137 results
Search Results
2. Assessing challenges to the mobile wallet usage in India: an interpretive structural modelling approach.
- Author
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Rana, Nripendra P., Luthra, Sunil, and Rao, H. Raghav
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ELECTRONIC wallets ,STRUCTURAL models ,PAPER money ,CASH transactions ,PUBLIC-private sector cooperation ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Purpose: Mobile-based payment is increasing exponentially but in the developing country like India, consumers' perception is highly positive in daily cash transaction. The purpose of this research is to identify and examine the important challenges for mobile wallet (m-wallet) implementation in India. In the wake of COVID-19, one of the transmission mechanisms of this virus has been the coins and paper money passed between a buyer and a seller. As such m-wallet considered as a convenience of payment has become a necessity in light of the pandemic. Design/methodology/approach: The authors explored 19 unique sets of challenges selected from the literature and collected data from 14 experts from private sector, multinational corporations and mixed private and public partnership who have significant knowledge and experience of mobile payment implementation and use in their respective organisations. Also, the authors have used Interpretive Structural Modelling (ISM) methodology in developing a hierarchal model for the identified challenges. The authors implemented Cross-Impact Matrix Multiplication Applied to Classification (MICMAC) analysis to classify the identified challenges. Findings: The ISM-based framework is divided into nine different hierarchical levels. "Lack of strong regulatory compliance (Ch6)" has been recognised as the most important challenge, which inhibited the mobile wallet implementation, whereas "Perception of customers about the value of using mobile wallets (Ch11)" is the most dependent critical challenge. There are seven hierarchical layers in between the top and the bottom level with the varied number of challenges based on their driving and dependence power. Originality/value: This is the first research to the best of our knowledge that has not only comprehensively reviewed the m-wallet literature but also employed a unique ISM-MICMAC-based approach to develop a framework of challenges for the m-wallet implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. The emotional constraints of emancipatory information systems
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Vaidya, Ranjan and Myers, Michael D.
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- 2022
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4. Modeling the strategies to accelerate the natural gas business market growth in a developing country
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Rawat, Atul and Garg, Chandra Prakash
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- 2023
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5. Do comprehensive labor measures reduce the severity of the pandemic? Evidence from India
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Kumar Kujur, Sandeep and Goswami, Diti
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- 2022
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6. Do ownership structures and governance attributes matter for corporate sustainability reporting? An examination in the Indian context
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Kumar, Kishore, Kumari, Ranjita, Nandy, Monomita, Sarim, Mohd, and Kumar, Rakesh
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- 2022
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7. A study on entrepreneurial opportunities in digital health-care post-Covid-19 from the perspective of developing countries
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Khandelwal, Rahul, Kolte, Ashutosh, and Rossi, Matteo
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- 2022
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8. Women entrepreneurs in India: a systematic literature review.
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Baral, Rupashree, Dey, Chitra, Manavazhagan, Subhashri, and Kamalini, S.
- Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to organize the existing empirical research on women entrepreneurs (WEs) in India, highlight the research areas that have not received attention and present opportunities for future research. Design/methodology/approach: A systematic literature review (SLR) was performed on 74 scholarly articles focusing on WEs in India and published between 1993 and 2020. This review is structured around the 4W framework used in previous SLRs. The review is directed by the following foci: what do we know about academic research on WEs in India? How were these studies conducted? Where were these studies conducted? Why should academicians and practitioners consider WE research? Findings: The authors arrived at four main themes underlying the empirical research on WEs: success factors for WEs, challenges faced by WEs, factors that attract and motivate WEs and performance measures for WEs. While challenges and success factors have received attention from researchers, there is a distinct lack of papers on factors that attract or motivate WE and performance measures. The main gaps identified were a lack of theoretical basis in studies, reliance on interview and survey-based methodology and a lack of context-specific studies. Research limitations/implications: The findings of this review are limited to WEs operating in India. Only Scopus-indexed journals listed in the Australian Business Dean's Council Journal Quality List (ABDC JQL) were included in the final SLR list. Originality/value: This is one of the first studies to use a systematic approach to provide a detailed account of the state of the literature on women's entrepreneurship research in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Identifying entry points for adaptive governance in peri-urban Chennai (India): a multi-dimensional, multi-level, and multi-scalar approach.
- Author
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Woiwode, Christoph, Ramachandran, A., Philip, Tarun, Rishika, D., and Rajan, Sudhir Chella
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CLIMATE change ,DEVELOPING countries ,URBANIZATION ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Governing transitions have assumed increasing significance in managing change with respect to climate change and rapid periurbanization. In this respect, evidence from sustainability transitions research in South Asia stipulates the need for institutional innovations that are suitable to the governance context, which is characterized by a fuzzy field of "speculative frontiers," and strong hierarchically structured mechanisms. This paper focuses on Chennai, India to ascertain the potentials of "adaptive governance" in this periurban region of the Global South. We approach this by (a) defining the periurban space from a bio-regional, socioecological systems perspective, (b) complementing it with a zonal classification considering disaster and climate change risks, and (c) presenting an adaptive governance framework. Based on analyzing existing governance structures, the paper discusses identified syndromes, synergistic potentials and activities for adaptive governance, especially highlighting water and agroecologyrelated pathways. Our integrated analytical approach is (a) multi-dimensional deploying the adaptive governance framework, (b) multi-level considering local, intermediate and state governance, and (c) multi-scalar applying macro, meso and micro scales. The implications underscore that transformative interventions, sooner or later, will have to challenge the system that produces such climate vulnerabilities. In spite of several barriers, there are noteworthy indications of adaptive governance practices discernible in numerous niche projects in the Chennai region that demonstrate diverse embryonic forms to build more strategic and conscientious approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Waste picking in the age of COVID-19: an environmental justice perspective.
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Shanmugasundaram, Lalitha
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ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,COVID-19 pandemic ,ECOFEMINISM ,DEVELOPING countries ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,POLITICAL ecology - Abstract
All over the world, waste and its disposal are becoming a more prominent issue, as landfills swell up and growing evidence points to its contribution to climate change and environmental degradation. In the developing world, waste pickers sort through solid waste and sell it to vendors, who will recycle the product into something consumable. The work they do is vital to climate change mitigation, as well as urban cleanliness. In a way, waste pickers, especially in India, are vehicles of environmental justice, but they are often discriminated against and subjected to inhumane working conditions. In this environment, the pandemic hit, making waste pickers' already precarious life even worse. This paper attempts to fill the gap in the academic literature by compiling a systemized literature review of the impacts of COVID-19 on waste-pickers' lives using an environmental justice perspective. The review also uses a Feminist Political Ecology perspective to illuminate the double jeopardy that female waste pickers face in the era of COVID-19, which academia often ignores. Ultimately, this paper shows that COVID-19 exacerbated the preexisting injustices that the waste picker community face and created an immense burden on women. This paper will show that it is important to notice the differentiation between female and male waste picker challenges, especially at the crux of the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper has important policy implications as well as research considerations for both environmental justice and feminist political ecology scholars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Gender, caste, and street vending in India: Towards an intersectional geography.
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Saxena, Saanchi
- Subjects
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STREET vendors , *EVIDENCE gaps , *CASTE , *GENDER ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Through an analysis of the available literature on women street vendors in the Global South, and then specifically in India, this paper identifies several knowledge gaps and future directions for research. The paper makes three broad claims: (1) street vending spaces are fundamentally gendered spaces; (2) the intersectional identities and caste‐based locations of women street vendors shape their spatial experiences, material realities and access to power; and (3) gender and caste are co‐constituted categories that produce a spatiality unique to the Indian subcontinent. While the geographical approach towards street vending recognises the importance of space and considers vendors as spatial practitioners, vendors are often assumed to belong to a homogenous (male) category with differentials such as gender, race, age, ethnicity and caste invisibilised. This research gap is of even more critical importance in India where caste intersects with gender to produce space. Examining the literature on gender and street vending reveals three broad analytical themes—socio‐spatial disparities, politics of space, and strategies of control. What seems to be missing is a critical, qualitative focus on the experiences of women street vendors, the gendering of vending spaces, the recognition of caste as a dynamic factor, and a spatial analysis grounded in the Southern urban context. Ultimately, this paper makes the case for a situated and postcolonial feminist geography approach to street vending in India, and calls for an intersectional research agenda that is attentive to the co‐constitution of caste and gender in the production of urban space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. The historical sociology of medicine in India: Introduction to the special section.
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Jeffery, Roger, Jones, David S., and Kumbhar, Kiran
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HISTORY of sociology , *PROFESSIONALISM , *MEDICAL specialties & specialists , *HEALTH , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *DISEASES , *PHYSICIAN-patient relations , *MEDICINE ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This introduction to a special section brings together three papers first presented at a panel, 'Medical Professions in South Asia: Historical and Contemporary Analyses', at the 26th European Conference on South Asian Studies, held in Vienna, Austria and online, in July 2021. All three papers deal with aspects of the professionalisation of biomedical doctors in India since its independence in 1947. The authors bring together historical and sociological approaches to illuminate the growth of specialisms, patterns of practitioner–patient interactions and efforts to maintain occupational closure and maintain status in the face of growing challenges. The introduction concludes with a discussion of the relevance of these papers for the sociology of health and illness in India and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Pluralizing the urban waste economy: insights from community-based enterprises in Ahmedabad (India) and Kampala (Uganda).
- Author
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Oates, Lucy, Kasaija, Peter, Sseviiri, Hakimu, Sudmant, Andrew, Ersoy, Aksel, and Van Bueren, Ellen
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SOLID waste management ,FREELANCERS ,SUSTAINABILITY ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC efficiency ,RAGPICKERS ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) - Abstract
The delivery of urban basic infrastructure services is often guided by the modern infrastructure ideal, which aims for technical innovation, economic efficiency and uniformity through long-term, centralized management approaches. In rapidly growing urban centres of the global South, however, heterogeneous infrastructure configurations have long involved multiple systems in varying degrees of coexistence. This paper explores how community-based enterprises – organizations that aim not to turn a profit but rather to generate human well-being – contribute to, complement or conflict with wider municipal solid waste management strategies. It does so through two case studies, focused on Luchacos, a local enterprise turning waste into briquettes in an informal settlement of Kampala, Uganda; and the Self Employed Women's Association (SEWA), a cooperative of waste pickers in Ahmedabad, India. Drawing on empirical data and policy analysis, the research finds that, given the necessary state support, community-based enterprises can contribute to a range of sustainability and development objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Smart city place-based outcomes in India: bubble urbanism and socio-spatial fragmentation.
- Author
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Prasad, Deepti, Alizadeh, Tooran, and Dowling, Robyn
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SMART cities ,URBAN growth ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Despite the bourgeoning of smart city initiatives across the Global South, their implementation and place-based outcomes remain understudied. This paper presents empirical studies in three Indian cities of Bhubaneswar, Pune and Chennai; three of the first 20 smart cities prioritized for implementation in the Smart Cities Mission. It investigates the place-based outcomes utilized to create smart cities under three categories of mega-, placemaking, and lighthouse projects. The results show varying levels of urban interventions contributing to 'bubble urbanism' – a fragmented combination of large-scale mega-projects and small-scale revitalization projects – with complex socio-spatial implications for smart city development in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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15. Venture capital industry emergence and development in India and Brazil: the role of the state and challenges for the Global South countries.
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Gonzalo, Manuel, Guimaraes Alves, Nathalia, Federico, Juan, Szapiro, Marina, and Kantis, Hugo
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DEVELOPING countries ,VENTURE capital ,COUNTRIES ,INFORMAL sector - Abstract
Most governments around the world are fostering innovation and entrepreneurial systems with a prominent role for venture capital (VC) support policies. However, the debate about the role and impact of VC support policies is still focused on the countries of the Global North. In this context, this paper seeks to describe and analyse the role that the state has played in the emergence and development of the VC industry in India and Brazil, two of the biggest economies of the Global South. We adopt a systemic and evolutionary perspective under the general context of a renewed role for the state in financing innovation. We offer interesting questions and implications to discuss the challenges, scale and impact that could be expected from VC industry support policies in the Global South countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. How do Venture Capital Investors Select Proposals: An Evidence from India.
- Author
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Mustafa, Mohammad
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VENTURE capital ,LEADERSHIP ,NEW business enterprises ,VENTURE capital companies ,INTERNATIONAL markets ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to explore the parameters, which venture capital investors prioritize while evaluating proposals. The deal selection procedure in actuality is different from the said procedure Zacharakis and Meyer (1998). Therefore, asking Venture Capital (VC) firms to rank each criterion that they use while evaluating a proposal will not be able to capture the true evaluation criteria. Further, VCs' decision varies based on the set of deals on their table. To address this problem, VCs should be asked to reveal the strength and weaknesses of the received proposals in each parameter and then their final decision on those proposals. Therefore, this study examines the decision-making criteria with reference to 441 samples of accepted and rejected proposals. This paper reveals that leadership quality, product/service superiority, revenue projection, and access to foreign market are strong determinant of VCs investment decision. Hence, in deal selection procedure, venture capitalists can reduce their evaluation process to these parameters only. In developing countries like India, availability of information regarding start-ups is highly asymmetric. Therefore, considering a proposal based on these most important parameters will enhance their decision-making process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
17. Africa beyond 'South‐South cooperation': A frame with limited resonance.
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Haug, Sebastian and Kamwengo, Cynthia M.
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INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,RESONANCE ,COOPERATION ,AFRICANS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
With reference to frames as socially determined definitions of reality, this paper examines the discrepancies between the prominence of 'South‐South cooperation' terminology in globally dominant discourses and its limited usage by African stakeholders. Based on insights from the United Nations, (cross‐)regional collaboration formats and bilateral cooperation, we find that African officials employ 'South‐South' terminology mainly when 'Northern' partners are present but use other frames when engaging with developing countries. This limited resonance poses a challenge to multilateral organisations and traditional donors in their attempts to expand engagement with 'South‐South' relations. A focus on the usage and effects of frames, we argue, can clarify the assumptions based on which international cooperation unfolds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Knowledge transfer, buyer-supplier relationship and supplier performance in agricultural supply chain: an agency theory perspective.
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Shukla, Suwarna, Kapoor, Rohit, Gupta, Narain, and Arunachalam, Deepak
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AGENCY theory ,FARM supplies ,KNOWLEDGE transfer ,SUPPLY chains ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to examine the performance of marginalized farmers in supply relationships with agri-tech firms in emerging rural agricultural economies. The complex relationship among the suppliers, dual relationship and knowledge transfer (KT) was studied. This paper empirically investigates the relationship between KT and supplier's performance improvement (SPI) via buyer–supplier relationship (BSR). Design/methodology/approach: Grounded on agency theory, a conceptual framework has been proposed to identify the mediation effect of BSR. The context deals with suppliers who are farmers in developing nations. The hypotheses were tested using confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation with a sample of 121 marginalized farmers from Indian states. The data was collected using a survey instrument designed by adapting the well-cited and validated measures. These marginalized farmers worked in collaboration with the agri-tech firms facilitating them with the KT. Findings: The relationships established from the results also indicate the fact that KT is a powerful tool to make connections with farmers that lead to their performance improvement. The KT was found as a driver to improve performance (SPI) and the BSR acted as a positive mediator in this study. The complex relationships among the KT, BSR and SPI hold. Research limitations/implications: This paper can be subscribed to various nuanced understandings of the agricultural supply chain context in emerging economies, in the specialized cases where farmers belong to the marginalized communities. This study has the scope to replicate using a mixed-method approach in emerging economies beyond India. It also advances the agency theory literature in the supply chain discipline of emerging rural economies. Practical implications: This study offers strategic implications for agri-tech practitioners, policymakers and academic debate. The marginalized farmers with KT and improved BSR can become a part of the mainstream value chain, their debts can be reduced, suicides can be prevented and the quality of their family life can be significantly improved. Originality/value: This study makes a unique contribution by investigating how the agri-tech firms (non-traditional buyer) and supplier relationship and KT helps improve the economic sustainability of smallholder farmers in India. The authors immersed themselves in fieldwork by interacting and meeting in person with 121 farmers residing in the remotest of the remote rural areas across multiple states of India. This resulted in the collection of authentic data and capturing the ground realities from one of the fastest-growing and largest emerging economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. Prefabrication and Transnational Building Materials in Modern India.
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Jain, Priya
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DEVELOPING countries ,LIGHTWEIGHT concrete ,CONCRETE products ,ARCHIVAL materials ,EVALUATORS ,CONSTRUCTION materials - Abstract
This paper analyzes the introduction of European prefabrication building systems in India in the years immediately after independence from Britain in 1947, through the lens of two episodes. In each case, the analysis challenges the often-perceived notion of the local, in this case Indian, actors in the Global South as mere recipients of superior foreign technologies, positing them instead as critical assessors, evaluators and decision makers. In the first example of UK's Alcrete House, well known as the reason for German architect Otto Koenigsberger's infamous departure from India, the paper examines archival materials, discussed here for the first time, to shed light on the role of Indian players who demanded accountability from foreign experts. In the second lesser-known example of the Swiss lightweight concrete building product, Durisol, the analysis highlights the role of local architects like Shaukat Rai, who deployed his own transnational and intranational networks in the product's bid to enter the Indian construction market in the early 1950s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Labor supply responses to rainfall shocks.
- Author
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Maitra, Pushkar and Tagat, Anirudh
- Subjects
LABOR supply ,AGRICULTURAL productivity ,TIME management ,WORKING capital ,DEVELOPING countries ,HUMAN capital - Abstract
Agricultural production in developing countries is heavily rainfall dependent. Any unexpected variation in rainfall can affect the welfare of households. Using unit record data from India, this paper shows that households can insure against agricultural productivity (rainfall) shocks. Evidence suggests that they do so by varying the time allocation of individual members to different activities, particularly to regular wage work and human capital accumulation. There is a gender‐differentiated aspect to this response. Rainfall shocks adversely affect women's human capital accumulation. While there is no evidence that households use participation in NREGS to insure against rainfall shocks, the availability of NREGS helps reduce the impact of rainfall shocks on human capital accumulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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21. North–South digital divide: A comparative study of personal and positional inequalities in USA and India.
- Author
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Mammen, Jeffin Thomas, Rugmini Devi, M, and Girish Kumar, R
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DIGITAL divide ,GLOBAL North-South divide ,HUMAN Development Index ,DEVELOPING countries ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic created one of the biggest disruptions in human life. We were all confined within the walls of our homes or offices with day-to-day life worldwide seriously affected. In this context, access to and efficient use of technology determined the course of daily life for vast sections of the world's population. However, there was (and still is) a severe pre-existing global divide between the Global North and Global South vis-à-vis digital access. This paper attempts to understand this digital divide and how it has widened during the pandemic in the Global North and Global South with reference to India and the United States (US). This is initiated by analyzing certain factors within each country, namely positional and personal categorical inequalities. Through the cases of the US and India, the authors conclude that the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the global digital divide between the two worlds, affecting core social sectors like education and health. The larger implication of this is a broadening inequality between the Global North and Global South in leading development indicators like the Human Development Index. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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22. Predicting intention of business students to behave ethically in the Indian context: from the perspective of Theory of Planned Behaviour.
- Author
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Marmat, Geeta
- Subjects
BUSINESS students ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,BUSINESS ethics ,DEVELOPING countries ,SOCIAL systems - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to understand business students' intention to behave ethically in general, and in particularly in the business context of a developing country, India. Design/methodology/approach: The paper surveyed 250 final semester MBA students from different business schools in Indore city of Madhya Pradesh in India. The study employed the most popular behavioural theory, the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) to understand the intention of business students to behave ethically. Structural equation modelling was used to analyse direct effects of the constructs on behavioural intention, and the overall model. Findings: Findings revealed that attitude, subjective norm and perceived behavioural control are positively related and have strong influence on ethical behavioural intention of business students. All constructs together explain 67 percent variance in intention. Attitude alone contributes 46 percent in explaining variance in ethical behavioural intention. Research limitations/implications: Business ethics field can benefit from this study as it provides an empirical explanation of the contribution of each factor that is, attitude, subjective norms and perceived behavioural control, in ethical behavioural intention of business students. This is directly beneficial for business schools and for education policymakers as the information can help policymakers to understand the potential of existing business ethics education. This study is limited to a data set of 250 business students in the context of a single country which cannot be generalized. So, there is need for research of this type in a more collaborative international context. Originality/value: To the best of my knowledge, this is the first study in the Indian context to predict the intention of business students to behave ethically, using the TPB model. This study contributes valuable knowledge to the domain of business ethics, behavioural studies as well the field of business education, and suggests to explore ways to strengthen the three constructs attitude, subjective norm and perceived behavioural control, as these constructs were found to have a strong influence in forming ethical behavioural intention of business students of business schools in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Therapeutic Hypothermia for Neonatal Encephalopathy in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Literature Review.
- Author
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Diggikar, Shivashankar and Krishnegowda, Roshani
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THERAPEUTIC hypothermia ,MIDDLE-income countries ,BRAIN diseases ,LITERATURE reviews ,PHASE change materials ,INDUCED hypothermia ,NEONATAL diseases ,CEREBRAL anoxia-ischemia ,ASPHYXIA neonatorum ,DEVELOPING countries ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Aims: This structured review aimed to discuss the existing literature on therapeutic hypothermia for moderate to severe neonatal encephalopathy exclusively in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).Methods: Medline, Embase, CINHAL and Cochrane Registry were searched for original papers with therapeutic hypothermia (TH) for treating neonatal encephalopathy in LMIC with no language restrictions. The search identified 1413 papers from 1990 to 31 August 2021.Results: Twenty-one original papers were included after duplicates removal and full-text screening in the final review. Fourteen randomized control studies and seven non-randomized studies were discussed with various modes of cooling (servo-controlled, phase changing material, traditional methods), complications during cooling, mortality and long-term neurodevelopmental assessment. Although there is sufficient evidence in LMIC favouring cooling for the reduction in mortality and improving the neurodevelopmental outcomes, nonetheless these studies were widely heterogeneous in terms of method of cooling, tools for assessing developmental outcomes, age at assessment and variations in neuroimaging tools and reporting.Conclusion: Therapeutic hypothermia is beneficial in LMICs with low certainty of evidence in reducing mortality and improving neurodevelopmental outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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24. Pandemics and consumer well‐being from the Global South.
- Author
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Das, Arindam and Chaudhuri, Himadri Roy
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DEVELOPING countries ,PANDEMICS ,SUSTAINABILITY ,CRITICAL currents ,CONSUMER research - Abstract
This introductory article makes a critical estimation of the impact of pandemics on the Global South consumer's well‐being. Our paper moves beyond the concerns of the other papers of this Special Issue. Instead, we focus on the issues of the vulnerable, marginal, and subaltern consumers of the Global South—experiences and anxieties, distinct from those of more "modern," capitalized, industrialized, democratized, and economically liberated Global North consumers. We offer the North–South comparisons across national lines or from block to block that bring in a series of promising directions and new currents in the critical, interdisciplinary studies of consumer affairs. Primary perspectives and associated topics for future agenda impacting TCR highlighted are (i) socio‐economic inequalities and injustices, (ii) environmental injustice and sustainable future. We finally suggest an innovative research paradigm, "altruistic‐activist consumer research," to address the concerns and impact the well‐being of marginal consumers from the Global South. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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25. Work and social reproduction in rural India: Lessons from time‐use data.
- Author
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Rao, Smriti, Ramnarain, Smita, Naidu, Sirisha, Uppal, Anupama, and Mukherjee, Avanti
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- *
SOCIAL reproduction , *SOCIAL services , *CASTE , *DECOLONIZATION ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Efforts to decentre/decolonize our understanding of capitalist development in the Global South call for more complex and differentiated categories of work that acknowledge the significance of both non‐waged and reproductive labour. These categories would allow us to more clearly 'see' the varying intersections of gender, class and caste within this world of work. Even as the literature on work in the Global South acknowledges the importance of forms of non‐waged work, there is still more work to be done to sufficiently incorporate the labour of social reproduction. In this paper, which emerges from an effort to apply a feminist social reproduction lens in the field, we propose understanding work through four conceptual dyads: waged productive labour, non‐waged productive labour, waged reproductive labour and non‐waged reproductive labour. Through an in‐depth description of three specific cases from a time‐use survey we conducted in rural Punjab, India, we argue not only that all four dyads are required to encompass the world of work but also that this more expansive conceptualization can help us produce richer analyses of the intersections of class, caste and gender. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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26. Hypermarketization: standardized shopping in emerging economies.
- Author
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Fischer, Johan
- Subjects
- *
EMERGING markets , *CONSUMERISM , *DEPARTMENT stores , *CONSUMER culture theory , *VEGETARIANISM , *OPENING ceremonies ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
A hypermarket is a combined supermarket and department store that carries a large range of products. Since the opening of the first hypermarket in the US in the early 1930s, this concept has spread globally. Nowhere is this trend more visible than in India, now the world's most populous country with a middle class that will expectedly grow to 800 million in 2030. This paper coins the theory of hypermarketization to explain why and how the hypermarket as a globalized form signifies the full integration of liberalization, retail and middle-class consumer culture in emerging markets. The argument that hypermarketization marks the point when successful economies in the Global South mature and then qualify as emerging markets is based on empirical material from fieldwork on vegetarianism and meat in hypermarkets and among middle-class groups in South India, namely participant observation and interviewing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Growing Like India—the Unequal Effects of Service‐Led Growth.
- Author
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Fan, Tianyu, Peters, Michael, and Zilibotti, Fabrizio
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STANDARD of living ,SERVICE industries ,CUSTOMER services ,GROWTH industries ,DEVELOPING countries ,RESIDENTIAL real estate - Abstract
Structural transformation in most currently developing countries takes the form of a rapid rise in services but limited industrialization. In this paper, we propose a new methodology to structurally estimate productivity growth in service industries that circumvents the notorious difficulties in measuring quality improvements. In our theory, the expansion of the service sector is both a consequence—due to income effects—and a cause—due to productivity growth—of the development process. We estimate the model using Indian household data. We find that productivity growth in nontradable consumer services such as retail, restaurants, or residential real estate was an important driver of structural transformation and rising living standards between 1987 and 2011. However, the welfare gains were heavily skewed toward high‐income urban dwellers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Global value chains and product sophistication in developing countries; the case of Indian manufacturing.
- Author
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Banga, Karishma
- Subjects
GLOBAL value chains ,DEVELOPING countries ,PROPENSITY score matching ,COMMERCIAL policy ,PRODUCT improvement ,FOREIGN investments - Abstract
This paper examines whether linking into Global Value Chains (GVCs) can facilitate product upgrading in developing country firms, enabling them to climb up the value-chain ladder. The analysis is conducted using an unbalanced panel of Indian manufacturing firms in the period 2001–2015. Extensive data at the product-firm level is used to construct a sales-weighted average product sophistication level of Indian firms. To account for econometric issues of endogeneity and self-selection, the study employs the System GMM estimator and Propensity Score Matching (PSM). Findings indicate that linking into GVCs boosts the average product sophistication level of Indian firms by roughly 2 percent. Younger, more innovative, and more embedded GVC firms capture higher product sophistication gains from GVCs, while no significant impact is found for foreign investment. Results are robust to the use of different measurement techniques, model and lag specifications and methodologies. Findings suggest that designing trade policies in developing countries to increase GVC integration can enable product upgrading but there is a need to boost internal innovative capabilities to maximise gains from linking into GVCs. Further, the study raises important concerns regarding the future of export sophistication in India, demonstrating a shift in India's GVC trade towards the Global South and its tendency to export less sophisticated goods to Southern partners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Evolving Policy Framework of Outward FDI from India.
- Author
-
Jain, Vandana
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,DEVELOPED countries ,MANUFACTURING industries ,SERVICE industries - Abstract
The present paper seeks to study the evolving policy paradigm of Indian outward foreign Investment, especially from the year 2000 till the present. Indian overseas investment has gone through a multitude of overhauls since the liberalization and globalization era of the 1990s.. The study, while highlighting the changing sectoral and geographical composition of Indian OFDI from 2000-2021, underpins the pivotal role played by the Indian Government in fostering gradual but steady policy reforms for calibrating the suitable ecosystem for overseas investment by Indian MNCs. The paper’s findings suggest that developed nations are preferred over developing ones owing to the desire of acquiring strategic assets while the service sector grabs the larger share over the manufacturing sector with respect to cross-border OFDI deals from India. The research suggests further liberalization of services like communication, education and personal services to augment the contribution of the service sector in India's OFDI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Exploring financial risks disclosure: evidence from Indian listed companies.
- Author
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Khandelwal, Chandani, Kumar, Satish, and Verma, Deepak
- Subjects
FINANCIAL disclosure ,FINANCIAL risk ,DISCLOSURE ,CORPORATION reports ,STOCK exchanges ,DEVELOPING countries ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to contribute to the existing literature on financial risk disclosure by examining a sample of non-financial Indian companies listed on the Bombay stock exchange (BSE) to explore the degree of information about financial risks contained in their annual reports. Design/methodology/approach: To study the financial risk disclosure of Indian companies, a sample of 206 non-financial companies has been derived from the top 500 listed companies at BSE. The method used in this study to analyze risk disclosure is content analysis. A total of 1,854 annual reports are scanned through software Nvivo-12 to find different types of risk words. Overall, risk disclosure, category wise risk disclosure, year-wise risk disclosure and sector-wise risk disclosure are assessed. The risk disclosure index is also computed. Findings: The results show that there are some risk disclosure practices in Indian companies. No general pattern is observed. Companies are following vague method of risk disclosure. In the true sense, Indian companies are now started risk disclosure practices since 2018. This may be because of pressure from regulating bodies and stakeholders with greater detail about their financial risks. Originality/value: This study is carried out for Indian non-financial companies. The paper adds to the literature relating to financial risk disclosure in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A knowledge-based view of emerging market firm internationalization: the case of the Indian IT industry.
- Author
-
Ray, Pradeep, Ray, Sangeeta, and Kumar, Vikas
- Subjects
ABSORPTIVE capacity (Economics) ,INFORMATION technology industry ,EMERGING markets ,BUSINESSPEOPLE ,DEVELOPING countries ,TACIT knowledge - Abstract
Purpose: Contemporary frameworks in the resource-based view (RBV) of the firm observe that the proprietary firm-specific assets of multinational companies (MNCs) from developed economies give them competitive advantage in international markets. However, the question "how do emerging market firms (EMFs) achieve accelerated internationalisation in knowledge based industries – despite not possessing proprietary assets and lacking critical elements of innovation eco-systems, institutions and infrastructure" has yet to be addressed. This paper aims to adopt a knowledge-based view (KBV) of the firm, identifying knowledge, both inside and outside of the firm, as a critical element for the internationalization of EMFs. Design/methodology/approach: This research entailed deductive econometric analyses using panel data analysis from 925 firm-year observations, which tested our predictions on capabilities that contribute to the internationalization of EMFs from the IT industry in India. Findings: The findings of the authors' panel data analysis reveal that the capacity to internationalize is predicated by knowledge leverage in three principal domains: absorptive capacity, tacit knowledge and knowledge-codification. This study shows internationalization is driven by higher-order capabilities of EMFs that draw on the absorptive capacity of individuals and collectives as a dynamic capability to serve international clients worldwide. Research limitations/implications: This study highlights that the process by which EMFs gain competence is different to the Western MNCs insofar as the extent to which EMFs have to stretch their efforts of learning from clients. Practical implications: For practitioners, the findings of this research are a useful guide to understand that EMFs need to make strategic investments to understand the idiosyncrasies of a variety of clients' needs and operating environments to dynamically adapt, document the learning and leverage the tacit knowledge. Social implications: This study captures the innate ability of entrepreneurs in emerging economies to unlock their potential in human capital for globalizing operations and targeting new market segments in the industry. This can directly benefit in uplifting the income level of millions in relatively underdeveloped countries and bringing about much-needed equity in the level of income in the society. Originality/value: The value of this study lies in its novel and contemporary insight on how EMFs leapfrog in a fast-changing technology space. What distinguishes the work from the static framework in literature is that EMFs learning is dynamic, and happens in an interactive mode, alongside clients in close proximity. This study captures the innate ability of entrepreneurs to unlock the potential of human capital in emerging economies for globalizing operations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Mini-Grids at the Interface: The Deployment of Mini-Grids in Urbanizing Localities of the Global South.
- Author
-
Guillou, Emmanuelle and Girard, Bérénice
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,RENEWABLE energy transition (Government policy) ,RURAL geography ,GRIDS (Cartography) ,GREY literature - Abstract
Based on fieldwork conducted in Senegal, Tanzania, and India, this article argues for a territorialized approach to mini-grids. One of the most sought-after solutions to electrification and transition to renewable energies in the Global South, mini-grids can be defined as decentralized collective systems of electricity supply. Whereas the academic and grey literature has mostly focused on their presence in rural areas, this paper looks at their development in urbanizing localities. It documents access to electrical service in these spaces and shows that, behind the rather uniform vision associated with the mini-grid object, the service provided takes different forms depending on the environment in which it is deployed. The presence of mini-grids also raises issues of social and territorial equity of access to essential services. A territorialized approach to mini-grids, therefore, furthers our understanding of the complex energy changes at work in cities of the Global South. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Duty, Discipline, and Dreams: Childhood and Time in Hindutva Nation.
- Author
-
Thapliyal, Nisha
- Subjects
HINDUTVA ,SECONDARY school students ,DEVELOPING countries ,SOCIAL hierarchies ,AUTHORITARIANISM - Abstract
Childhood and time constitute key sites of regulation for nationalist authoritarian regimes. However, the influence of time on contemporary nationalist discourses of childhood located in the Global South remains an underresearched area. This paper critically analyzes two spectacles involving Hindu nationalist Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and secondary school students on the occasions of Teachers Day 2014 and 2015. Temporal language, markers, and symbols rooted in discourses of colonialism/Orientalism, Brahminical Hinduism, and capitalist development are deconstructed to show how nationalist constructions of childhood can penetrate deep into the everyday lives of particular children who are deemed worthy to serve their nation. The paper concludes by highlighting specific ways in which time and temporality are weaponized to reproduce and legitimize a social hierarchy of childhoods that is necessary to sustain Hindu ethno-religious nationalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Environmental behaviour under credit constraints – Evidence from panel of Indian manufacturing firms.
- Author
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Ghosh, Debarati and Dutta, Meghna
- Subjects
- *
CORPORATE debt financing , *SUSTAINABLE development , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *CAPITAL financing ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
• Financial barrier is an encumbrance for eco-investment for firms. • The linkage between environmental behavior and credit accessibility is driven by the ownership structure. • The paper also investigates the relationship between credit access and corporate environmental behavior according to the pollution intensity of firms. Firms play a major role in facilitating green growth in developing nations by promoting environmental protection investment to control pollution caused during the manufacturing process. The paper explores whether the financial vulnerability of firms curbs their investment towards environmental practices that eliminate the creation of wastes or pollutants and hence acts as a deterrent towards green economy. Using firm-level data for manufacturing firms from 2010 to 2019, it is confirmed that financial barrier is an encumbrance for eco-investment by firms. We also focus on the environmental behavior of firms classified according to their ownership structure observing that government-owned firms (GOFs) tend to rely less on their internal and debt capital to finance their environmental investment, whereas private-owned firms (POFs) rely mainly on their internal capital. However, internal financing methods have generally no significant impact on the eco-investment decision of foreign-owned firms (FOFs). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Do developing countries gain by participating in global value chains? Evidence from India.
- Author
-
Veeramani, Choorikkad and Dhir, Garima
- Subjects
GLOBAL value chains ,DEVELOPING countries ,DIVIDEND policy ,PANEL analysis - Abstract
Is it in the interest of a developing country to promote strong local linkages for domestic industries or to participate in global value chains (GVCs) wherein linkages are globally dispersed? This paper informs this debate by empirically analyzing which one of these strategies would result in higher levels of domestic value added (DVA) and employment in India. Using a unique panel data on DVA and jobs tied to Indian exports from 112 sectors for the period 1999–2000 to 2012–2013, we show that greater backward GVC participation—use of imported inputs to produce for exports—leads to higher absolute levels of gross exports, DVA and employment. This result implies that labor abundant countries can reap dividends by adopting policies aimed at strengthening their backward participation in GVCs. Our findings are robust to various estimation techniques and instrumental variable approaches to address potential endogeneity concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Unlocking India’s Potential in Managing Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs): Importance, Challenges, and Opportunities
- Author
-
Sharma, Brij Mohan, Scheringer, Martin, Chakraborty, Paromita, Bharat, Girija K., Steindal, Eirik Hovland, Trasande, Leonardo, and Nizzetto, Luca
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Service innovations in mobile banking for creating value for the poor in developing countries.
- Author
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Gaur, Aakanksha and Potnis, Devendra Dilip
- Subjects
MOBILE banking industry ,DEVELOPING countries ,BANKING industry ,INFORMATION & communication technologies ,FINANCIAL leverage ,MOBILE learning - Abstract
Mobile banking is a service innovation in the banking industry. Extant research has demonstrated that the goal of any service innovation is to create value for stakeholders including consumers. Despite the consensus that information and communication technologies (ICTs) can be leveraged to deliver financial services to the poor, few studies have examined the process through which mobile banking service providers create value for consumers. Building on concepts from service‐dominant logic and service science, this paper posits that the delivery of such mobile banking services requires a repertoire of information and communication technology (ICT) as well as non‐ICT resources. Specifically, Cashpor a mobile banking service provider, that provides mobile banking financial services to rural females is examined. The research traces the implementation of key service innovations by configurations of three resources—people, technology, and information, and three mechanisms—knowledge integration, technology integration, and governance—through which value‐creating benefits of social, financial, and psychological benefits are achieved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. EXPLORING SUSTAINABILITY FACETS OF PROPOOR TOURISM PROGRAMS IN INDIA.
- Author
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Vinodan, A. and Manalel, J.
- Subjects
SOCIAL sustainability ,FOOD tourism ,TOURISM ,SUSTAINABILITY ,FACTOR analysis ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper intends to explore local-specific sustainability facets of pro-poor tourism initiated in India's Protected Area (PA). Mixed methodology, i.e., interview and structured questionnaire adopted for data collection and followed by the factor analysis for testing hypothesis. The result indicates that the sustainability facets of pro-poor tourism have five distinct facets: monetary, environmental, societal, cultural heritage, and governance. The study assumes significance in the pro-poor approach in tourism development for addressing various Sustainable Development Goals and in understating the ground-level reality of sustainability in the context of tourism-led development in developing countries. It also throws light on setting standards for approach-based tourism programs that cater to various segments of society and the environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Theorizing community health governance for strengthening primary healthcare in LMICs.
- Author
-
Madon, Shirin and Krishna, S
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,PRIMARY health care ,IMPACT of Event Scale ,RESEARCH funding ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In recent years, community health governance structures have been established in many low and middle-income countries (LMICs) as part of decentralization policies aimed at strengthening primary healthcare systems. So far, most studies on these local structures either focus on measuring their impact on health outcome or on identifying the factors that affect their performance. In this paper we offer an alternative contribution that draws on a sociological interpretation of community health governance to improve understanding of how the government's policy vision and instrumentation translate to interactions that take place within local spaces at field level. We study 13 Village Health Sanitation and Nutrition Committees (VHSNCs) in Karnataka, India, from 2016 to 2018 focusing on sanitation, nutrition and hygiene which remain impediments to improving primary healthcare amongst poor and marginalized communities. Three local governance mechanisms of horizontal coordination, demand for accountability and self-help help to explain improvements that have taken place at village level and contribute to the creation of a new theory of community health governance as evolving phenomenon that requires a constant process of learning from the field to strengthen policymaking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Digesting agriculture development: nutrition-oriented development and the political ecology of rice–body relations in India.
- Author
-
Nichols, Carly E.
- Subjects
POLITICAL ecology ,POLITICAL development ,RICE ,FOOD consumption ,ENVIRONMENTAL health ,AGRICULTURE ,CULTIVARS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Nutrition-sensitive agriculture (NSA) has emerged as a major development paradigm that works to diversify crops and diets throughout the Global South in order to improve nutritional outcomes. Drawing on a conceptual framework from political ecologies of health that looks at political economic factors, social discourse, and embodied, material experiences of food, I analyze qualitative and ethnographic data from an integrated NSA intervention in Madhya Pradesh and Jharkhand, India. The analysis shows that while embodied experiences of differing rice varieties (either indigenous or improved) were central to research participants' conceptions of bodily health, mainstream NSA metrics had trouble 'seeing' these relations in meaningful ways. Moreover, although material experiences of rice cultivation and consumption anchored participants' rice preferences, structural economic realities along with notions of social identity were always interwoven. Yet, while villagers expressed divergent perceptions around how the different rice cultivars shaped their bodily health, agricultural officers tended to view rice experiences as a product of culture, rather than as material and socio-ecological food-body interactions. In sum, this paper argues more deeply engaging with the political economic, socially symbolic, and embodied ways that communities relate to food production and consumption would allow NSA research to develop more grounded and inclusive understandings of agriculture-nutrition linkages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Managing intellectual property and technology commercialization: Experiences, success stories and lessons learnt—A case study from Vivekananda Institute of Hill Agriculture, India.
- Author
-
Kant, Lakshmi and Shahid, Faaiza
- Subjects
HILL farming ,INTELLECTUAL property ,COMMERCIALIZATION ,LIBRARY administration ,TECHNOLOGY transfer ,DEVELOPING countries ,AGRICULTURAL technology - Abstract
A paradigm shift towards IPR policy and technology commercialization have been observed in India, during the post‐World Trade Organization (WTO) regime. Protecting innovative agricultural technologies through IPR and technology commercialization are of utmost significance to enhance country's public research enterprise, promote economic development and national competitiveness. This has impacted the innovations in a positive direction in these areas. The present article reviews in‐depth process of IPR management and technology commercialization attempted by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR)—Vivekananda Parvatiya Krishi Anusandhan Sansthan (VPKAS). Earlier, ICAR established a three‐tier model for technology management and transfer namely, central, zonal, and institute level committees/units. Of late, Agrinnovate India Limited (AgIn), which works to meet with world‐wide commercial success of the invented technologies, have come in to facilitate the commercialization process and thus a renewed three‐tier model is in place now. The paper also presents a case study of ICAR‐VPKAS, highlighting the unique experiences, lessons learnt and evolution in managing IP and process of technology commercialization. This is purposely drawn as an early example in managing IP and commercializing the argicultural technologies, despite the challenges faced by the institute due to its remoteness, difficult accessibility and hilly location. These together, may catalyze similar efforts throughout the developing countries to promote innovation and global competitiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. E-mobility ecosystem innovation – impact on downstream supply chain management processes. Is India ready for inevitable change in auto sector?
- Author
-
Serohi, Ajay
- Subjects
SUPPLY chain management ,AUTOMOBILE industry ,TESLA automobiles ,ALTERNATIVE fuel vehicles ,VERTICAL integration ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to understand the specific reasons why developed countries could easily start implementing innovative alternative fuel vehicles (e.g. electric vehicles or EVs) while the implementation in developing countries looks so far-fetched, with respect to infrastructure and downstream activities, and suggest the steps that can be taken to effectively address these issues. Design/methodology/approach: This research undertakes case study – Tesla (USA), Mahindra and Mahindra (India) and Tata Motors to bring out the problems being faced by manufacturers from developing countries vis-a-vis the developed countries. The consumers' side has been adequately represented though an in-depth survey. An analysis is also carried out as to how Tesla has accrued competitive leverage by innovating and vertical integration of up as well as downstream systems. Findings: EV infrastructure remains grossly inadequate in developing countries like India. Two key areas that remain significantly unexplored are the installation of charging stations at parking lots and at the housing clusters and lack of competitive leverage in the services, processes and other downstream systems due to limited research and development capabilities. The performance metrics of domestic EVs lag those of conventional vehicles as well as foreign competitors like Tesla. Range anxiety is ranked as number one in the major concerns among the potential mass buyers of electric vehicles in India. Originality/value: The value of the paper lies in an in-depth analysis of the relationship between horizontal and vertical perspectives as well as the impact of the product eco-system innovation on both the upstream as well as downstream nodes in the supply chain. Whereas the consumer attitudes and perspectives on e-mobility are inferred from a survey, the impact analysis matrix is used for analyzing the competitive leverage of Tesla through several features in the upstream, downstream and servitization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Development Research at High Geographic Resolution: An Analysis of Night-Lights, Firms, and Poverty in India Using the SHRUG Open Data Platform.
- Author
-
Asher, Sam, Lunt, Tobias, Matsuura, Ryu, and Novosad, Paul
- Subjects
STANDARD of living ,RESEARCH & development ,POVERTY ,TIME series analysis ,DEVELOPING countries ,CROWDSOURCING - Abstract
The SHRUG is an open data platform describing multidimensional socioeconomic development across 600,000 villages and towns in India. This paper presents three illustrative analyses only possible with high-resolution data. First, it confirms that nighttime lights are highly significant proxies for population, employment, per capita consumption, and electrification at very local levels. However, elasticities between night-lights and these variables are far lower in time series than in cross section, and vary widely across context and level of aggregation. Next, this study shows that the distribution of manufacturing employment across villages follows a power law: the majority of rural Indians have considerably less access to manufacturing employment than is suggested by aggregate data. Third, a poverty mapping exercise explores local heterogeneity in living standards and estimates the potential targeting improvement from allocating programs at the village—rather than at the district—level. The SHRUG can serve as a model for open high-resolution data in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Rethinking Audience Fragmentation Using a Theory of News Reading Publics: Online India as a Case Study.
- Author
-
Mukerjee, Subhayan
- Subjects
- *
READING , *PUBLIC utilities , *NEWS consumption , *DELAY of gratification , *IMAGINATION ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Scholarly work that seeks to theorize about fragmentation of media audiences has largely been restricted to the experiences of advanced democracies in the west. This has resulted in a preponderance of research endeavors that have sought to understand this phenomenon through ideas that are pertinent, perhaps solely to those contexts, and not as applicable outside, particularly in the Global South. This has potentially limited our imagination into various other ways in which audience fragmentation can manifest in these often-overlooked countries. In this paper, I use the case of online India as an example to offer a theoretical framework – that of news reading publics – for understanding audience fragmentation as a more global socio-political phenomenon that allows for rigorous comparative research, without being restrictive in scope. I draw from existing theories in communication and related disciplines and show how such a framework can be situated within existing social science theory. I argue that this framework should make us think of audience fragmentation in western contexts to be special cases of a more general model. I also show how network analysis can be used as a context-agnostic tool for identifying news reading publics and demonstrate the utility of such a method in complementing this theoretical framework. Finally, I discuss potential future research directions that this framework generates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Youth employment for inclusive growth: a review and research agenda in global perspective with special reference to India.
- Author
-
Varsha Pramod, P. and Ramachandran, Remya
- Subjects
LITERATURE reviews ,YOUTH employment ,EVIDENCE gaps ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,DEVELOPING countries ,INCLUSIVE education ,UNEMPLOYMENT - Abstract
In instances where the "youth bulge" in developing nations is aggravating the unemployment crisis and contributing to a detrimental cycle of events, inclusive growth (IG) has emerged as a cutting-edge development model. The academic interest in inclusive growth and unemployment-related research is plentiful, but the exclusive search into youth employment for inclusive growth is sparse. Based on a conceptual framework that offers an overview of the topic, this paper examines studies on youth unemployment concerning inclusive growth. It specifically explores the concept of inclusive growth, the financial and socio-psychological aspects of youth unemployment, and ways of tackling unemployment, such as youth entrepreneurship and skill development in pursuit of inclusive growth. By addressing these challenges, the assessment reveals ways to achieve SDGs such as SDG 8 (decent work and economic growth) and SDG 10 (reduced disparities). The relevant literature was extracted using qualitative content analysis and recursive content abstraction approaches. The study adds to the multidisciplinary literature on youth studies, entrepreneurship, and development economics. This study summarises the current level of knowledge on these topics, identifies research gaps, and offers interesting future research directions that will benefit academics and practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. "Millet" as a postcolonial-masculinist sign of difference: tracing the effects of ontological-epistemic erasure on a food grain.
- Author
-
Chandrasekaran, Priya Rajalakshmi
- Subjects
- *
MILLETS , *GREEN Revolution , *SEED exchanges , *WOMEN farmers , *FARMERS' attitudes , *RAGI , *INDIAN women (Asians) ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In this paper, I use deconstructive theory to analyze the category of "millet" and the endangerment of food grains in India. I argue that "millet" cohered as a sign of difference from the 1960s through India's Green Revolution, which created a national infrastructure for the materialization of colonial and masculinist ideology. In the hills of Uttarakhand and through the food grain regionally known as mandua, we see how India's postcolonial success relied on the ontological-epistemic erasure of women's food/land practices and assaulted the intertwined "rootedness" (place-making faculties) of women and the crops they cultivate. Reading mandua as "millet" under erasure (millet) reveals how mixed crop systems and practices of socio-ecological reciprocity eroded in the face of Green Revolution ideology and functioned as a bulwark against it. I turn finally to the counterhegemonic potential of "millet," as Uttarakhandi seed activists link with decentralized third world networks, which are exchanging seeds and building power across and from marginalized places. This opens a potential space of visibility and belonging for Uttarakhandi women farmers in the national arena at a time when the ecological and alimentary value of "millet" has entered national and global conversations, infusing the sign of difference with new meaning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Evolution of Government Procurement Regimes in the United States of America and the European Union: Lessons For Developing Countries.
- Author
-
Rawat, Mukesh and Raju, K D
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT purchasing , *COMMERCIAL policy ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Government procurement has emerged as a complex and crucial national and international trade policy subject in the contemporary era. The United States of America (US) and the European Union (EU) are recognised as economies with some of the most advanced procurement regimes. Globally, developing countries have struggled to develop robust procurement regulatory frameworks for government procurement. This paper analyses the evolution of procurement in the US and EU and the valuable lessons for developing countries willing to improve their procurement regimes. The findings will be helpful to achieve harmonisation of procurement rules at the international level and to promote efficacy in the procurement process at the domestic level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Time for Clean Energy? Cleaner Fuels and Women's Time in Home Production.
- Author
-
Afridi, Farzana, Debnath, Sisir, Dinkelman, Taryn, and Sareen, Komal
- Subjects
CLEAN energy ,DEVELOPING countries ,NUDGE theory ,TIME management ,RANDOMIZED response ,CLEANING - Abstract
In much of the developing world, cooking accounts for the largest share of women's time in home production. Does relying on solid fuels drive this time burden? This study revisits a clean energy information experiment in rural India to assess the time savings' potential of cleaner cooking technologies. Treatment villages were randomly assigned to receive information about negative health effects of cooking with solid fuels and about public subsidies for cleaner liquid petroleum gas (LPG). Time-use data indicate that primary cooks spend almost 24 hours cooking each week. Cleaner fuel use is correlated with about 140 minutes less cooking time each week. Yet households only reduce their weekly cooking time by about 35 minutes in response to the randomized clean energy information nudge. Factors limiting the impact of clean energy nudges on the choice of home production technologies and time use are discussed and an avenue for future research is suggested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Pro-poor policies and improvements in maternal health outcomes in India
- Author
-
Bhatia, M., Dwivedi, L. K., Banerjee, K., Bansal, A., Ranjan, M., and Dixit, P.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Employment Challenge in India: Hundred Years from 'Ten days that shook the World'.
- Author
-
Majumder, Rajarshi
- Subjects
UNDEREMPLOYMENT ,EMPLOYMENT ,JOB vacancies ,JOB creation ,REAL wages ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Hundred years from the Bolshevik Revolution that shook the world, workers around the globe are facing new challenges. Throughout a long stretch of the global South, job creation is sluggish, real wages are stagnant, and working conditions are getting harsher and there is a growing disjoint between work and wealth. Against this backdrop, in this paper we flag the employment challenges facing India at present. Using a novel 4-quadrant compartmentalisation, we observe that the three major challenges are—absolute lack of employment opportunities; chronic unemployment and intermittent employment; and substantial underemployment and loss of person days. Two further related challenges are low returns from work and skill mismatch. All these markers have worsened in the last decade which also witnessed massive job loss for casual workers. This is perhaps a natural sequel to the economic boom built on mass casualisation of workforce over the previous two decades. At first sight of slowdown, the axe has fallen on these casual workers. Mismatch between sectoral shares in output and employment also causes wage disparity and aggravates inequality. With production increasingly set to become machine and AI driven, labour redundancy and skill mismatch is expected to worsen in coming years. We must press for a separate employment–incomes policy rather than continue with the false hope that economic growth will solve the employment conundrum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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