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India Jean Dreze (Honorary Professor, Honorary Professor, Delhi School of Economics)

India By Jean Dreze (Honorary Professor, Honorary Professor, Delhi School of Economics)

Summary

This book explores the role of public action in eliminating deprivation and expanding human freedoms in India. This fully revised edition includes three new chapters on health and the environment, the social costs of military expansion, and the challenges of democracy, plus an expanded statistical appendix.

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India Summary

India: Development and Participation by Jean Dreze (Honorary Professor, Honorary Professor, Delhi School of Economics)

This book explores the role of public action in eliminating deprivation and expanding human freedoms in India. The analysis is based on a broad and integrated view of development, which focuses on well-being and freedom rather than the standard indicators of economic growth. The authors place human agency at the centre of stage, and stress the complementary roles of different institutions (economic, social, and political) in enhancing effective freedoms. In comparative international perspective, the Indian economy has done reasonably well in the period following the economic reforms initiated in the early nineties. However, relatively high aggregate economic growth coexists with the persistence of endemic deprivation and deep social failures. Jean Dreze and Amartya Sen relate this imbalance to the continued neglect, in the post-reform period, of public involvement in crucial fields such as basic education, health care, social security, environmental protection, gender equity, and civil rights, and also to the imposition of new burdens such as the accelerated expansion of military expenditure. Further, the authors link these distortions of public priorities with deep-seated inequalities of social influence and political power. The book discusses the possibility of addressing these biases through more active democratic practice.

India Reviews

Review from previous edition a very meticulous and persuasive analytical picture . . . altogether a model of empirical economics with a heart * Ashok V. Desai, The Book Review *
Highly illuminating . . . an exceptionally impressive analysis, rich with implications * Cass R. Sunstein, The New Republic *
a fine account of India's achievements and failures . . . it will be a starting point of subsequent discussions on social life in India * Partha Dasgupta, Times Higher Education Supplement *

About Jean Dreze (Honorary Professor, Honorary Professor, Delhi School of Economics)

Jean Dreze is a Visiting Professor at the Delhi School of Economics and an international authority on development economics. His association with India goes back more than twenty years during which time he has studied the issues in India minutely and has authored many books, research papers, and newspaper articles on education, poverty, development, nuclear doctrine, freedom of information, and the Narmada Struggle.; Amartya Sen is the Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, and the winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Economic Science. He has been President of the Indian Economic Association, the American Economic Association, the International Economic Association, and the Econometric Society. He has taught at Calcutta, Delhi, Oxford, Cambridge, the London School of Economics, and Harvard.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction and Approach ; 2. Economic Development and Social Opportunity ; 3. India in Comparative Perspective ; 4. India and China ; 5. Basic Education as a Political Issue ; 6. Population, Health, and the Environment ; 7. Gender Inequality and Women's Agency ; 8. Security and Democracy in a Nuclear India ; 9. Well Beyond Liberalization ; 10. The Practice of Democracy

Additional information

CIN0199257493VG
9780199257492
0199257493
India: Development and Participation by Jean Dreze (Honorary Professor, Honorary Professor, Delhi School of Economics)
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Oxford University Press
2002-08-22
542
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - India