Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « CAMPAIGNING IN INDIA »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "CAMPAIGNING IN INDIA"

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Sarmah, Rantu, et Dr Niranjan Mohapatra. « Role of Social Media in Election Campaigning in India with Special Reference to Assam ». World Journal of Social Science Research 7, no 3 (19 juin 2020) : p1. http://dx.doi.org/10.22158/wjssr.v7n3p1.

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This is an attempt to find out the role of social media in election campaigning in India with special reference to Assam. Democratic countries like United States of America, India the social media has become an integral part for political communications during election campaigning. This new way of campaigning during election plays an important role to attract voters. Social media has given a new platform such as Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Whatsapp, Youtube etc. to the political parties and the voters, these are becoming an easy tool for the political leaders to interact with their voters. Social media allows candidates to share, post, comments, and their views during election and making them more direct involvement to their voters. These new tools or platforms are appeared as new area for research. Firstly to find out the term of social media, secondly, general meaning of political campaigning, thirdly, uses of social media in Indian election campaigning with reference to Assam and lastly conclusions.
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Pincock, Stephen. « K Srinath Reddy : campaigning cardiologist in India ». Lancet 368, no 9536 (août 2006) : 639. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(06)69231-3.

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Wyatt, Andrew. « India in 2013 ». Asian Survey 54, no 1 (janvier 2014) : 151–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/as.2014.54.1.151.

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The Congress-led coalition battled through another difficult year with issues of governance continuing to cause difficulty for the government. The economy performed unevenly, with high rates of inflation and slower economic growth. Close relations were maintained with the U.S., but relations with China remained awkward. Pakistan and India made little headway on improving relations. Campaigning for the 2014 general election began midway through 2013.
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Sarma, Pratysush Paras, et Tanaya Hazarika. « Social Media and Election Campaigns : An Analysis of the Usage of Twitter during the 2021 Assam Assembly Elections ». International Journal of Social Science Research and Review 6, no 2 (30 janvier 2023) : 96–117. http://dx.doi.org/10.47814/ijssrr.v6i2.857.

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Election campaigning in India shows increasingly more sophisticated and widespread use of digital technologies like mobile phones and social media platforms, including Twitter for broadcasting messages and WhatsApp for creating political communities. Political parties hire workers to work for their social media campaigns, generally spreading negative campaigns about their opposition and glorifying their own agendas. At the same time, parties have mobilized campaign strategies around the personality of the leaders. Accordingly, Indian politics mirrors existing trends in western democracies, but these changes in election campaigning have occurred later and for many Indian voters, seem to have appeared out of nowhere. Hence this study may pave the way to gain a comprehensible understanding of the parties’ dominant political ideologies and identities, and especially the various issues that they may focus upon. It uses theories of professionalization, and social media campaigning for the 2021 election campaigns of the two dominant parties in Assam, an Indian state with more than 30 million residents. Primarily the study will try to explore the role of Twitter in the election campaigning process in the state of Assam. It will use qualitative content analysis to categorize the dominant techniques used by the two dominant political parties of Assam and finally percentage analysis will be performed to churn out the dominant issues used by the two political parties on Twitter. By analyzing the dominant issues this study also tries to explore which party was able to use Twitter significantly and how its role as a political communication strategy was effective.
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Ghosh, Arjun. « Theatre for the Ballot : Campaigning with Street Theatre in India ». TDR/The Drama Review 49, no 4 (décembre 2005) : 171–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/105420405774763023.

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An integral part of political campaigns in India, street theatre is not restricted to parties of any particular ideology; the nature and role of street theatre varies according to different organizational structures and conditions of performance. For political parties it is a mode of reaching out to the electorate at the grassroots level; for spectators it is also a source of entertainment.The author toured with India's foremost street theatre group, the Jana Natya Manch (People's Theatre Forum), during campaigns in Kanpur for the April 2004 Parliamentary elections
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Bagcchi, S. « Health campaigning group calls for action on corruption in India ». BMJ 349, jul15 22 (15 juillet 2014) : g4648. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.g4648.

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Thrandardottir, Erla, et Susanna G. Mitra. « Who Does Greenpeace India Represent ? » Global Governance : A Review of Multilateralism and International Organizations 25, no 4 (10 décembre 2019) : 587–619. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/19426720-02504004.

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Abstract The global governance literature is increasingly concerned with questions regarding the purpose of global governance and the sources of power in world politics. One strand of this debate centers on nongovernmental organizations and to what extent their role in global politics and policy processes is legitimate. This article uses Greenpeace India as an instructive case study to analyze the legitimacy problems facing international nongovernmental organizations (INGO s) campaigning on a global policy platform in the context of domestic politics. The article argues that the undertheorization of INGO s’ agency as global actors is likely to reproduce processes of structural delegitimation that maintain a discrepancy between two of their legitimacy constructs. This is exemplified in questions about their representativeness and restrictive regulatory frameworks that undermine their legality. This article proposes that developing a more nuanced empirical understanding of the endogenous and exogenous limits of INGO s’ power can help bridge the theoretical gap between their global and local agencies.
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Mahawar, Pawan Kumar, et Abhay Sharma. « A Review on 2019-nCoV (SARS-CoV-2) in India ». Asian Journal of Pharmaceutical Research and Development 8, no 3 (15 juin 2020) : 135–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.22270/ajprd.v8i3.744.

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Background: The outbreak of the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, has been declared a pandemic by the WHO on March 11th of 2020. Novel Coronavirus infection mediated pandemic started in China in December 2019 and is still killing 1000s of people throughout the world. The second most populous country, India too is fighting against this infectious disease. The country is taking effective measures to curb the pandemic by exerting extensive campaigning on sanitation and strict social distancing measures to quell the explosion of the infection rate. Treatment: No drugs are currently approved for Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19), although some have been tried. In view of recent studies and discussion on tested drugs on COVID-19 patients of India, I aimed to review existing literature and relevant websites regarding these drugs used in India including allopathic, plasma therapy,Ayurvedic and homeopathic medication.
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Lipton, Michael. « Growing Mountain, Shrinking Mouse ? Indian Poverty and British Bilateral Aid ». Modern Asian Studies 30, no 3 (juillet 1996) : 481–522. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x00016577.

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In the book compiled by Mervyn Jones after Kingsley Martin's death in 1969, Asa Briggs recalled that ‘no country meant more to Kingsley Martin than India’. Martin's writing, campaigning and travelling all confirm this. His life also confirms his priorities for development and poverty reduction. Famously, however, he was not an economist, and he does not seem to have brought these concerns together, or to have asked how aid might best be used to help. This paper, in a small way, aims to fill that gap.
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VATUK, SYLVIA. « Islamic Feminism in India : Indian Muslim Women Activists and the Reform of Muslim Personal Law ». Modern Asian Studies 42, no 2-3 (mars 2008) : 489–518. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x07003228.

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AbstractI describe here a nascent ‘Islamic feminist’ movement in India, dedicated to the goal of achieving gender equity under Muslim Personal Law. In justifying their demands, these women activists refer neither to the Indian Constitution nor to the universalistic human rights principles that guide secular feminists campaigning for passage of a gender-neutral uniform civil code of personal law, but rather to the authority of the Qur'an—which, they claim, grants Muslim women numerous rights that in practice are routinely denied them. They accuse the male ‘ulamaof foisting ‘patriarchal’ interpretations of the Qur'an on the unlettered Muslim masses and assert their right to read the Qur'an for themselves and interpret it in a woman-friendly way. Their activities reflect an increasing ‘fragmentation of religious authority’ in the globalizing Muslim world, associated with the spread of mass education, new forms of media and transport and a mobile labour force, in which clerical claims to exclusive authoritative knowledge are being questioned by a wide variety of new voices, women's among them. Whether it can ultimately succeed is an open question but the movement is clearly having an impact, even on the clerical establishment itself, insofar as the legal issues it considers most pressing for women are concerned.
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Thèses sur le sujet "CAMPAIGNING IN INDIA"

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PRASOON, PRIYANK. « DIGITAL MARKETING AND POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS : A STUDY OF CHANGE IN FOCUS FOR CAMPAIGNING IN INDIA ». Thesis, 2020. http://dspace.dtu.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/repository/18123.

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This project report focuses on Digital Marketing and Political Campaigns and evaluate the impact of digital marketing on Political Campaigns. Case of BJP campaign of 2014 lok sabha elections has been taken for study. A survey of 51 respondent were taken from Delhi/NCR to analyse the impact of digital marketing on political campaigns. From the outcomes it can be said that Social media can influence in India politics and polls. The 2014 in the elections of Lok Sabha in India is proof of social media impact and influence on India politics. How Narendra Modi campaigned for his election and how he still manages to influence the young population. Reaching out to the common man becomes easier through social media. It also helps a politician look more human, and showcase the things they do (or pretend to do) for people.
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Livres sur le sujet "CAMPAIGNING IN INDIA"

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Parker, King Lawrence. Anglo-American wilderness campaigning, 1754-1764 : Logistical and tactical developments. Ann Arbor, MI : University Microfilms, 1996.

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Duberly, Frances Isabella. Campaigning Experiences in Rajpootana and Central India. Adamant Media Corporation, 2002.

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YEAR'S CAMPAIGNING IN INDIA FROM MARCH 1857 TO MARCH 1858. Naval & Military Press, 2006.

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Yearos Campaigning in India from March 1857 to March 1858. Naval & Military Press, 2005.

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Duberly, Frances Isabella. Campaigning Experiences in Rajpootana and Central India : During the Suppression of the Mutiny, 1857-1858. Cambridge University Press, 2012.

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Duberly, Frances Isabella. Campaigning Experiences in Rajpootana and Central India : During the Suppression of the Mutiny, 1857-1858. Cambridge University Press, 2012.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "CAMPAIGNING IN INDIA"

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Grant, Laura. « National Coalition for Education India ». Dans Campaigning for “Education for All”, 83–100. Rotterdam : SensePublishers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6091-879-7_6.

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Banerjee, Rituparna. « Elections and Social Media Cultures : Politics, Women and Visuals in West Bengal, India ». Dans Political Campaigning and Communication, 49–72. Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-22782-0_3.

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Bakir, Vian, et Andrew McStay. « Profiling, Targeting and the Increasing Optimisation of Emotional Life ». Dans Optimising Emotions, Incubating Falsehoods, 139–72. Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-13551-4_6.

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AbstractTo understand how the optimisation of emotion incubates false information online, this chapter examines profiling and targeting in citizen-political communications. Profiling and targeting are how emotion is understood, harnessed, amplified, dampened, manipulated and optimised. This chapter focuses on profiling and targeting in political campaigning as this is an intensively studied area awash with emotion and deception and attracts uneven protections across the world. Specifically, this chapter examines the targeting and profiling technologies and practices in political campaigning in the USA, UK and India, so highlighting the impact of different data protection regimes as well as uneven digital literacies. In exploring these issues, this chapter also outlines key tools and techniques utilised by digital political campaigners in the big data era to profile and target datafied emotions.
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Kumar, Avinash, Ben Phillips, Aditi Kapoor et Divya Mukand. « 11. Keep Your Promises : campaigning to hold government to account in India ». Dans Speaking Out, 105–15. Rugby, Warwickshire, United Kingdom : Practical Action Publishing, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/9781780440682.011.

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Nijhawan, Shobna. « Fallen Through the Nationalist and Feminist Grids of Analysis : Political Campaigning of Indian Women Against Indentured Labour Emigration ». Dans The Subaltern Indian Woman, 173–94. Singapore : Springer Singapore, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-5166-1_8.

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Perry, Matt. « ‘The Lingua Franca of the Bangle' ». Dans Workers of the Empire, Unite, 115–32. Liverpool University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781800859685.003.0005.

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Wilkinson’s approach to imperialism provides significant insight into her political ideas. For much of the interwar period, she perceived a causal link between imperialism—which she understood as a product of late capitalism—and war. This chapter focuses upon her visit to India in autumn 1932 on behalf of the India League. Using the British and Indian press as well as India Office sources, it examines the complex relationships involved in this visit between the delegation, the Indian nationalist movement, the British and Indian state as well as the British Labour movement and the reception of Indian affairs in Britain. In this case, culturalist approaches, stressing the mutual comprehensibility, the prejudices and assumption of superiority underplay the micro-level complexity of transnational contentious politics. Wilkinson used several techniques to overcome the distance between Indian and British workers in her journalism and campaigning for Indian independence regarding the trip. The trip had a lasting significance for her attitude to the possibilities of revolution as well as the misplaced complacency about British immunity to fascism. Indeed, she incorporated her Indian experiences into her campaigning frames for social mobilisation related to women, Jarrow and anti-fascism.
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BANERJEE, MUKULIKA. « A Left Front Election ». Dans Diversity and Change in Modern India. British Academy, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264515.003.0010.

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This chapter discusses the electoral ethnography of a campaign in the state of West Bengal. It presents a thick ethnographic description of the campaigning process and traces the numerous techniques used. The political messages and organisational hierarchies at every level of the state's population help in answering why incumbent governments suffer repeated electoral defeats.
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Karan, Kavita. « E-Engaging India ». Dans Digital Democracy, 875–99. IGI Global, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-1740-7.ch043.

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E-Governance, inclusive of e-democracy, e-government, and e-business, has the power to improve processes, connect citizens, and build interactions with civil societies. The infusion of Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) by the governments, civil society organizations, and political institutions to engage citizens, have promoted greater participation in the process of governance. E-Democracy encompasses all forms of electronic interaction between the elected government and the electorate. Examples include e-voting, e-consultation, e-representatives, e-campaigning, online deliberative polling, e-petitions, and e-referendums. India is the largest democracy in the world and a frontrunner in the use of ICTs for e-governance and e-democracy. The last few elections witnessed a surge in the use of new technologies inclusive of Internet, social networking, and mobile technologies, alongside the traditional forms of electioneering. This chapter examines the e-governance and e-democracy strategies, and the innovative new media technologies used by political parties, industrial corporations, and other organizations that have e-engaged the citizens.
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Karan, Kavita. « E-Engaging India ». Dans Active Citizen Participation in E-Government, 334–58. IGI Global, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-0116-1.ch017.

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E-Governance, inclusive of e-democracy, e-government, and e-business, has the power to improve processes, connect citizens, and build interactions with civil societies. The infusion of Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) by the governments, civil society organizations, and political institutions to engage citizens, have promoted greater participation in the process of governance. E-Democracy encompasses all forms of electronic interaction between the elected government and the electorate. Examples include e-voting, e-consultation, e-representatives, e-campaigning, online deliberative polling, e-petitions, and e-referendums. India is the largest democracy in the world and a frontrunner in the use of ICTs for e-governance and e-democracy. The last few elections witnessed a surge in the use of new technologies inclusive of Internet, social networking, and mobile technologies, alongside the traditional forms of electioneering. This chapter examines the e-governance and e-democracy strategies, and the innovative new media technologies used by political parties, industrial corporations, and other organizations that have e-engaged the citizens.
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Karan, Kavita. « Cultural Political System ». Dans Civic Engagement and Politics, 966–82. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7669-3.ch048.

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The use of popular culture of music, dance, songs, theatre, videos and films for electioneering has been part of the Indian election process. Politics has been the narrative of Indian cinema since the beginning of century where political themes, political roles and political issues were exemplified through lead roles of politicians, enactment of political scenes, political satires and songs. This chapter examines the role of film artists in politics, popular political songs in films and campaign films that have expanded the levels of traditional and new media campaigning in India. Films and songs in the films glorify the country, arouse patriotism and whenever needed expose social issues such as high prices, corruption, feudalism, and other political issues. In the process, political campaign films became a way of marketing parties and candidates. This further characterizes the future of the political cultural system and the political economy of Indian cinema.
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Actes de conférences sur le sujet "CAMPAIGNING IN INDIA"

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Sakhinethi, Mounica, et Sudharsan Jayabalan. « Design, fabrication & ; control of modified SHRALA robot for campaigning in Indian Election : SHRALA – Social Humanoid Robot Based on Autonomous Learning Algorithm ». Dans 2021 International Conference on System, Computation, Automation and Networking (ICSCAN). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icscan53069.2021.9526544.

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