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1

Khosla, Martand. "The Lahori Gate Polyclinic, New Delhi, INDIA. Building for an inclusive city." Astrágalo. Cultura de la Arquitectura y la Ciudad 1, n.º 1 (2020): 75–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.12795/astragalo.2020.i27.05.

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MANN, MICHAEL, e SAMIKSHA SEHRAWAT. "A City With a View: The Afforestation of the Delhi Ridge, 1883–1913". Modern Asian Studies 43, n.º 2 (março de 2009): 543–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x07002867.

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AbstractDespite the contemporary importance of the Ridge forest to the city of Delhi as its most important ‘green lung’, the concept of urban forestry has been explored neither by urban historians studying Delhi nor by environmental historians. This article places the colonial efforts to plant a forest on the Delhi Ridge from 1883 to 1913 within the context of the gradual deforestation of the countryside around Delhi and the local colonial administration's preoccupation with encouraging arboriculture. This project of colonial forestry prioritized the needs of the white colonizers living in Delhi, while coming into conflict repeatedly with indigenous peasants. With the decision to transfer the capital to Delhi in 1911, the afforestation of the Delhi Ridge received a further stimulus. Town planners' visions of a building the capital city of New Delhi were meant to assert the grandeur of British rule through imposing buildings, with the permanence of the British in India being emphasised by the strategic location of the ruins of earlier empires within the city. The principles of English landscape gardening inspired the planning of New Delhi, with the afforestation of the Delhi Ridge being undertaken to provide a verdant backdrop for—the Government House and the Secretariat—the administrative centre of British government in India. Imperial notions of landscaping, which were central to the afforestation of the Delhi Ridge epitomised colonial rule and marginalized Indians.
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Gupta, Sonika. "Frontiers in Flux: Indo-Tibetan Border: 1946–1948". India Quarterly: A Journal of International Affairs 77, n.º 1 (10 de fevereiro de 2021): 42–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0974928420983095.

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On the eve of Indian Independence, as Britain prepared to devolve the Crown’s treaties with Tibet to the Indian government, the Tibetan government was debating its future treaty relationship with India under the 1914 Simla Convention and associated Indo-Tibetan Trade Regulations. Soon after Indian independence, Tibetan government made an expansive demand for return of Tibetan territory along the McMahon Line and beyond. This led to a long diplomatic exchange between Lhasa, New Delhi and London as India deliberated its response to the Tibetan demand. This article decodes the voluminous correspondence between February 1947 and January 1948 that flowed between the British/Indian Mission in Lhasa, the Political Officer in Sikkim, External Affairs Ministry in Delhi and the Foreign Office in London, on the Simla Convention and the ensuing Tibetan territorial demand. Housed at the National Archives in New Delhi, this declassified confidential communication provides crucial context for newly independent Indian state’s relationship with Tibet. It also reveals the intricacies of Tibetan elite politics that affected decision-making in Lhasa translating to a fragmented and often contradictory policy in forging its new relationship with India. Most importantly, this Tibetan territorial demand undermined the diplomatic efficacy of Tibet’s 1947 Trade Mission to India entangling its outcome with the resolution of this issue. This was a lost opportunity for both India and Tibet in building an agreement on the frontier which worked to their mutual disadvantage in the future.
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Golay, Alain, e Ian Firth. "The Baha’i House of Worship, New Delhi, India". Structural Engineering International 11, n.º 3 (agosto de 2001): 214. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/101686601780346959.

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Salam Azad, Abdus, Mohd Salman, S. C. Kaushik e Dibakar Rakshit. "Energy saving potential of tubular light pipe system with different colors on internal surfaces". International Journal of Energy Sector Management 14, n.º 4 (18 de setembro de 2019): 793–837. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijesm-12-2018-0001.

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Purpose Lighting in building sectors (consumes the highest energy in commercial buildings and the second highest in residential buildings in India) has very much potential for energy conservation in buildings. With the use of daylighting system, energy consumption in lighting can be lowered up to 30 to 40 per cent. Design/methodology/approach An experimental effort has been made in this paper to explore the internal wall coloring effect on the performance of tubular light pipe. Trace-pro software has been used and validated. With the help of this software, light pipe has been designed and simulated in a ray tracing mode. Assessment of four globally used prediction models has also been conducted to compare the performances in different seasons for light pipes in the composite climate of New Delhi. Findings It has been conducted based on three statistical indicators as mean bias error, root mean square error and R2. Using regression, an empirical model for average internal illuminance has been developed as a function of light reflectance value (LRV) and solar altitude angle. Trace-pro results confirmed that maximum internal illuminance can be obtained with wall surfaces coated with high LRV color. Finally, by using of a single light pipe system for a test room with the artificial lighting system and applying continuous dimming control, the amount of electrical energy has been saved up to 38.5 per cent per year. Originality/value After going through the literature, it has been identified that there has been no paper published which explores the effect of colors of the internal walls on the performance of the light pipe. Along with this, the comparison between existing empirical performance models and find out which model gives the best result in different seasons has been carried out for New Delhi, India.
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Johnson, David A. "Competing Visions of Empire in the Colonial Built Environment: Sir Bradford Leslie and the Building of New Delhi". Britain and the World 8, n.º 1 (março de 2015): 27–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/brw.2015.0166.

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In 1911, the Government of India transferred the imperial seat of government from Calcutta to Delhi. The decision initiated an ambitious colonial building project that consumed massive human, material, and financial resources for the next two decades. The new city was meant to be not just a site of government but also a symbol of a new direction in British rule. As such, the transfer and building of a new capital caused tremendous debate in parliament, in the press, and in the worlds of art and finance. This paper examines one of these debates: the precise location of the new capital in the Delhi area. When news reached London that the Government of India planned to build the new capital in a largely rural area with little connection to Delhi's existing European community, Sir Bradford Leslie, an eminent railway engineer with long experience in India, prepared a town plan that placed the capital back within Delhi's European civil lines. His plan, the controversy it created, and its eventual rejection by the Government of India highlighted arguments over the meaning of British rule in India and who should benefit from it.
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7

Shokoohy, Mehrdad, e Natalie H. Shokoohy. "The Dark Gate, the Dungeons, the royal escape route and more: survey of Tughluqabad, second interim report". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 62, n.º 3 (outubro de 1999): 423–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0041977x00018528.

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Tughluqabad, situated 18 kilometres south-east of New Delhi, is the oldest surviving sultanate town in India. It was built by Sultan Ghiyāth al-dīn Tughluq between 1320 and 1323, and its well preserved walls, its street layout and the remains of its buildings provide us with the earliest existing example of Indo-Muslim urban planning and its architectural components. The town was designed by Ahmad b. Ayāz, an Anatolian architect and a nobleman of the Tughluq court, who was responsible for the design of many of the early Tughluq buildings1 and who was later raised to the rank of Grand Vizier at the time of Muhammad b. Tughluq (1325–51), but was put to death by Fīrūz Shāh Tughluq (1351–88) in the early days of his reign.
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Leo Samuel, DG, SM Shiva Nagendra e MP Maiya. "A study of pipe parameters on the performance of cooling tower-based thermally activated building system". Indoor and Built Environment 27, n.º 2 (27 de setembro de 2016): 219–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1420326x16670202.

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Passive cooling systems are energy efficient and eco-friendly alternatives to mechanical cooling systems. In this paper, the cooling tower-based thermally activated building system, which acts as an indirect evaporative cooling system, has been investigated using a computational fluid dynamics tool for the hot semi-arid climate of New Delhi. Three design parameters namely spacing, vertical position and arrangement of pipes embedded in the roof and floor were analysed for their influence on the cooling performance of the system. The results indicate that reducing pipe spacing from 0.3 to 0.1 m and moving the pipes closer to the inner surface from 0.135 to 0.015 m could reduce the operative temperatures by 1.6 and 2.7℃, respectively. For the same total water flow rate, a change in pipe arrangement from serpentine to parallel showed insignificant influence on the indoor comfort indices. The best combination of these three parameters can achieve an average operative temperature of 29℃, which is comfortable for the hot semi-arid climate of New Delhi where the adaptive neutral temperature was found to be 29.4℃. This study will contribute to heating, ventilating, air-conditioning designers’ understanding of the importance of these parameters for achieving the required comfort in buildings in India.
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9

Hoyt, Lorlene, Renu Khosla e Claudia Canepa. "Leaves, Pebbles, and Chalk: Building a Public Participation GIS in New Delhi, India". Journal of Urban Technology 12, n.º 1 (abril de 2005): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10630730500116479.

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Dhawan, Ranjit Kumar. "Korea’s ‘New Southern Policy’ Towards India: An Analysis". Jadavpur Journal of International Relations 24, n.º 1 (23 de fevereiro de 2020): 53–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0973598420906248.

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The Moon Jae-in administration in South Korea (hereafter Korea) initiated the ‘New Southern Policy’ in 2017 to foster closer relations with ASEAN and India and bring them at par with the four major powers—the United States of America (USA), China, Russia and Japan, which have traditionally played a dominant role in Korea’s foreign affairs. Korea’s strategy through this new policy has been to diversify its foreign relations and lessen dependence on these four major powers of the Northeast Asian region. In this policy shift India is projected as one of the key partners for Korea. However, there has not been much progress in Korea’s relations with India in the last 2 years. The New Southern Policy is also not compatible with US-led ‘Indo-Pacific strategy’ in which India is an integral component. This article argues that Seoul’s New Southern Policy toward New Delhi shall remain limited and would largely focus on developing economic relations rather than building security cooperation between the two countries.
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Umadi, Ravi, Sumit Dookia e Jens Rydell. "The Monumental Mistake of Evicting Bats from Archaeological Sites—A Reflection from New Delhi". Heritage 2, n.º 1 (8 de fevereiro de 2019): 553–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/heritage2010036.

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We highlight the importance of an integrated management policy for archaeological monuments and the insect-eating bats that roost inside them. We refer to India, but the issue is general and of worldwide significance. There is increasing evidence that the ecosystem services provided by insect-eating bats in agricultural fields are of vital economic importance, which is likely to increase as chemical pest-control methods become inefficient due to evolving multi-resistance in insects. We visited five archaeological sites in the city of New Delhi. We found bats at all five locations, and three of them harbored large colonies (many thousands) of mouse-tailed bats and tomb bats. These bats likely disperse over extensive areas to feed, including agricultural fields in the vicinity and beyond. All insect-eating bats should be protected and properly managed as a valuable resource at the archaeological sites where they occur. We firmly believe that “fear” of bats can be turned into curiosity by means of education and that their presence should instead enhance the value of the sites. We suggest some means to protect the bats roosting inside the buildings, while mitigating potential conflicts with archaeological and touristic interests.
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Garver, John. "Across the Himalayan Gap: An Indian Quest for Understanding China. Edited by Tan Chung. [New Delhi: Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts and Gyan Publishing House, 1998. ISBN 81-212-0585-9.]". China Quarterly 170 (junho de 2002): 477–502. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009443902310283.

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This is a fascinating book essential for anyone seeking to understand contemporary China–India relations. It presents in considerable detail and from a number of different perspectives the strategic vision of a coalition of China and India struggling in common to create a new world economic–political order in greater comport with the interests and values of the peoples of the non-Western world. This vision of Sino-Indian co-operation in building a new world order was posited as the desirable end-goal of the process of Sino-Indian rapprochement presided over by Indian Congress Party and Chinese leaders beginning in 1988.
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Mahmood, Mir Annice. "Vinala Ramachandran (ed.). Gender and Social Equity in Primary Education: Hierarchies of Access. New Delhi: Sage Publications, 2004. 381 pages. Paperback. Indian Rs 390.00." Pakistan Development Review 42, n.º 3 (1 de setembro de 2003): 282–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.30541/v42i3pp.282-283.

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Education is a basic human right. Over the past sixty years much progress has been made in raising literacy levels across a large cross-section of developing countries. For instance, Pakistan has seen an increase in literacy levels from 15 percent in 1951 to just over 50 percent in 2004. In India also there has been a significant increase in literacy levels. The 2001 Census of India showed that 65.4 percent of the population could be considered to be literate. A breakdown by sex revealed that more males (75.85 percent) were literate than females (54.16 percent). Although the figures are impressive, much remains to be done in India if literacy levels are to be raised to the levels that prevail in the developed world. Thus, appropriate plans, programmes, and projects need to be implemented to provide basic primary education to all children. However, there are two sides to the picture; one that deals with the demand for education and the other with the supply of education. On the demand side, one of the most important factors is that of income of the parents. On the supply side, it is the quality of education being imparted, particularly the level of teaching standards, and the up-keep of school buildings.
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Jain, Mansi, Thomas Hoppe e Hans Bressers. "A Governance Perspective on Net Zero Energy Building Niche Development in India: The Case of New Delhi". Energies 10, n.º 8 (3 de agosto de 2017): 1144. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en10081144.

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Schlaich, Mike, Harshavardhan Subbarao e Jose Kurian. "A Signature Cable-Stayed Bridge in India—The Yamuna Bridge at Wazirabad in New Delhi". Structural Engineering International 23, n.º 1 (fevereiro de 2013): 14–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/101686613x13363929988179.

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Hu, Richard W. "China’s ‘One Belt One Road’ Strategy". China Report 53, n.º 2 (21 de abril de 2017): 107–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0009445517696619.

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This article examines One Belt One Road (OBOR) strategic implications for India. It is argued that the implications need to be considered within the framework of the future development of the China–India relationship. The relationship is largely constrained by and embedded in the security dilemma at the present time. Taking the opportunity offered by the OBOR initiative, China and India should explore building a ‘new model of major power relationship’ between the two countries. While the border issue and regional security rivalry may not find an easy way out, it should not impede the leaders of the two countries from expanding the areas of cooperation and building up strategic trust between the two peoples. Beijing and New Delhi can and should find more areas of cooperation on non-traditional security issues, such as food security, water, energy, strategic metals, common concern over environmental protection and climate change and reforming the post-war international economic order.
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17

Sathyamurthy, T. V. "State and society in India: Studies in nation-building T. K. Oommen Sage, New Delhi, 1990.225 pp". Public Administration and Development 14, n.º 5 (1994): 509–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pad.4230140507.

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Singh, M. C., e S. N. Garg. "Suitable Glazing Selection for Glass-Curtain Walls in Tropical Climates of India". ISRN Renewable Energy 2011 (4 de outubro de 2011): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.5402/2011/484893.

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How a glass-curtain wall affects the heating and cooling load of a building is analysed. The study includes five types of glazings, which include double-glazed clear glass, double-glazed low-e, and double-glazed solar control. The analysis is for three climates: composite (New Delhi), hot and dry (Jodhpur), and warm and humid (Chennai). An office building is chosen for analysis. The study includes effect of glazed area, orientation, and that of climates, on annual energy consumption. It was found that energy consumption increases linearly with the glazed area and minimum energy consumption is for north orientation. For types of climates considered in this study, a glass-curtain wall, made of solar control glazing (reflective), consumes 6–8% less energy than the standard window.
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Rao, T. N. Subba. "Civilization Through Civil Engineering: Conclusions of the 14th Congress of IABSE, New Delhi, India, March 1-6, 1992". Structural Engineering International 2, n.º 3 (agosto de 1992): 214–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/101686692780628325.

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Bhardwaj, Ashok Kumar, Ashoo Grover, Sunil Kumar Raina, Dinesh Kumar, Vishav Chander, Shailja Sharma Sood e Sushant Sharma. "Research Equity: A Capacity Building Workshop of Research Methodology for Medical Health Professionals". Journal of Biomedical Education 2013 (22 de dezembro de 2013): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/261643.

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Research is a cornerstone for knowledge generation, which in turns requires capacity building for its tools and techniques. Despite having a vast infrastructure in India the research in medical science has been carried out in limited and focused institutions. In order to build the capacity in carrying out research activities a five-day planning workshop was conducted at state run medical college. Total 22 medical faculty members participated in the workshop with average public health experience of 12 years (range: 5–25 years). The knowledge was assessed objectively by multiple-choice questionnaire. The mean score increased from 6.7 to 7.9 from pre- to posttest. About seventy-percent participants showed improvement, whereas 21.0% showed deterioration in the knowledge and the rest showed the same score. Apart from knowledge skills also showed improvement as total 12 research projects were generated and eight were approved for funding by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), New Delhi. It can be concluded that a supportive environment for research can be built with the technical assistance.
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Ahmad, Adil, e Khalid Moin. "Stability Analysis of Monument: A Case Study–Safdarjung Tomb". Advanced Materials Research 133-134 (outubro de 2010): 403–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.133-134.403.

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Present study deals with the stability analysis of an existing historical monument “Safdarjung Tomb” under Seismic Load. The tomb is situated at New Delhi, India. The building is classified as protected monument by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). This is a ground plus two storey masonry structure with a central dome. The basic seismic parameters have been evaluated using Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) Codal method. Distribution of lateral forces is carried out to individual piers and walls using Rigidity Approach. The seismic performance of the building is studied under the gravity and earthquake loads. The building is modeled as a two-degree-of-freedom shear-beam system. The piers, which are located parallel to the direction of earthquake shaking are assumed to provide spring action. The mass of the walls and slabs are lumped at the storey levels. The lumped masses are assumed to be connected to each other through massless springs. The degree of each mass in horizontal direction is considered, neglecting the vertical translational and rotational degrees of freedom. Stiffness of the walls parallel to longitudinal and transverse directions of the building has been computed separately which was used for computation of lateral forces in each direction. The forces so evaluated are used in pier analysis to evaluate stress induced in various elements. The majority of the structural elements were found safe and the overall structure is stable. The stresses due to shear and bending are within permissible limit
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Chel, Arvind, e G. N. Tiwari. "A case study of a typical 2.32kWP stand-alone photovoltaic (SAPV) in composite climate of New Delhi (India)". Applied Energy 88, n.º 4 (abril de 2011): 1415–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2010.10.027.

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Rattan, Amulya, Subodh Kumar, Amit Gupta, Biplab Mishra e Sushma Sagar. "Management of Patients with Neurotrauma by Trauma Surgeons: Need of the Hour". Indian Journal of Neurotrauma 16, n.º 02/03 (agosto de 2019): 082–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0039-3400331.

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AbstractTrauma-related deaths in excess of 1 million occur annually in India, more than half of which are attributable to head injury. There are just 1,400 certified neurosurgeons in India, and only 300 new trainees are inducted every year. More than 80% of India’s specialist doctors live in urban India. There is evidence that patients travel hundreds of kilometers to seek a neurosurgeon; needless to say, golden hour of trauma is surely lost in this time. Scarcity of neurosurgeons is a problem in the developed world too. Government of India is building a national network of trauma centers for better trauma care. However, neurosurgeon availability at these centers remains a cause of concern. In dire need of neurotrauma management and scarcity of neurosurgeons, management of neurotrauma by trauma and general surgeons is the best available option. Such management policies have already been tested successfully in both developed (Germany, Sweden) and developing world (Nepal). There is evidence on patient safety and good outcome in neurotrauma management by trauma surgeons. Refresher training of 1 week every 2 years has been recommended to prevent skill attrition after 2-week neurotrauma training led by a neurosurgeon. Uninterrupted run of 3-year trauma surgery residency program at JPN Apex Trauma Center, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India, incorporating in-house neurotrauma training is a testimony to need and utility of this approach. A “readily available neurosurgeon when needed” is a scarce resource in most parts of world. Therefore, trauma surgeon is best suited to deliver timely care in neurotrauma and tackle this “hidden epidemic.”
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Redlinger, Daniel. "Die frühe Sultanatsarchitektur in Nordindien im 12.–14. Jahrhundert als herrschaftspolitisches, identitätsstiftendes Ausdrucksmittel im Spannungsfeld wechselnder Legitimierungsstrategien". Das Mittelalter 20, n.º 1 (1 de junho de 2015): 11–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/mial-2015-0002.

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Abstract The following paper discusses how the experience and perception of contingency and strategies to cope with it are evident in the architecture of the Muslim ruling class during the early Delhi Sultanate (1190–1320). The discussed building is the most important Friday Mosque in this context, a quasi-visualized symbol of the thematic concept of rulership for the new Muslim political elite. This ruling class established itself in Northern India in the late 12th century within a multi-ethnic, multi-religious and socially heterogeneous society, in which extremely different forms of communication, social hierarchies, worldviews, religious concepts, social norms and perceptions of historical images and experiences met. From the 13th century onwards, the countless immigrants and refugees from Persian-speaking areas had a remarkable influence on the local culture which was already multifaceted due to the various indigenous Northern Indian conceptions of life, faith and perception. Examining the architecture of the mosque as well as its decoration and systems of inscriptions, it will be shown how these almost text-like visual systems where adapted and used by different rulers as part of their diverging strategies of legitimization of their rule and how they created visualized reference systems to promote a coherent, specific historical narrative and a visual experience and language of a meaningful collective past to which all social and religious groups in Northern India could relate.
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Ngaibiakching e Amba Pande. "India’s Act East Policy and ASEAN: Building a Regional Order Through Partnership in the Indo-Pacific". International Studies 57, n.º 1 (22 de dezembro de 2019): 67–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0020881719885526.

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Over the past few decades, India’s security concerns have undergone a substantial change. With the formulation of the Look East Policy (LEP) in the 1990s, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) as a regional entity became an essential component and a corridor for India’s outreach to Southeast Asia. In 2014, the LEP became more encompassing with a shift to the Act East Policy (AEP). The global security and economic environment too are witnessing significant changes with the USA taking a back seat, China’s aggressive positioning and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) coupled with the emerging geopolitical construct of ‘Indo-Pacific’. The regional stakeholders, such as ASEAN, the USA, Japan, Australia and India are yet to form a unified stand on the Indo-Pacific concept as well as the regional security architecture. The AEP appropriately fits into the current scenario as India is set to take up a larger role in the regional security environment while keeping the centrality of ASEAN intact. New Delhi seeks to create a platform for mutual development in the Indo-Pacific and engage with like-minded nations in the quest for a rules-based order that promotes transparency, respect for sovereignty and international law, stability and free and fair-trade framework. India and ASEAN can be apt partners in the Indo-Pacific to play a constructive role and build a regional order.
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Haq, Rashida. "M. L. Dantwala, Harsh Sethi and Pravin Visaria. Social Change through Voluntary Action. New Delhi: Sage Publications, 1998. Hardback. Indian Rs 325.00. 199 pages." Pakistan Development Review 38, n.º 1 (1 de março de 1999): 119–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.30541/v38i1pp.119-120.

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This book is an• extremely valuable addition to a very important topic concerning development issues at the grassroots levels. It has highlighted the contribution of voluntary organisations and proved that voluntary action can• be a potent instrument for bringing about social change, for eliminating poverty and for building an egalitarian and humane society. In the introduction, the editors remind the readers of the unfulfilled promises made before, and after independence, by leaders to banish poverty and inequality. Five of the eleven chapters in this book take a macro view of the context, the nature as well as the future of voluntary action in India: These articles describe the current state of affairs, the degeneration of the values of sacrifices and an unending quest for money and political power. So, it is argued, that basic values in public behaviour can be restored through vigilant and purposive voluntary action. But a major criticism of voluntary groups is their localism, small size, fragmentation and the failure to institutionalise them. The editors are of the view that thousands of such groups can collectively contribute to social transformation through their modest efforts at organising help for the needy, redress their• grievances and fight against atrocities inflicted on them. The articles evaluate the contextual factors influencing the emergence of voluntary organisations and their applicability to the Indian situation.
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Gáthy, Vera. "Das, S. K.: Building a World-Class Civil Service for Twenty-First Century India (Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2010, pp. 269)". Társadalomkutatás 30, n.º 2 (junho de 2012): 195–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/tarskut.30.2012.2.8.

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Adlakha, Deepti, Mina Chandra, Murali Krishna, Lee Smith e Mark A. Tully. "Designing Age-Friendly Communities: Exploring Qualitative Perspectives on Urban Green Spaces and Ageing in Two Indian Megacities". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, n.º 4 (4 de fevereiro de 2021): 1491. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041491.

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The World Health Organization and the United Nations have increasingly acknowledged the importance of urban green space (UGS) for healthy ageing. However, low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) like India with exponential ageing populations have inadequate UGS. This qualitative study examined the relationships between UGS and healthy ageing in two megacities in India. Participants were recruited using snowball sampling in New Delhi and Chennai and semi-structured interviews were conducted with consenting participants (N = 60, female = 51%; age > 60 years; fluent in English, Hindi, or Tamil). Interviews were recorded, transcribed, translated, and analysed using inductive and thematic analysis. Benefits of UGS included community building and social capital, improved health and social resilience, physical activity promotion, reduced exposure to noise, air pollution, and heat. Poorly maintained UGS and lack of safe, age-friendly pedestrian infrastructure were identified as barriers to health promotion in later life. Neighbourhood disorder and crime constrained older adults’ use of UGS in low-income neighbourhoods. This study underscores the role of UGS in the design of age-friendly communities in India. The findings highlight the benefits of UGS for older adults, particularly those living in socially disadvantaged or underserved communities, which often have least access to high-quality parks and green areas.
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Jha, Sunanda, e Dinabandhu Bag. "Why do informal service enterprises remain informal? A RIDIT approach". Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development 26, n.º 3 (4 de junho de 2019): 381–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jsbed-01-2018-0009.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to identify reasons as to why firms operate informally, and to explore the rationalisation of not moving towards formalisation. Design/methodology/approach Building on empirical data collected through interviews with the entrepreneurs of the informal service enterprises of Delhi and peripheral areas, this paper presents the results of the survey conducted in 2017. By using the analytical tool developed by I. Bross, the authors have identified the most significant contributing factors to informality. Findings In the research, the authors establish that competition and lack of awareness are the most dominant reasons due to which informal firms are hesitant in moving towards formalisation. For successful transition towards formalisation, a “new pact” between the workers, enterprises and governments needs to be developed, based on capacity building, productivity gains, enabling business environment, empowerment and entitlements to social and economic rights. Research limitations/implications The research is limited only to informal service enterprises located in Delhi, the national capital of India, and the peripheral areas. Practical implications By identifying the most dominant factors, focussed steps can be taken to reduce the size of the informal sector. Originality/value The informal service enterprises are not a widely explored community by researchers and policy makers. This sector can employ more people with less investment, and hence requires intensive study. The use of RIDIT approach to rank the identified factors due to which the firms do not move towards formalisation is the novelty of this work.
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Corwin, Julia Eleanor. "“Nothing is useless in nature”: Delhi’s repair economies and value-creation in an electronics “waste” sector". Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 50, n.º 1 (2 de novembro de 2017): 14–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0308518x17739006.

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This paper follows the return of electronic waste back into commodity circuits through widespread processes of reuse, repair and remanufacturing across Delhi, India. Tracing the movements of “waste” from the scrap shop back into secondary use industries, I situate e-waste in India as operating primarily within economies of reuse and repair, rather than waste and recycling. Instead of managing waste, India’s broad reuse industries are production-based, maintaining and making new things out of a diversity of new and used materials. The production of value from used things is dependent on the e-waste trader and the repair worker, who see the potential for seemingly unlimited trajectories of multitudinous conditions and configurations. This view of e-waste from the repair shop (and even the scrap shop) rather than a recycling factory offers a very different rendering of e-waste and particularly informal e-waste labor in the Global South than is presented in policy and popular media. Building on scholarship on vibrant waste economies, I demonstrate that India’s electronic “waste” sector is in fact a powerful source of value (and product) creation and call into question e-waste as a definitive “waste” product and its management in a “waste” economy.
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Jaya Surya R e Dr. Kranti Kumar M. "Implementation of Circular Business Models in Construction and Demolition Waste Management of India". International Journal of Engineering and Management Research 11, n.º 2 (19 de abril de 2021): 87–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.31033/ijemr.11.2.12.

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In the world, around 30% of the total solid waste is construction and demolition waste. In India, as per the building material promotion council, 150 million tonnes of C&D waste is generated every year. In the total C&D waste, only one percent which is 6500 tonnes per day is recycled, mentioned in the report released by the Centre for science and environment, New Delhi. There is a rising gap between increasing demand and limited sources in the construction sector of India. It leads to market instability and environmental harm. Linear business model is most commonly used in present times. It is one of the main reasons for the increase of C&D wastes. This linear approach (source-commodity-waste) encourages the one-use of products. It leads to excessive dumping of C&D wastes in landfills, which is not a sustainable practice. Circular business models leads to closed-loop approach (source-commodity-waste-new source). The adoption of circular business models in C&D waste management is the possible solution for the decreasing resources. This study aims to discuss the implementation of various approaches including conceptual models, methods, and tools of circular business models in the C&D waste management in India, which leads to the circular economy and sustainable development. Through the study of recent literature sources, various data related to circular business models, circular economy are collected. Data analysis will be done using the literature review. This research will highlight the socio-economic, environmental benefits, improvements, and the applicability of circular business models in the C&D waste management of India. This paper is concluded that framing strict circular economy policies for India would encourage the implementation of CBM in C&D waste management which reduces the need for fresh resources and ensures sustainable development.
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Drinkwater, Derek. "Building a World-Class Civil Service for Twenty-First Century India S. K. Das Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2010, ISBN 9780198068662, 269 pp.)". Australian Journal of Public Administration 72, n.º 4 (dezembro de 2013): 489–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-8500.12047.

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Dahal, Shanti, Anjali Sharma e Sanjay Zodpey. "Mapping of Public Health Jobs in India—Where Can the Public Health Graduates Be Employed?" Journal of Health Management 20, n.º 1 (11 de janeiro de 2018): 73–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0972063417747725.

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Introduction: Public health programmes work to improve the health and well-being of communities by identifying the risks affecting people at different stages of life and finding best ways to minimize them. This article attempts to map the public health jobs available in India and contribute towards providing new insights in recruitment strategies for public health professionals (PHPs). Methods: A total of 427 public health jobs advertised in recruitment portals, newspapers and websites of organizations during 2012–2015 were analysed for title, qualification, location and job disciplines. Results: Higher qualification in public health and/or social sciences is much preferred followed by MBBS and management. The largest group of vacancies consisted of programme management responsibilities followed by profiles in RMNCH. Delhi, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh and Bihar had the highest number of jobs. Recommendations: A dedicated public health jobs web portal can be a rich resource for employers for easy access to profiles of PHPs. It will also give due emphasis to public health as a profession. Building a public health cadre in state health services shall be a desirable step to ensure creation of enough job opportunities. Conclusion: Research should be undertaken to understand the changing trends in public health employment. Such studies can be beneficial for public health workforce planning and monitoring.
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Chel, Arvind, G. N. Tiwari e H. N. Singh. "A modified model for estimation of daylight factor for skylight integrated with dome roof structure of mud-house in New Delhi (India)". Applied Energy 87, n.º 10 (outubro de 2010): 3037–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2010.02.018.

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Malik, K., e D. Kumar. "HIGH RESOLUTION INTERFEROMETRIC DIGITAL ELEVATION MODEL GENERATION AND VALIDATION". ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLII-5 (19 de novembro de 2018): 755–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-xlii-5-755-2018.

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<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> In this paper high-resolution DEM generation has been attempted using the Cosmo-skymed data over the New Delhi, India area. The study area is an urban area filled with lots of building and settlement which was helpful to get the stable point in the time series images data. This DEM generation is based on the highly stable permanents scatter candidate (PSC). This PSC was selected on the basis of amplitude stability index which was generated/calculated using the 25 images of the cosmo-skymed acquired over the time. A sufficient number of field GPS data has been used for result validation. Interpolated output DEM at 10-meter resolution has also been compared with the available SRTM and ASTER DEM for further quality estimation. Presented result demonstrate the capabilities of the technique in constructing a high-resolution quality DEM.</p>
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Weiss, Anita M. "Protest and Change: Studies in Social Movements. By T. K. Oommen. New Delhi: Sage Publications. 1990. 309 pp. $32.50. - State and Society in India: Studies in Nation-Building. By T. K. Oommen. New Delhi: Sage Publications. 1990. 225 pp. $26.00." Journal of Asian Studies 51, n.º 1 (fevereiro de 1992): 195–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2058402.

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Kanika Bansal. "Impact of British Raj on the Education System in India: The Process of Modernization in the Princely States of India – The case of Mohindra College, Patiala". Creative Space 5, n.º 1 (3 de julho de 2017): 13–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.15415/cs.2017.51002.

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British rule is said to have been responsible for the modernization witnessed in the Indian civilization. The impact of this process was quiet evident from the changes adopted by the Indians in their life style, thinking processes, attires, food and education. Besides the advancements made in the spheres of roads, transports, postal services etc, their rule acted as a significant period of transition from the indigenous style of education to western education. The foundations were laid by the East India Company and the Christian Missionaries to employ Indians for administrative tasks as well as to serve their political, economical and colonial interests. Originally the access to education was limited to the royal families, as the British were of the opinion that Indians could become aware of their rights and positions and protest against their Raj posing a threat to the British establishment in India. Lord Curzon’s efforts in the 20th century gave way to spread of higher education within the masses and channelized Indian education system. However the rulers of the Princely States in of India who were granted autonomy by the British to manage their own kingdoms acted as major agents to undertake the social and educational reforms within their territories. With the spread of education from elementary to higher levels, many new schools, universities and other institutions were developed during this period which are symbols of educational advancement as well as hold high architectural merit. Patiala, aprime princely state is a well known academic centre also important for its rich culture since the British Raj. Education in Patiala originated under the Maharajas with the opening of the school of languages in 1860A.D. With the introduction of Mahindra College (the first Degree College in a city) in 1870, became came an important educational centre. It was the only college between Delhi and Lahore for a long time that promoted contemporary higher learning in Northern India. The historic college building represents an aesthetic mix of regional interpretation of Indo-Saracenic style of architecture. Later on many educational institutes catering to medical facilities, sports education etc. was set up in this princely state. This paper is thus an attempt to explore the education reforms during the British Raj, the changes that happened and their triggers. It also brings out reforms initiated in Princely States specifically Patiala as a seat of learning and a detailed study of the Mohindra College, Patiala, that represents an excellent example of educational institutions developed during the 19th century. The present study was done as a part of an academic project undertaken during Masters of Architecture under the able guidance of Prof Kiran Joshi..
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Iyer, Gopal, Myra J. Giesen, Rohit Juneja e David W. Graham. "Strategic value of interviewer training and local community-based organisations for WaSH and antibiotic resistance surveys". Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development 11, n.º 4 (19 de maio de 2021): 535–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/washdev.2021.232.

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Abstract Water, sanitation, and hygiene (WaSH) research has long relied on household surveys to gather knowledge, attitudes, and practice (KAP) data with local enumerators or community correspondents (CCs). However, CCs must be trained to build capacity and ensure representative survey responses. Here, we use a case study in low-income, informal communities from New Delhi, India to assess the value of structured training for individuals who lead the gathering of KAP data (CC leaders, CCLs) on WaSH and antibiotic resistance. Feedback from CCLs showed that directed training increased their motivation, confidence, and technical competence and provided them skills that enhanced data collection. Training further strengthened relationships and empowered our local community-based organisation (CBO), expanding their role beyond being an implementing partner. Empowerment led to new insights, such as evident problems with communications between local doctors and community dwellers. Only three of 38 focus group attendees knew what an antibiotic was, apparently because they were never told. Overall, this work shows that interviewer training has many trickle-down benefits, improving the quality of data, building confidence in field teams, and empowering local CBOs, but most importantly, by increasing knowledge among community dwellers, such that they also might be empowered.
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Adžemović, Tessa, e Pauline Park. "2303 Trauma-related acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in India: Current incidence and management strategies". Journal of Clinical and Translational Science 2, S1 (junho de 2018): 33–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2018.141.

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OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Aim 1: To determine the true incidence of trauma-related acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in India. We propose to perform a prospective observational study to determine the incidence of ARDS in India. Aim 2: To perform a preliminary assessment of risk factors for ARDS in the Indian trauma population. We will leverage these findings against the global ARDS data to provide a foundation for further interventional studies. Aim 3: To evaluate the current management strategies and patient outcomes from ARDS in trauma subjects admitted to the Jai Prakash Narayan Apex Trauma Center (JPNATC). These findings will identify areas in need of practice-based performance improvement in ARDS therapies in India. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: This application proposes an observational study of trauma patients with ARDS, a population that continues to have substantial in-hospital mortality. The approximate number of ICU-admitted trauma cases for the study period is 1700. Specific data elements to be collected include patient demographics, comorbidities, mechanism of injury, Injury Severity Score, risk factors for ARDS, sequential organ failure and assessment scores, vital signs, laboratory values, and evidence-based treatments received, including mechanical ventilation and adjunctive therapies. Outcome data will include discharge location, ICU and hospital length of stay and all-cause mortality. Selection of Subjects: We will include all patients admitted to the JPNATC Trauma and Neurosurgical ICUs intubated and mechanically ventilated and meeting the definition of Berlin definition of ARDS8. We will collect data for a total of 12 months. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Due to gaps in reporting, the incidence, mortality, and practice-based management algorithms applied in trauma patients suffering from ARDS in India is unknown. We hypothesize that the overall incidence of trauma-related ARDS is higher, and the fraction of patients managed with evidence-based therapies is lower than global reported averages. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: Although the true incidence of ARDS in trauma subjects in India is currently unknown, we suspect that it is much higher than reported. Such data are important in identification of resource allocation including ICU bed and mechanical ventilator availability, particularly in a resource-limited environment. This proposal will aid in the development of research infrastructure at JPNATC, contribute to capacity building, and the establishment of a Clinical Research unit at the Apex Institute. Finally, a provision to develop a consortium and trauma quality improvement program among the existing trauma centers in New Delhi to disseminate important research findings and guidance to the rest of India is a future benefit of the study.
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Faraz Naim, Mohammad, Sumbul Fatima e Mohd Suhail. "WINFORT Services: the way forward". Emerald Emerging Markets Case Studies 11, n.º 1 (16 de março de 2021): 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eemcs-08-2020-0300.

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Learning outcomes After a thorough analysis of the case, students will be able to do the following: understand the building blocks of incentive structure in an organizational setting. Review the existing incentive structure at WINFORT. Develop effective incentive approaches to motivate employees at workplace. Illustrate the importance of performance management review to motivate employees. Case overview/synopsis The case explores the motivational state of a talent acquisition executive or talent scout working for a staffing firm, WINFORT Services in New Delhi, India. The two main characters in the cast are Helena Stacy, the Lead Talent Scout at WINFORT and Sofia Williams, the Talent scout. There was a meeting conducted between Helena and Sofia regarding the latter’s performance review held annually. However, to Sofia’s surprise, she could to get any salary hike this time as she failed to achieve her given targets. This led to a serious altercation between the two and resulted in Sofia started thinking of looking for alternate job opportunities. Complexity academic level The case is suitable for any postgraduate course, in particular MBA or MBA executive development program on human resource management, talent management, compensation and benefits, and as a module on motivation in organizational behavior. Subject code CSS 6: Human Resource Management. Supplementary materials In addition, there are more resources available to augment the understanding of the business operations of staffing firms in India. Interested instructors and students are advised to go through these resources to better understand the routine operations of a staffing organization. https://talentcorner.in/how-recruitment-industry-generates-wealth/ https://wowidea.in/how-recruitment-agencies-in-india-works/ https://www.michaelpage.be/about-us/our-recruitment-process?fbclid=iwar0ftzztbzm5afvdwv_oyvp1f1p8zgpuflrbt8z6yg9zakm5c0kaoaom6ha
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Chel, Arvind, G. N. Tiwari e Avinash Chandra. "A model for estimation of daylight factor for skylight: An experimental validation using pyramid shape skylight over vault roof mud-house in New Delhi (India)". Applied Energy 86, n.º 11 (novembro de 2009): 2507–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2009.03.004.

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Makkar, Namrata, e Kanika Jain. "To study the impact of design considerations on customer satisfaction in a dialysis facility of a super-specialty tertiary care hospital in Delhi, India". International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences 5, n.º 6 (27 de maio de 2017): 2563. http://dx.doi.org/10.18203/2320-6012.ijrms20172448.

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Background: In recent times, patient focused hospital architecture is gaining attention. The current scenario demands to provide living spaces for families rather than ware houses for the sick. Attitudes, aspiration and values of the society must be clearly understood while planning a facility.Methods: This prospective cross sectional observational study was carried out over a period of one year at the Dialysis unit of a tertiary care, super specialty hospital in North India with the objective to establish that minor structural changes can enhance customer delight which includes patients and their attendants of a chronic disease patient population visiting a health care facility and satisfaction of the staff of the facility. The tool used was a structured 5 point Likert scaled questionnaire including unstructured interviews. These were held with 200 patients availing treatment in the old and new dialysis unit each and who have at least had three dialysis treatments within 6 months in the both the units. Also, for staff satisfaction, 25 staff working for at least one month in the old unit and new unit each. Data was analysed using SPSS 17.0 software.Results: Good design and quality of care were regarded important for patient experience. For patients, overall functioning and efficiency of the processes in the facility dependent on the design of the building was most important. Just over half of all surveyed patients felt that design impacted their relationship with their doctor and the quality of the care received. For attendants, waiting area including billing facility fetched the highest parameter for satisfaction. For staff the importance of access to support services, safety and provision of basic facilities resonated with the patient views presented above. Privacy, confidentiality and patient safety through careful design of waiting room, reception and consulting room were high staff priorities. Design that facilitated communication between team members also emerged as an important area although the change in design did not make much difference in emotional wellbeing and work life balance of the staff.Conclusions: This study did not yield sufficient data to confirm or refute either concept, though clearly this merit further investigation. Some unexpected findings were reported. Specifically, the survey data rated privacy and the availability of comfortable physical conditions as the highest priority for both staff and patients.
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Basu, Titli. "Sino-US Disorder: Power and Policy in Post-COVID Indo-Pacific". Journal of Asian Economic Integration 2, n.º 2 (13 de agosto de 2020): 159–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2631684620940448.

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Great powers have invested in order-building projects with competing vision of political values and ideologies. How the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic shapes the balance of power and order are debated. The pandemic arrived in the midst of Sino-US strategic contestation, a crumbling European project, de-globalisation and contested economic governance architecture. While the pandemic exacerbated Washington abdicating leadership role, Beijing also has alienated itself from the followers of rules based order. It has sharpened the clash of rhetoric, narratives, and perceptions. The pandemic will reorganise the international system and power structures. Situating the Indo-Pacific project in this backdrop, this article critically analyses the debates, discourses and nuanced divergences that are shaping the Indo-Pacific puzzle in the power corridors of Washington, Tokyo and Delhi, in addition to mapping Beijing’s approach to Indo-Pacific. The article evaluates the contrast in their respective visions of order, China strategy, ASEAN centrality and multilateral free-trade regimes. But these subtle departures have not restricted major Indo-Pacific powers to weave a strategic web of democracies and pursue a win-win issue-based multi-alignment on matters of mutual strategic interests. With new realities in play, the India-US-Japan triangle will feature as one of the key building blocks of Indo-Pacific to deliver on the shared responsibility of providing global public goods. JEL Codes: F5, K3
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Oberoi, J. K., C. Wattal, P. K. Aggarwal, S. Khanna, A. K. Basu e K. Verma. "Pulmonary coccidiomycosis in New Delhi, India". Infection 40, n.º 6 (17 de agosto de 2012): 699–702. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s15010-012-0315-9.

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Datta, Arindam, R. Suresh, Akansha Gupta, Damini Singh e Priyanka Kulshrestha. "Indoor air quality of non-residential urban buildings in Delhi, India". International Journal of Sustainable Built Environment 6, n.º 2 (dezembro de 2017): 412–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijsbe.2017.07.005.

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Chowdhary, Anuradha, Cheshta Sharma, Shalini Duggal, Kshitij Agarwal, Anupam Prakash, Pradeep Kumar Singh, Sarika Jain et al. "New Clonal Strain ofCandida auris, Delhi, India". Emerging Infectious Diseases 19, n.º 10 (outubro de 2013): 1670–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1910.130393.

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STAMP, GAVIN. "New Delhi: A New Imperial Capital for British India". Court Historian 17, n.º 2 (dezembro de 2012): 189–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/cou.2012.17.2.004.

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Dalal, Rakesh, Kamal Bansal e Sapan Thapar. "Bridging the energy gap of India’s residential buildings by using rooftop solar PV systems for higher energy stars". Clean Energy 5, n.º 3 (19 de julho de 2021): 423–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ce/zkab017.

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Abstract The residential-building sector in India consumes &gt;25% of the total electricity and is the third-largest consumer of electricity; consumption increased by 26% between 2014 and 2017. India has introduced a star-labelling programme for residential buildings that is applicable for all single- and multiple-dwelling units in the country for residential purposes. The Energy Performance Index (EPI) of a building (annual energy consumption in kilowatt-hours per square metre of the building) is taken as an indicator for awarding the star label for residential buildings. For gauging the EPI status of existing buildings, the electricity consumption of residential buildings (in kWh/m2/year) is established through a case study of the residential society. Two years of electricity bills are collected for an Indian residential society located in Palam, Delhi, analysed and benchmarked with the Indian residential star-labelling programme. A wide EPI gap is observed for existing buildings for five-star energy labels. Based on existing electricity tariffs, the energy consumption of residential consumers and the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE)’s proposed building ENERGY STAR labelling, a grid-integrated rooftop solar photovoltaic (PV) system is considered for achieving a higher star label. This research study establishes the potential of grid-connected rooftop solar PV systems for residential buildings in Indian cities through a case study of Delhi. Techno-economic analysis of a grid-integrated 3-kWp rooftop solar PV plant is analysed by using RETScreen software. The study establishes that an additional two stars can be achieved by existing buildings by using a grid-integrated rooftop solar PV plant. Payback for retrofit of a 3-kWp rooftop solar PV plant for Indian cites varies from 3 to 7 years. A case study in Delhi, India establishes the potential of grid-connected rooftop solar PV systems for residential buildings. Techno-economic analysis of grid integrated, 3 kWp rooftop solar systems estimates a payback period from 3 to 7 years.
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Sandhu, Amit Jyoti. "Delhi High Court identifies limitations to architects’ moral rights in case of demolition of buildings". Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice 14, n.º 8 (1 de agosto de 2019): 599–600. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jiplp/jpz094.

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Thomas, P. C., Bhaskar Natarajan e S. Anand. "Energy conservation guidelines for government office buildings in New Delhi". Energy and Buildings 16, n.º 1-2 (janeiro de 1991): 617–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0378-7788(91)90030-7.

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