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When the Invisible Disappeared: Migrant Labour in Agriculture in the Pandemic

By R. Ramakumar|2022-01-31T14:45:25+05:30April 14, 2020|

The Covid-19 pandemic has, in real life, made the world recognise and appreciate the value of migrant labour. After the lockdown began, the mobility of migrant workers has been severely restricted and large numbers of migrant workers have returned home.

The Covid­-19 Pandemic and Indian Agriculture: A Note

By R. Ramakumar|2022-01-31T14:51:30+05:30March 31, 2020|

As India moves from regulations and controls to a total lockdown, the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the economy is becoming ever more acute. The Indian economy, which was already facing a sharp downturn by the end of 2019, will surely record an extraordinarily poor growth rate for the months of March, April, and May 2020.

Randomised Controlled Trials and Non-Randomised Politics: What Makes for Good Policy?

By Aparajita Bakshi|2022-01-31T15:01:31+05:30December 19, 2019|

The 2019 Nobel Prize in economics for the proponents of Randomised Controlled Trials fulfils the discipline’s highest aspiration to mimic the laws and methods of natural sciences to explain social order.

Studying the Rural and Liberal Education

By Shamsher Singh|2022-01-31T15:03:25+05:30December 15, 2019|

If one runs an internet search for the word “rural” in the Indian undergraduate Sociology curricula, one expects to find multiple occurrences. When the result does not show a single mention of the word, it attracts the attention of an educator and teacher and raises the question as to why the word that dominated not only sociology but the syllabi of social sciences has disappeared.

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