Half-Lion: How P. V. Narasimha Rao Transformed India
About the Author:
About the Author:
From early 2011 to the end of 2012, the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) coalition government led by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh faced its biggest civic challenge in the India Against Corruption (IAC) movement. This agitation came to a crescendo off the back of a sequence of high-profile corruption scandals involving senior government officials. The UPA, after a successful re-election in 2009, found itself in the midst of a credibility and corruption crisis.
This week marks the 60th anniversary of the Suez Canal Crisis, an event that was of enormous importance to India’s approach to the region in general and to the rise of Arab nationalism. India was blindsided by the developments that had led to the crisis in the first place and there are many lessons to be learned from India’s handling of it through the UN and in direct diplomacy with all interested parties. The crisis had its genesis in a tripartite aggression when Israel, Britain, and France invaded Egyptian territory on October 29, 1956.
Co-Authors:
Sanjoy Chakravorty, Professor of Geography & Urban Studies, Temple University
Devesh Kapur, Director, Center for the Advanced Study of India (CASI)
In part one of this two-part series on India’s informal slum leaders, we discussed how some slum residents rise to become leaders of their settlement, and the range of activities in which they are involved. In this issue, we draw on our second survey, conducted in the summer of 2016, of a sample of 629 actual slum leaders across those same settlements. Finding slum leaders, let alone a systematic and large sample of them, is extremely challenging, and to our knowledge, has not been previously attempted in India.
Panel Discussion - 5:00 to 6:30 p.m.
Reception - 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. (book sale and signing by co-authors during reception)
with Co-Authors:
Sanjoy Chakravorty
Professor of Geography & Urban Studies, Temple University
Devesh Kapur
Director, CASI
Professor of Political Science, Madan Lal Sobti Professor for the Study of Contemporary India, University of Pennsylvania
Naren Karunakaran is a Senior Journalist with The Economic Times, India's largest financial daily and has, in recent years, focused exclusively on corporate responsibility/sustainability issues including affirmative action in the private sector and philanthropy. His prime motive has been mainstreaming these issues and infusing a developmental hue to business journalism. Previously, he held key positions at The Indian Express, BusinessWorld, and Outlook Business.
India’s demographic shift to cities has been accompanied by a number of pressing governance and development challenges. Among the most serious of those challenges is the spread of slum settlements—spaces defined by their haphazard construction, material poverty, tenure insecurity, and lack of basic public services. The 2011 Census of India estimates that 65 million people reside in the country’s urban slums. This is a staggering figure, exceeding the entire population of countries like Argentina, South Africa, and Spain.
The last decade has witnessed a steady rise in activism by the urban middle class, as demonstrated by the historic India Against Corruption Movement. It gave rise to the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP),arguably India’s first major class-based urban political party. Beyond large cities, the 2014 general election saw the middle classes vote more than the poor for the first time in recent history.