Penn Calendar Penn A-Z School of Arts and Sciences University of Pennsylvania

Natural Disasters and Child Marriages: A Case Study from Bihar

Madhulika Khanna & Nishtha Kochhar
Monday, December 21, 2020

The past few months have been a time of great flux in India. While the economic slowdown and the COVID-19 crisis were the media’s central focus, two seemingly unrelated reports also appeared in this rapidly moving news cycle: a proposal to increase women’s legal age at marriage to 21 and floods in Eastern India. Although child marriage declined from 38.69 percent to 16.1 percent in the decade since the Child Marriage Act (2006) came into being, it is still a persistent phenomenon in Eastern India.

Data Privacy and Digitization of Health in India

Vivek N. D.
Monday, December 7, 2020

On August 15, 2020, on the occasion of India’s 74th Independence Day, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the launch of the National Digital Health Mission (NDHM) with the promise that it will revolutionize the Indian health sector. The NDHM, according to the Indian government, is the first step in strengthening India’s health system and moving it toward the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 3: achieving universal health coverage.

How Wide is the “Sink of Localism” in India?

Naveen Bharathi, Deepak Malghan & Andaleeb Rahman
Monday, November 23, 2020

Even a beginning student of rural India with only a passing familiarity with its complex social organization can wax eloquent about one stylized fact—the near-perfect segregation of residential space by caste and religion. Introductory textbooks have immortalized spatial segregation as a constitutive feature of social life in agrarian India.

India's Covid Response

Dr. Krishnamurthy Subramanian, currently the Chief Economic Adviser to the Government of India, is a leading expert on economic policy, banking and corporate governance. In his role as Chief Economic Adviser, he has authored India’s 2019 Economic Survey and 2020 Economic Survey, the flagship annual document of the Ministry of Finance. His academic articles span various topics, including corporate governance, bankruptcy, and banking deregulation, and have appeared in a range of peer-reviewed journals including Journal of Financial Economics, Review of Financial Studies, and Journal of Law and Economics. He has previously served on several expert committees including the P.J. Nayak Committee on governance of banks for the Reserve Bank of India and the Uday Kotak Corporate Governance Committee of Securities and Exchange Board of India. He was also the Founding Board Member at Bandhan Bank (2015-18).

Data, Development, and Democracy: A View from India’s Periphery

Ankush Agrawal & Vikas Kumar
Monday, November 9, 2020

In less than half a decade, the Indian economy has suffered three major shocks in quick succession – demonetization of high denomination currency notes (2016), mismanaged transition to the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime (2017) and COVID-19 pandemic (2020). On each of these occasions, the unavailability of reliable and timely data tied the hands of policymakers and exposed critical gaps in official information systems.

Investigating Discrimination Against Migrants in Urban India: The Electoral Connection

Nikhar Gaikwad & Gareth Nellis
Monday, October 26, 2020

India’s large population of internal migrants experienced punishing hardships during the COVID-19 lockdown, as many struggled to return home and access essential services. The country’s rapid urbanization has involved the mass relocation of job aspirants from the countryside to cities. Few doubt the significance of this demographic shift for India’s economic growth. Yet the early days of the pandemic brought into focus the short shrift too often paid to movers.

The Importance of Spontaneous Protest in India

Ganeshdatta Poddar
Monday, October 12, 2020

At the beginning of this year, India went into the throes of protests, with students and women at the forefront. The protests marked a new dawn of creative politics with the potential for stemming the tide of democratic decline—a moment to celebrate the vibrancy of civil society in India, unprecedented in its recent past. Unfortunately, the incipient ferment ebbed away in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing lockdown in March.  

Monsoon Planning: The Future of India’s Sinking Cities

Debjani Bhattacharyya
Monday, September 28, 2020

On May 20, 2020, in what is becoming a semi-annual environmental ritual, a super-cyclone pummeled through the Bengal delta, breaching embankments in the Sundarbans and submerging large swathes of Kolkata. The winds and the tides that accompany these super-cyclones have a curious way of foregrounding how deeply the concrete city is embedded in the deltaic ecology and the region’s hydrology.