Academic literature on the topic 'Bhopal'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bhopal"

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Deb, Nikhil. "Law and Corporate Malfeasance in Neoliberal India." Critical Sociology 46, no. 7-8 (April 17, 2020): 1157–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0896920520907122.

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Critical sociolegal scholars highlight how the law favors powerful actors in handling the socioenvironmental devastation affecting marginalized populations. What receives scant attention is how the neoliberalization of the world economy has further enabled powerful capitalist firms to shape the legal path in their own favor and to the detriment of the marginalized. Union Carbide’s 1984 Bhopal catastrophe killed 25,000, injured 600,000, and left prolonged consequences. This paper advances our understanding of the political economy of law by analyzing the handling of death and devastation in Bhopal. Drawing data from 60 interviews with Bhopal victim activists and archives, it advances the argument that the law mirrors the interests of the neoliberal actors of capital. Findings suggest that the law has not only proved unable to safeguard the weakest elements of Bhopal society, but also the pursuit of legal solutions under neoliberalism is incapable of addressing the long-term harms affecting marginalized Bhopalis.
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Jyoti Pandey Sharma. "Sacralizing the City: The Begums of Bhopal and their Mosques." Creative Space 1, no. 2 (January 6, 2014): 145–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.15415/cs.2014.12002.

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Princely building ventures in post 1857 colonial India included, among others, construction of religious buildings, even as their patrons enthusiastically pursued the colonial modernist agenda. This paper examines the architectural patronage of the Bhopal Begums, the women rulers of Bhopal State, who raised three grand mosques in their capital, Bhopal, in the 19th and early 20th century. As Bhopal marched on the road to progress under the Begums’ patronage, the mosques heralded the presence of Islam in the city in the post uprising scenario where both Muslims and mosques were subjected to retribution for fomenting the 1857 insurrection. Bhopal’s mosques were not only sacred sites for the devout but also impacted the public realm of the city. Their construction drew significantly on the Mughal architectural archetype, thus affording the Begums an opportunity to assert themselves, via their mosques, as legitimate inheritors of the Mughal legacy, including taking charge of the latter’s legacy of stewardship of Iam. Today, the Bhopal mosques constitute an integral part of the city’s built heritage corpus. It is worth underscoring that they are not only important symbols of the Muslim faith but also markers of their patrons’ endeavour to position themselves at the forefront in the complex political and cultural scenario of post uprising colonial India.
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Ray, David. "Bhopal." College English 48, no. 4 (April 1986): 351. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/377255.

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Murthy, R. Srinivasa. "Bhopal." International Journal of Mental Health 19, no. 2 (June 1990): 30–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00207411.1990.11449160.

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HEYLIN, MICHAEL. "BHOPAL." Chemical & Engineering News 63, no. 6 (February 11, 1985): 14–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cen-v063n006.p014.

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LEPKOWSKI, WLL. "BHOPAL." Chemical & Engineering News 63, no. 48 (December 2, 1985): 18–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cen-v063n048.p018.

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Ekiss, K. "Bhopal." European Journal of International Law 25, no. 1 (February 1, 2014): 360. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ejil/cht086.

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Ayres, Robert U., and Pradeep K. Rohatgi. "Bhopal." Technology in Society 9, no. 1 (January 1987): 19–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0160-791x(87)90028-5.

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Jones, T. "Oidhreacht Bhopal." Comhar 46, no. 2 (1987): 8. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20556171.

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Jones, T. "Bhopal Eile?" Comhar 47, no. 4 (1988): 7. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20556473.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bhopal"

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Kaba, Arnaud. "Les maîtres du fer : des ouvriers métallurgistes de Bhopal et de leur confrontation avec l’incertitude." Thesis, Paris, EHESS, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018EHES0001/document.

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Cette thèse part de l’étude de l’espace social de deux groupes d’ouvriers métallurgistes de Bhopal. L’un est composé de musulmans habitant dans les quartiers autoconstruits pollués suite à la catastrophe industrielle qui a marqué l’histoire contemporaine de la ville et travaillant dans des ateliers de métallurgie au sein de la vieille ville. L’autre est formé majoritairement d’hindous venant de villages parfois éloignés employés sur des chantiers de viaduc dans Bhopal et ses environs. Tous deux travaillent dans le secteur informel, dans un rapport à l’emploi incertain. En explorant leurs relations hors travail, elle décrit la manière dont se construisent les rapports sociaux et les représentations collectives. Elle montre également comment la confrontation à l’incertitude marquant de nombreux aspects de leur quotidien ainsi que le rapport au travail interagissent avec ces constructions. En s’intéressant à la nature des relations au travail et à celle des rapports de domination, elle montre que les travailleurs ont de nombreuses marges de négociation, malgré une importante résurgence du paternalisme combinée à une faiblesse globale des protections concrètes. En s’appuyant sur une ethnographie des techniques et du rapport au corps engagé dans le labeur, elle montre que les idéologies en découlant, trop rarement étudiées, constituent le cœur d’un système de valeurs qui permet de légitimer les hiérarchies, mais aussi de les stabiliser, de les remettre en cause et de rendre possible une mobilité sociale grâce au talent. Mais il est également menacé par l’incertitude qui pèse sur ces cultures de la mètis dans un environnement technologique en profonde mutation et une configuration sociologique dans laquelle la valorisation de l’enseignement supérieur est toujours plus hégémonique
This doctoral thesis starts with the study of the social space of two groups of metal workers in Bhopal. The first one is made of Muslim inhabitants of the polluted neighborhoods which have been contaminated following the 1984 industrial disaster who work in the Old City’s metal workshops. The other one in made of a majority of Hindus coming from the rural hinterland, sometimes from distant villages, and hired in the flyover construction yards in and around Bhopal. Both are working in the informal sector, and experiment uncertain conditions of employment. By exploring their relationships outside of work it describes the way their social relations and their collective representations are constructing themselves. It also shows how the confronting with uncertainty and their relationship to work are interacting with these social constructs. It shifts then its focus to the relationships on the shop floor, the nature of the labour and domination relationships and it shows that the workers have many margins of negotiation, in spite of an important resurgence of paternalistic structures combined with weak empirical protections. Then, the thesis makes an ethnography of the techniques and the body commitment involved in the labour process in order to unveil ideologies of labour which constitute the core of a value system which allows to legitimate the hierarchical positions but also to contest it, and allows a social mobility based on skills. But this system is also threatened by the uncertainty of these cultures of mètis in a technological environment which experiments a deep technological mutation and a social context where the valorization of the academic education becomes more and more hegemonic
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Heyndrickx, Bruno. "Le methylisocyanate : mic - bhopal." Lille 2, 1995. http://www.theses.fr/1995LIL2P351.

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Ferrali, Jean-François. "La catastrophe de Bhopal dans la presse." Université Louis Pasteur (Strasbourg) (1971-2008), 1985. http://www.theses.fr/1985STR1M190.

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Hanna, Bridget Corbett. "Toxic Relief: Science, Uncertainty, and Medicine after Bhopal." Thesis, Harvard University, 2014. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:11346.

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This dissertation is a study of science and medicine after the gas disaster in1984 in Bhopal, India. It looks at the discourses, debates, suspicions, and entangled events that have shaped the narratives of causality following the catastrophe, and the ways that ideas about relief, treatment, and illness have been constructed by experts, lay activists, and survivors. In it I address the issues of suspicion, research, and power by looking at the "cyanide controversy" in the early years after the disaster, and at the ways that the consequences of uncertainty affect patients and doctors within the hospital system designed to provide "gas relief" in the aftermath. I also describe the range of ways gas survivors have categorized and produced as subjects and citizens through an analysis of epidemiological, legal, and political discussions. I take on the history of medical research after the event, and show how a vast corpus of scientific work has remained dispersed and underutilized, leaving room for sometimes-dangerous narratives of certain illness or death. Finally, I look at the consequences of this indeterminacy for care and healing. I assess access to treatments, the diversity of medical care, the undermining of the status of the gas exposed, and the ways that detoxification has been approached through notions of dosage, potency, and traditional medicine. I produce a sociology of knowledge about the catastrophe and contribute to literatures on the problem of epistemic uncertainty and risk after disasters, the production of medicalized subjects, and the politicization of knowledge. I argue that interventions that have tried to encompass the disaster within a unitary framework have been persistently inadequate, and illustrate how attempts to reduce or subsume the consequences of the disaster - through recourse to scientific indeterminacy, under reductionist legal mechanisms, by imprecise categorization schema, within flawed research methodologies, and among hollow medical infrastructures - have not only failed to meaningfully represent it but also resulted in predictable forms of reductionist violence and social suffering, through obfuscation as often as through action.
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Matilal, Sumohon. "Giving an account of the Bhopal gas disaster : journeys and justifications." Thesis, University of Essex, 2011. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.542344.

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Nath, Abhay. "Conflicts of interest among primary stakeholders of urban dairying in Bhopal (India)." Thesis, University of Reading, 2006. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.434112.

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Lambert, Hurley Siobhan. "Contesting seclusion : the political emergence of Muslim women in Bhopal, 1901-1930." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 1998. http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/28963/.

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This study examines the emergence of Indian Muslim women as politicians and social reformers in the early years of the twentieth century by focussing on the state of Bhopal, a small Muslim principality in Central India, which was ruled by a succession of female rulers throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The last Begam of Bhopal, Nawab Sultan Jahan Begam (1858-1930, r. 1901-1926), emerges as the main figure in this history, though a substantial effort has also been made to examine the activities of other Bhopali women, whether poor, privileged or princely. Special significance has been attached to their changing attitudes to class, gender and communal identities, using the veil as a metaphor for women's expanding concerns. Their connections with wider movements of social reform have also been emphasized in an attempt to show that the emergence of women in Bhopal was representative of a broader development occurring amongst Muslim women, both within India and throughout the Islamic world. The importance of this study lies in its treatment of the 'daughters of reform,' the first generation of Muslim women who contributed to the reformist discourse, particularly at the regional level, as complex subjects in possession of a history. It is also significant in that it redresses the paucity of academic literature on the princely states of India, highlighting the differences between states and the changes that occurred over time, rather than simply dismissing the princes as frivolous reminders of a by-gone age. The main theme that arises is the importance for early Muslim female activists of balancing continuity and innovation. By operating within the framework of Islam, Bhopali women were able to build on traditional norms in order to introduce incremental change. As many of their achievements were unforseen, however, their story is as much one of paradox, as of progress.
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Bahia, Antonio Fernando Noceti. "Gerência de risco industrial : um estudo "ex-post" sobre o acidente em Bhopal, Índia." reponame:Repositório Institucional da UnB, 2006. http://repositorio.unb.br/handle/10482/3634.

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Dissertação (mestrado)—Universidade de Brasília, Faculdade de Economia, Administração, Contabiliade e Ciência da Informação e Documentação, Departamento de Economia, 2006.
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A ocorrência de acidentes catastróficos faz com que vários organismos internacionais sejam conduzidos à reflexão e à discussão dos danos causados às empresas, aos seres humanos, aos animais e ao meio ambiente. No acidente em Bhopal na Índia, ocorrido no ano de 1984, os prejuízos causados foram e são até hoje incalculáveis. Sejam eles considerados sob diferentes óticas, como por exemplo, a do bem-estar da sociedade, incluindo a saúde pública; a de natureza econômica; e a do meio ambiente, refletindo a perda e/ou a difícil recuperação da biodiversidade. O objetivo desta dissertação é efetuar uma análise ex-post do acidente em Bhopal, tendo como fundamentação teórica os diferentes métodos e técnicas de análise de risco industrial até então desenvolvidos e constantes em publicações científicas. Por outro lado, o presente estudo tem a simples pretensão de contribuir como um instrumento que possa auxiliar e orientar as firmas/indústrias em suas novas instalações e/ou ampliações industriais no que concerne à análise de risco. _________________________________________________________________________________________ ABSTRACT
The catastrophic accidents occurrence have conduced many international organizations to reflection and to discuss the damages caused to enterprises, people, animals and environment. The impairments caused by the 1984 Bhopal accident in India are incalculable, being them considered by the social welfare viewpoint, including public health; under the Economy viewpoint; under the Ecology loss and/or hard biodiversity retrieval. The aim of this dissertation is to present an ex-post analysis of the Bhopal accident, based on several methods and industrial risk analysis techniques developed, until now, by specialists and presented in scientific journals. Otherwise, this research has the simple pretention to contribute as an instrument which can contribute as a helpful auxiliary instrument to guide firms/industries in their new plants and/or industrial expansion relatively to the risk analysis.
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Sharma, Shalini. "New social movements and media : the case of the Justice for Bhopal Movement in India." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 2013. http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/18259/.

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Pariyadath, Renu. "When coporations migrate south: rethinking citizenship and privileged migrant mobilities for equitable development." Diss., University of Iowa, 2015. https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/5595.

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Since the 1990s, governments of migrant sending and receiving countries, policy institutes, the United Nations and allied international financial institutions, and migration researchers in the academy have shown a heightened interest in the role that diasporas can play in the development of the Global South. As government responsibility to social welfare recedes and as humanitarian aid shrinks, these stakeholders have looked toward the wealth offered by diasporas. The resultant discourse of diaspora and development, the dissertation argues, is changing the meaning of the discursive construction of "diaspora" in its articulation with the concurrent construct of "development". This presents scholars with new challenges in studying diaspora and transnationalism. The expansion of who gets to be counted as diaspora and its articulation with newly extended diasporic citizenship limits the nature of citizenship to the performative and to the exclusive domain of giving. Accordingly, the study examines the communicate and relational practices of Association for India's Development (AID), a 1000-volunteer-strong migrant Indian non-profit organization in the United States, to critique and expand the diaspora and development discourse. Through an extended case study of AID's practice and performance of citizenship, this study makes contributions to theories about the space of `home' and its relation to the practice of politics; migrant presence and performance of citizenship in the Global North; diasporic interventions in the discourse of development; and strategic mobilizing for broad-based social justice issues. First, the dissertation unpacks the meaning-making practices that AID volunteers associate with the construct `development', and demonstrates how the volunteers' discourse of "development as sustainability" challenges notions of charity and the brain metaphor trafficking in policy reports and scholarship. The study then examines the treatment of diasporic imaginings of home in theory and migration policy, juxtaposed with AID's practices related to India arguing that practices of deconstructing home/nation allow this organization to center diasporic privilege rather than loss. This allows for less common alliance-building practices with populations from historically marginalized religious, caste and class backgrounds and a centering of marginalized voices within multiple diasporic homes. The dissertation also examines annual die-ins by AID's Austin chapter, staged in solidarity with survivors of the Bhopal gas disaster of 1984 that complicates the notion of presence in theorizations of transformation in new forms of citizenship. The study finally takes an ethnographic peek into an education project that used to be supported by AID in India. The backstage organizing work studied, suggests that what seems like a single-issue movement strategically employs universal discourses of `quality education' for organizing multiple publics. The study required multi-sited critical ethnographic fieldwork in the United States and in India, participant observation, in-depth interviews, and rhetorical/discourse analyses of AID's practices. The study offers a people-centered exploration of diaspora engagement with social development, which is difficult to grasp solely through research informed by macro-level and quantitative data. Overall, this work complicates the monolithic understanding of development in current research on diaspora and development, demonstrating that local and transnational actors both participate in, and challenge the development discourse to communicatively and relationally address issues of social development and transnational environmental justice.
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Books on the topic "Bhopal"

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Madhya Pradesh (India). Department of Public Relations, ed. Bhopal, bhopalis and bhopaliyat: Bhopāla, bhopālī aura bhopāliyata. Bhopal: Department of Public Relations, Madhya Pradesh, 2010.

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Ayres, Robert U. Bhopal. Laxenburg: International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, 1987.

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Riddle, John. Bhopal. Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 2002.

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Madhya Pradesh (India). Directorate of Archaeology, Archives & Museums., ed. State Museum, Bhopal =: Rājya Saṅgrahālaya, Bhopāla. Bhopal: Directorate of Archaeology, Archives & Museums, Madhya Pradesh, 2005.

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Mukherjee, Suroopa. Surviving Bhopal. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230106321.

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Śāha, Aśoka. Vintage Bhopal. Bhopal: Archaeology, Archives, and Museums, Government of Madhya Pradesh, 2011.

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Madhya Pradesh (India). Office of the Commissioner, Archaeology, Archives & Museums., ed. Virasat Bhopal. Bhopal: Directorate of Archaeology, Archives and Museums, Madhya Pradesh, 2003.

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Weir, David. The Bhopal Syndrome. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003323365.

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Indirā Gāndhī Rāshṭrīya Mānava Saṅgrahālaya., ed. Museums of Bhopal. Bhopal: Indira Gandhi Rashtriya Manav Sangrahalaya, 2004.

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Lapierre, Dominique. Era medianoche en Bhopal. Barcelona (España): Editorial Planeta, S.A. (Planeta Internacional), 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bhopal"

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Eskelinen, Teppo. "Bhopal Tragedy." In Encyclopedia of Global Justice, 74–75. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9160-5_183.

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Mukherjee, Suroopa. "Introduction." In Surviving Bhopal, 1–16. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230106321_1.

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Mukherjee, Suroopa. "The Killer Factory: A Disaster Waiting to Happen." In Surviving Bhopal, 17–39. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230106321_2.

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Mukherjee, Suroopa. "Monstrous Memories: “Reliving” the Night of the Disaster." In Surviving Bhopal, 41–59. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230106321_3.

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Mukherjee, Suroopa. "Bhopal Lives On: The Many Faces of the Continuing Disaster." In Surviving Bhopal, 61–80. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230106321_4.

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Mukherjee, Suroopa. "Women as Bread Earners: Shattered Lives and the Relentless Struggle for Survival." In Surviving Bhopal, 81–100. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230106321_5.

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Mukherjee, Suroopa. "“We Are Flames Not Flowers”: The Inception of Activism." In Surviving Bhopal, 101–29. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230106321_6.

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Mukherjee, Suroopa. "“No More Bhopals”: Women’s Right to Knowledge and Control of Their Bodies." In Surviving Bhopal, 131–57. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230106321_7.

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Mukherjee, Suroopa. "“Dancing in the Streets”: Protest, Celebration, and Modes of Self-Expression." In Surviving Bhopal, 159–84. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230106321_8.

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Rajan, S. Ravi. "Bhopal and Beyond." In The Angry Earth, 288–302. Second edition. | Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2020.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315298917-34.

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Conference papers on the topic "Bhopal"

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Tiwari, Pallavi, and Arka Kanungo. "Land surface temperature variations: Case study Bhopal (M.P.)." In Countermeasures to Urban Heat Islands. BS Publications, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37285/bsp.ic2uhi.14.

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Singh, S. C. "Surface Geophysical Study for Groundwater in Bhopal City of Madhya Pradesh, India." In 1st Indian Near Surface Geophysics Conference & Exhibition. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201979014.

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Maski, Kalpana, and S. K. Vijay. "Analytical study of nighttime scintillations using GPS at low latitude station Bhopal." In INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EMERGING INTERFACES OF PLASMA SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (EIPT-2015): Proceedings of the International Conference on Emerging Interfaces of Plasma Science and Technology. AIP Publishing LLC, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4926701.

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Goyal, Parash, B. Shiva Kumar, and K. Sudhakar. "Energy audit: A case study of energy centre and Hostel of MANIT, Bhopal." In 2013 International Conference on Green Computing, Communication and Conservation of Energy (ICGCE). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icgce.2013.6823515.

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Tiwari, Rahul, Utkarsh Kaushik, and Lakshman Rao Devadaru. "Effect of Public Transportation on Urban Sprawl in the City of Bhopal, India." In 57th ISOCARP World Planning Congress. ISOCARP, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/hdvfdcm2.

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Gupta, Vallary, and Puntambekar Kshama. "Planning for Inclusion of Refugees Understanding Initiatives taken for Sindhi Community of Bairagarh, Bhopal." In 57th ISOCARP World Planning Congress. ISOCARP, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/guphbaxr.

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Mukherjee, Shweta, Shivalika Sarkar, P. K. Purohit, and A. K. Gwal. "Study of GPS ionospheric scintillations over equatorial anomaly station Bhopal during low solar activity period." In 2012 IEEE 39th International Conference on Plasma Sciences (ICOPS). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/plasma.2012.6383388.

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Ushkewar, Sandeep, Suraj Chaube, Nikhil Komawar, Nirbhay Tirpude, and Md Salman Ansari. "Controlled islanding scheme for power system protection: Guidelines and approach: Case study: Proposed Bhopal islanding scheme." In 2017 Third International Conference on Advances in Electrical, Electronics, Information, Communication and Bio-Informatics (AEEICB). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aeeicb.2017.7972394.

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Nick, H. J., J. Rioux, L. A. Veress, L. Bloomquist, P. E. Bratcher, P. Anantharam, C. Croutch, et al. "Mitigation of Methyl Isocyanate (Bhopal Agent)-Induced Airway Obstruction and Mortality by Tissue Plasminogen Activator (tPA)." In American Thoracic Society 2020 International Conference, May 15-20, 2020 - Philadelphia, PA. American Thoracic Society, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm-conference.2020.201.1_meetingabstracts.a1787.

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Suresh, P. V., and K. Sudhakar. "Life cycle cost assessment of solar-wind-biomass hybrid energy system for energy centre, MANIT, Bhopal." In 2013 International Conference on Green Computing, Communication and Conservation of Energy (ICGCE). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icgce.2013.6823513.

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Reports on the topic "Bhopal"

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Clark, Louise, and Jaideep Gupte. Community Embedded Decision Support Systems: Learning Report from the Smart Data for Inclusive Cities Bhopal Pilot. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ids.2022.020.

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This document presents learning from the pilot to provide Community Embedded Decision Support Systems (CEDSS) delivered by the EU-funded Smart Data for Inclusive Cities. The pilot was conducted through a partnership of the Institute of Development Studies (IDS, UK); National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA, India), Samarthan-Centre for Development Support (India) and GRADE (Grupo de Análisis para el Desarrollo; Peru), in close collaboration with authorities of the Smart Cities Mission in Bhopal and community groups in the Banganga informal settlement between May and October 2021.
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Gupte, Jaideep, Louise Clark, Debjani Ghosh, Sarath Babu, Priyanka Mehra, Asif Raza, Vaibhav Sharma, et al. Embedding Community Voice into Smart City Spatial Planning. Institute of Development Studies, February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ids.2022.005.

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Public participation in spatial planning is a vital means to successful policymaking and can be enhanced by combining geospatial methods with participatory learning and action. Based on a pilot study in Bhopal, India involving urban authorities, civil society organisations and experts in an informal settlement during Covid-19 lockdowns, we find that the obstacles to sustaining public participation are not technological, but arise from a lack of awareness of the added value of ‘second order solutions’. We outline key approaches that emphasise short-term, feasible, and low-cost ways to embed community voice into participatory spatial planning.
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