Search Results - "President of India
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The NextWave of Expeditious Economic Growth (China, India, Brazil, South Africa and Russia)
Published 2011“…It is clear when the President of the USA tells students that ‘you are competing with the kids not only in your own country but in India and China’. …”
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US foreign policy towards India: 1993-2005: a study emphasizing the importance of systematic selection and usage of documentary evidence
Published 2018“…Contrary to what most of the existing literature suggests, elements of continuity between the Clinton and the Bush administrations are particularly important to explain the evolution of US foreign policy towards India. In spite of the change in the presidency from Democrat to Republican, President George W. …”
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The Indo-Pacific in the post-Trump era: expectations and challenges
Published 2021“…In global affairs, President Biden, who inherited the consequences of the “America First” US foreign policy, promised the return of the United States (US) to multilateralism in global institutions, mainly focusing on military alliances, defending democracy, climate change, nuclear non-proliferation and global health (White House 2021). …”
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Non-timber forest products in West Bengal: knowledge, livelihoods and policy
Published 2010“…The theme of this research is the conservation of open dry-deciduous forest areas of West Bengal, India, through the socio-economic progress of forest dwellers. …”
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A dialogue between colonial and post-colonial Bengal: An exceptional mother and daughter in search of science
Published 2014“…In India the colonial years were one of immense political,cultural and economic subordination of India by the colonizers. …”
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One century, two countries and three forgotten heroic women (twentieth century South Asia)
Published 2014“…All of them who were born in undivided Indian subcontinent, were near contemporaries and had more or less great longevity lived and worked in the 20th century the first half of which was the colonial era and the second half was the growing years of a newly liberated nation.They all were born in Barisal, a riverine district of Eastern Bengal in the Bengal Presidency under the British rule which later became part of Pakistan(1947) after partition of the country and finally of Bangladesh(1971).All the three women soon after partition left their motherland in their middle age and settled in West Bengal, India. …”
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