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BusinessWeek September 5, 2005 Josey Puliyenthuruthel |
India: Who Wants To Build Some Roads? To remake its creaky infrastructure, India is banking on public-private partnerships. |
IDB America July 2005 Alexandra Russell-Bitting |
"Guiana 1838" Premieres at IDB Cultural Center In his film "Guiana 1838," first-time Guyanese filmmaker Rohit Jagessar tells the story of Asian Indians who were taken to Guyana after slavery was officially abolished in Britain in 1838. |
BusinessWeek August 8, 2005 Manjeet Kripalani |
How A Factory Became A Flash Point Violence at a Honda plant highlights India's outdated labor laws and rattles foreign investors. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2005 Vir Singh |
India May Resuscitate Disputed Enron Plant As India's Dabhol power plant stands idle, shortages of electricity in the area put pressure on local politicians to resolve pricing policy and other issues which prevents its operation. |
InternetNews June 30, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
India to Flex Manufacturing Muscle A new research report predicts India's IT growth rate will outpace China's over the next several years. North American, European, and Asian companies will likely help with the necessary infrastructure upgrades. |
Finance & Development June 1, 2005 Wu, Kaul, & Sankar |
The Quiet Revolution How India is achieving universal elementary education. |
BusinessWeek May 23, 2005 Manjeet Kripalani |
Not Enough Power to the People In India, power is politics -- electrical power, that is. But while makers of electrical equipment thrive, reform lags, blackouts occur daily, and the people are up in arms. Meanwhile, foreign investment is "waiting and watching." |
Geotimes May 2005 Sara Pratt |
Soot From Indian Cooking A new study says that residential cooking -- with stoves that burn wood, crop waste and dried animal manure -- is actually the largest source of soot emissions in India. Understanding this pollution source could have an important role in bettering both air quality and climate models. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 21, 2005 Martha Lagace |
The No-Sari Zone: South Asian Women at Work Like many others, women from India and Pakistan seem doomed to stereotypes about how they function at work. But they should strive to resist labels and pursue the careers of their dreams, said panelists at the Conference on India and Its Neighbors. |
BusinessWeek March 21, 2005 Manjeet Kripalani |
The Ties That Bind Delhi And Washington The United States enjoys a successful business relationship with India and aims to increase their political relations. |
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