held in
Coimbatore, India, in December 2016. The 23 revised papers
presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 74 submissions.
The theme of CSI 2016, Digital Connectivity - Social Impact, has
been selected to highlight the importance of technology in solving
social problems and thereby creating a long term impact on society.
The papers are organized in topical sections on information
science; computational intelligence; network computing; IT for
society.
The book is a collection of essays written since 2010, and dealing,
in one way or another, with the place of values in economic
analysis. The centrality of values in the collection is not
surprising, given that the thematic concerns informing the essays
in the book relate principally to methodological issues in economic
enquiry, to the normatively constrained aggregation of personal
preferences into collective choice, and to problems of logical
coherence and ethical appeal in the axiom systems underlying the
measurement of economic and social phenomena such as poverty,
inequality and literacy. While many of the essays are more or less
technical in nature, they are all explicitly motivated by
considerations that go beyond the formalisms of presentation to an
involvement with the role of moral reasoning in economic analysis.
In particular, the essays emphasize the importance of 'ought
propositions' in a science which is all too often regarded as being
wholly and exclusively 'positive' in its orientation. The book
should be of particular interest to researchers, students, and
public policy makers.
This book provides an entry into the subjects of disparity and
deprivation, by attending to issues that have a bearing on certain
salient philosophical and conceptual aspects of these subjects. The
student doing a graduate course in the measurement of inequality
and poverty is all too often plunged directly into the complexities
of Schur-convex functions, dominance conditions, partial orders and
the axiomatics of characterization theorems. Inequality and poverty
as phenomena with profound social and moral implications for the
world we live in tend to get submerged in a treatment of the
subject that is more suggestive of applied mathematics than of the
material conditions of life. This is in no way to deny that
measurement must deal uncompromisingly with measurement, and
therefore with the protocols of formal logic and technical rigour.
Having said this, it seems fair to suggest that one's appreciation
of the formalities - as well as of the limitations and ambiguities
- of measurement is only aided by a relatively gentle introduction
to the subject. This would call for a prior, or accompanying,
engagement with the underlying concepts, the philosophical bases,
the political salience, the normative values, and the critical
facts of the subjects under investigation. It is this necessary
background that is emphasized in this book, which is a collection
of articles published earlier in the popular press, and intended
for consumption by any curious general reader or student with a
taste for critical enquiry. The contents of the book will be useful
as much for the aspiring scholar as for the interested lay reader
looking for a gateway into the subject.
Human rights stand for the dignified existence of the citizens in a
state and are fundamental and inalienable. The United Nations has
launched a massive movement for the observation of human rights by
all concerned and has brought into existence nearly 100 covenants,
instruments, principles and standards. In India, the Supreme Court
of India and the National Human Rights Commission are doing a
yeoman service in bringing home the truth to the errant on the
inevitability of observing human rights. By virtue of the duties
performed by them, police and security forces exercise coercive and
restrictive jurisdiction over fellow citizens. The author of this
work, Dr S. Subramanian seeks to explain that these duties can be
performed without violating the human rights of the citizens. He
states that training plays an important role in spreading awareness
for human rights observance among the rank and file. This title has
been designed to help the trainer in this task.
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