Academic literature on the topic 'Bombay'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bombay"

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Alessandrini, Anthony C. "“My Heart’s Indian for All That”: Bollywood Film between Home and Diaspora." Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies 10, no. 3 (2001): 315–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/diaspora.10.3.315.

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In the spring of 1995, I had just begun to work on issues having to do with the global reception of Indian popular film.2 I was particularly interested in the consumption of Bollywood films in South Asian diasporic communities and was doing some preliminary research in Iselin, a small town in central New Jersey, with a large and thriving “Little India” neighborhood. Since I was also interested in the changes taking place in the Indian popular film industry itself, I had been following the case of Mani Ratnam’s film Bombay, which had been released earlier that year, in Tamil and Hindi, to a mix of acclaim and controversy in India. Because the film deals with the communal violence that gave rise to rioting that shook Bombay in 1992 and 1993, some authorities were concerned that screening the film in areas experiencing communal tensions might lead to more violence. Consequently, the film had been temporarily banned in several parts of India, including Hyderabad and Karnataka and, as of April 1995, had not yet been screened in Bombay itself (Niranjana, “Banning Bombayi” 1291–2). But at a party that spring, I found myself discussing the film with a colleague who had come from Bombay to study comparative literature at Rutgers. Bombay was quite an interesting film, she assured me, and I should watch it as part of my research. I must have looked puzzled, for she then added, “We found a copy on video in Iselin last week.”
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Subramaniam, Arundhathi. "Bombay." Nature Cities 1, no. 1 (2024): 105. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s44284-023-00018-0.

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Dipta, TFA, KN Hossain, A. Khatun, et al. "Bombay Phenotype: Report of 2 Cases." Journal of Bangladesh College of Physicians and Surgeons 29, no. 4 (2012): 241–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/jbcps.v29i4.11347.

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Two cases of the rare blood group “Bombay phenotype” are discussed here. This rare blood group, Bombay (Oh) was first established by Bhende et al in Bombay (Mumbai), in 1952.In the ABO (ABH) blood group system, the ‘O’ antigen represents the lack of A or B antigens; however it has the most amount of H antigen. If the H gene is absent, which is extremely rare, H substance can not be formed and subsequent A and B antigens can not also be formed. Absence of H gene results in the Bombay phenotype (Oh) 1-6, 7-13. Individuals with the Bombay phenotype develop anti-H antibodies. This is the reason that undetected Bombay individuals (typically typed as O individuals) will be cross match incompatible with O individuals. Bombay phenotype individuals can only receive blood from other Bombay individuals. In India, 1 in 10,000 has been found to have “Bombay” blood group. Where as, in Bangladesh till now only nine persons with Bombay (Oh) blood group have been formally reported by the Transfusion Medicine Department of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU). Using two cases we would like to discuss strategies to properly diagnose cases of Bombay phenotype in Bangladesh DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/jbcps.v29i4.11347 J Bangladesh Coll Phys Surg 2011; 29: 241-243
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Di Maio, Giuseppe, Enrico Meccariello, and Somashekhar Naimpally. "Bombay hypertopologies." Applied General Topology 4, no. 2 (2003): 421. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/agt.2003.2042.

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<p>Recently it was shown that, in a metric space, the upper Wijsman convergence can be topologized with the introduction of a new far-miss topology. The resulting Wijsman topology is a mixture of the ball topology and the proximal ball topology. It leads easily to the generalized or g-Wijsman topology on the hyperspace of any topological space with a compatible LO-proximity and a cobase (i.e. a family of closed subsets which is closed under finite unions and which contains all singletons). Further generalization involving a topological space with two compatible LO-proximities and a cobase results in a new hypertopology which we call the Bombay topology. The generalized locally finite Bombay topology includes the known hypertopologies as special cases and moreover it gives birth to many new hypertopologies. We show how it facilitates comparison of any two hypertopologies by proving one simple result of which most of the existing results are easy consequences.</p>
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Beattie, Kathryn M., and Sheikh M. Saeed. "Bombay phenotype." Transfusion 16, no. 3 (2003): 290. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1537-2995.1976.16376225506.x.

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Bhanot, Kavita. "Bombay Customs." Index on Censorship 32, no. 1 (2003): 212–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03064220308537196.

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Inglis, Patrick. "Bombay Brokers." Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews 51, no. 6 (2022): 463–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00943061221129662e.

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Scholz, A. O., E. Muwazi, W. Hasse, and H. R. Kortmann. "Blutgruppe Bombay." Trauma und Berufskrankheit 12, S1 (2009): 75–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10039-009-1559-1.

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Mansur, Mansur, Suhairi Suhairi, and Dian Putri Nugroho. "Pengaruh Motivasi Terhadap Produktivitas Kerja Karyawan Pada Toko Bombay Tekstil Soppeng." Jurnal Ilmiah Metansi (Manajemen dan Akuntansi) 6, no. 1 (2023): 31–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.57093/metansi.v6i1.180.

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Tujuan penelitian ini untuk mengetahui seberapa besar Pengaruh Motivasi Terhadap Produktivitas Kerja Karyawan Pada Toko Bombay Tekstil Soppeng. Penelitian dilakukan di Toko Bombay Tekstil yang berlokasi di Jl. Kemakmuran Watansoppeng, Teknik pengambilan sampel yang digunakan adalah dengan teknik sampling jenuh, sehingga sampel dalam penelitian ini adalah karyawan Toko Bombay Tekstil Soppeng yang berjumlah 10 orang, Untuk mengetahui Pengaruh Motivasi terhadap produktivitas kerja karyawan pada Toko Bombay Tekstil Soppeng maka digunakan Analisis Regresi Linear sederhana. Berdasarkan hasil analisis, analisis regresi linear sederhana dan pembahasan, maka dapat disimpulkan bahwa : Variabel Motivasi berpengaruh signifikan terhadap Produktivitas Kerja karyawan pada Toko Bombay Tekstil Soppeng. Berdasarkan hasil kesimpulan yang telah dikemukakan di atas, maka dapat Disarankan kepada pihak Toko Bombay Tekstil Soppeng agar Lebih memperhatikan Motivasi yang diberikan kepada Karyawan, utamanya dalam pemberian dorongan berupa bonus dan insentif tambahan agar Produktivitas kerja karyawan pada Toko Bombay Tekstil Soppeng dapat lebih meningkat lagi
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Shaw, Annapurna. "The Planning and Development of New Bombay." Modern Asian Studies 33, no. 4 (1999): 951–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x99003534.

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Since independence (1947), foremost among the issues related to the growth of Bombay has been the decision to build New Bombay, a new city on the mainland across from Bombay island. In this paper, I examine first, the emergence of the idea of New Bombay and the interest groups who influenced the planning process. Secondly, I examine the actual achievements of the New Bombay project and the disjuncture between planning and reality. The New Bombay case shows clearly the way the political environment can influence the planning process. Confronted with the demands of different interest groups, the state in its urban planning opted for a solution which would accommodate all of them. In the process, many of the original objectives of building the new city have remained unfulfilled.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bombay"

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Kahn, David Schultz Dwight. "The Bombay Project : a film /." [New London, Conn.?], 2006. http://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/filmhp/.

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London, Christopher W. "British architecture in Victorian Bombay." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1986. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.385562.

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Amdekar, Shachi Dilip. "From Lancashire to Bombay : commercial networks, technology diffusion, and business strategy in the Bombay textile industry." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2018. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/277919.

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This thesis is an analysis of technology diffusion and the long-run institutional impact of the nature of that diffusion. It examines how a growing commercial trading relationship with Lancashire-based millwrights enabled textile industrialisation in late 19th century Bombay, and reflects upon the evolving character of Indian manufacturing and organisational behaviour within and beyond the colonial context, and into 21st century industrial strategy. Drawing upon primary archival material from sources in Britain and India (including historical company records, trade association records, transactional correspondence between Lancashire and Bombay, and administrative records of the India Office in Whitehall), and upon 27 elite interviews with prominent Mumbai-based businessmen and their families, a technological and cultural dependence by manufacturing elites upon the commercial agent is identified. The emplacement of colonial business norms and particularly the use of informal networks, in turn bolstered by a culture for clubbability, appears to influence the distinctly tight-knit, ‘gentlemanly’ character of Indian family business houses established during the late 19th and early 20th century. Applying a mixed-methods approach to technology theory and analysis, the data chapters are split into two parts, respectively concerning info rmation flows and knowledge flows from the UK to Western India. The former explores patterns in technological transactions and decisions governing the diffusion of textile technology that enabled industrial establishment. The latter focuses on the replication of managerial, cultural and business practices following and reflecting upon Bombay’s textile industrialisation; this establishes the observed presence of British ideals of gentlemanly business conduct within informal networks, familial and community ties. Overall, this research highlights how business history may be used as a lens to understand the process of technology diffusion and analyse the reinforcement of culturally-hybrid social norms in peripheral regions via technical or commercial links. In terms of developmental trajectory, moreover, this case study considers how given limited capacity for innovation or capital goods production, strategic supply-side decisions may garner early cumulative value by replicating industrial production, albeit with long-term institutional consequences. This research has implications for future understanding of the development of UK-Commonwealth trading relationships, and how these might foster structural transformation in the so-called Fourth Industrial Revolution. While this thesis focuses on the diffusion of physical capital and technology-driven industry, such a narrative exploration of networks and business norms surrounding structural transformation might be pursued based on alternative factors of production including capital investment and flow, or else feasibly extend into other post-colonial regions.
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Charbogne, Marie-Bénédicte. "Aspect et devenir de l'habitat precaire a bombay : de la degradation des quartiers centraux a la croissance des quartiers d'habitat spontane." Caen, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993CAEN1131.

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La concentration de la population indienne dans quelques poles urbains a eu pour principale consequence, la croissance tres rapide des quartiers d'habitat spontane. A bombay, pres de la moitie de la population se repartit dans ces lieux mis en place en dehors des circuits officiels de construction. Une etude realisee aupres de 663 menages permet de mieux connaitre ces personnes souvent considerees comme marginales alors qu'elles contribuent au developpement economique de la ville. L'habitat spontane n'est pas le seul probleme auquel sont confrontes les pouvoirs publics qui doivent egalement faire place a la degradation du parc immobilier existant et notamment a l'effondrement des vieux immeubles des quartiers centraux. Ces deux formes d'habitat, bien que differentes l'une de l'autre, offrent des conditions de vie precaires a leurs occupants en raison de l'insuffisance des services de base, de l'environnement pollue et de logements degrades ou de fortune. Combattus ou delaisses pendant plusieurs decennies, les quartiers d'habitat precaire de bombay font l'objet, depuis la fin des annees 1980, de divers programmes d'amenagement destines a offrir des conditions de vie acceptables a tous ces bombayites<br>The concentration of the indian population in a few urban areas has, as a main consequence, a very fast growth of temporary sheltering zones in bombay. Nearly half of the population of bombay can be found in those places which have appeared outside the official building networks. A study carried out on 663 households allows to know better those people, who are often considered as marginals, although they contribute to the economic development of the city. Spontaneous sheltering isn't the only problem facing the public authorities who must also deal with the decaying of existing housing stock and notably the collapsing old building in inner city areas. Those two forms of accomodation, although they are different, both offer precarious living conditions to their tenants, due to the insufficient basic services, the polluted environment and degraded or makeshift dwellings. Fought against or forgottrn for several decades, precarious dwellings areas in bombay have been since the end of the nineteen eighties parts of various development programs which aim at providing acceptable living conditions to all those bombayites
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Bird, Emma Jade. "Reimagining Bombay : postcolonial poetry and urban space." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/8301.

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This thesis considers the ways in which poets writing in English in Bombay have represented the city and negotiated its particular challenges, focusing in particular on poets starting to publish during the 1950s and 1960s. Examining in detail work by poets whom Bruce King refers to as constituting a “Bombay circle”, this project examines how Nissim Ezekiel, Adil Jussawalla, Gieve Patel and Arun Kolatkar in particular have represented the modernity of the city (Modern Indian Poetry in English 45). Despite Bombay’s significance in postcolonial studies, this highly mediated city has been disassociated from its material histories by recent critical and imaginative portrayals. The over-determination of Bombay is countered and nuanced, this thesis suggests, by examining the ways in which poets have represented the city. Evaluating Bombay poetry closely, and considering the relationship between poetic form and language and the articulation of space, this project asks how poetry written in the city contributes to, intervenes in or disarticulates dominant readings of Bombay. The material contexts in which poetry was written and circulated provide further significant and under-researched sites of engagement with this postcolonial city. This thesis thus turns to a period in the city’s cultural and literary history that has not been extensively documented: to the emergence of its poetry scene from the 1950s onwards. This project combines close, poetic analyses with archival research, examining Bombay’s little magazines and small press publishers, and tracing the various local and international affiliations evidenced in this body of work. In doing so, its aim is to historicize and contextualize the city and the work of its poets, enriching a critical and materialist understanding of this paradigmatic city.
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Boucher, Lauretta Anne. "Community development -- The struggle for housing rights : a case study of pavement dwellers in Bombay India." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/31229.

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The international campaign for housing rights focuses on the process of legislative change. Critics of the legislative change approach argue that this process is elitist insofar as such campaigns are fought on behalf of those people denied the right to housing by academics, lawyers and international non-governmental agencies, instead of in conjunction with the people. This approach, it is argued, excludes the people themselves from defining what housing rights mean to them, their culture and their community standards, placing such decisions in courts of law and legislatures. It is the position of this study that a more effective approach in the struggle for housing rights is one that recognizes that the problems of the poor and disenfranchized are not just their lack of rights per se, but also their lack of power to demand the legislative recognition and enforcement of those rights. This study explores a more inclusive approach to the housing rights struggle wherein the achievement of legislative rights represents only one peg in a more holistic strategy for change. This approach is represented by the theory and practice of Community Development — a process which empowers people to work collectively for change. Community Development provides the tools for people to understand, define and demand their rights, thus providing a bottom up and sustainable strategy in the struggle for housing rights. Community Development does not reject the role of legislative change, nor the responsibility of the state to recognize and enforce housing rights among its citizenry, but enhances the process to include all dimensions of the the housing struggle, most notably the community based sector which is currently excluded from the legislative change approach. The viability of a Community Development approach is built upon the premise that rights are norms or standards determined by the shared values of society and influenced by the dominant ideology. If people can articulate their values as well as organize to demand from the state the recognition and enforcement of their values, then they can work for change and begin to shape their housing rights. An indigenous non-governmental organisation using the methods of Community Development in the struggle for housing rights is the Society for the Promotion of Area Resources (SPARC). The work of SPARC focuses on a group of women pavement dwellers in Bombay India. In SPARC'S analysis, it is women who bear the brunt of poverty, yet are vested with virtually no powers of decision-making within (or outside) the family. SPARC uses the methods of Community Development to empower these women to demand the recognition and enforcement of their housing rights. Their work has resulted in such manifest outcomes as: challenging the Bombay Municipal Council in a court of law, building prototype houses, establishing a credit co-operative, undertaking a people's census and the creation of Mahila Milan — a community based organisation run entirely by the women themselves. Other latent, less measurable outcomes have also resulted from their work such as confidence building and solidarity among the women. SPARC'S use of Community Development methods on the streets of Bombay has important lessons for the international struggle for housing rights. Incorporating the community based sector in the struggle ensures that the process of defining and demanding housing rights remains democratic, culturally sensitive and sustainable. Community Development can be effectively facilitated by an indigenous non-governmental organisation which can gain the trust of the community and understand local customs, cultures, language and history. Essentially the debate over the right to housing comes down to a set of ethical questions, the answers to which form the philosophical and moral framework for the policy decisions that face a society. A Community Development approach ensures that all people have a voice in answering these questions and influencing the decisions that affect their lives, their housing and indeed their rights.<br>Applied Science, Faculty of<br>Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of<br>Graduate
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Mehta, Monika. "Selections : cutting, classifying and certifying in Bombay cinema /." Diss., ON-CAMPUS Access For University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Click on "Connect to Digital Dissertations", 2001. http://www.lib.umn.edu/articles/proquest.phtml.

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Ignatius, Roger. "The Bombay Stock Exchange: tests of market efficiency." Thesis, University of North Texas, 1991. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc332561/.

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This dissertation analyzes the efficiency of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) and the relationship of stock return patterns on the BSE with those of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). The data includes daily closing values of the BSE and S&P 500 Indexes for the period 1979-1990 and bi-weekly closing prices on 27 of the most active stocks on the BSE for the period 1980-1990.
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Shahani, Parmesh. "Disco Jalebi : an ethnographic exploration of Gay Bombay." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/42343.

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Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Comparative Media Studies, 2005.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 368-401).<br>Gay Bombay is an online-offline community (comprising a website, a newsgroup and physical events in Bombay city), that was formed as a result of the intersection of certain historical conjectures with the disjunctures caused via the flows of the radically shifting ethnoscape, financescape, politiscape, mediascape, technoscape and ideoscape of urban India in the 1990. Within this thesis, using a combination of multi-sited ethnography, textual analysis, historical documentation analysis and memoir writing, I attempt to provide various macro and micro perspectives on what it means to be a gay man located in Gay Bombay at a particular point of time. Specifically, I explore what being gay means to the members of Gay Bombay and how they negotiate locality and globalization, their sense of identity as well as a feeling of community within its online/offline world. On a broader level, I critically examine the formulation and reconfiguration of contemporary Indian gayness in the light of its emergent cultural, media and political alliances. I realize that Gay Bombay is a community that is imagined and fluid; identity here is both fixed and negotiated, and to be gay in Gay Bombay signifies being 'glocal' - it is not just gayness but Indianized gayness. I further realize that within the various struggles in and around Gay Bombay, what is being negotiated is the very stability of the idea of Indianness. I conclude with a modus vivendi - my draft manifesto for the larger queer movement that I believe Gay Bombay is an integral part of, and a sincere hope that as the struggle for queer rights enters its exciting new phase, groups like Gay Bombay might be able to cooperate with other queer groups in the country, and march on the path to progress, together.<br>by Parmesh Shahani.<br>S.M.
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Alexander, Emma Catherine. "Child labour in the Bombay presidency, 1850-1920." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2002. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/284002.

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This dissertation argues that the identity of the child in late colonial India was primarily that of a labourer. The institutional functioning of family and the social organisation of caste have obscured the history of childhood in the subcontinent, and as a result, the history of child labour remains unwritten. However, in the mid-nineteenth century the colonial state introduced new legislation, institutions and social practices which identified the child labourer as an individual. The thesis analyses the contribution of child labour to the household and to agricultural economy of the Bombay Presidency, and emphasises the importance of familial labour patterns. Such patterns continued in the urban setting, shaping the child's experience of work, receiving wages and contributing to the family income, although migrant families were constituted differently from their rural counterparts. Through an analysis of factory legislation, the emergence of the child as the centre of debates concerning industrial development is traced. Investigation and regulation of factory labour necessitated the definition of the child by the colonial state. However, the regulatory regime was frequently evaded; systems of registration and certification and violation were abused, and the colonial state did little to enforce laws concerning the hours worked by children. Moreover, factory children suffered from a disproportionate number of accidents in the dangerous industrial environment. These developments are set in the context of living conditions outside the factory: crises involving housing, diet, health, death, opium, alcohol, and possible destitution determined the everyday survival of children in the city. The colonial state's discourse of child protection involved state utilisation of mission orphanages. Fear over juvenile delinquency in industrialising Bombay led to the institutionalisation of child labour in reformatories. Finally, the thesis examines the emergence of the child in the context of the educational debates of the nineteenth century.
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Books on the topic "Bombay"

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Bombay, Asiatic Society of, ed. Bombay. Asiatic Society of Bombay, 1991.

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Institute, British Film, ed. Bombay. BFI, 2005.

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Dwivedi, Sharada. Bombay deco. Eminence Designs, 2008.

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Patel, Sujata, D. Parthasarathy, and George Jose. Mumbai / Bombay. Routledge India, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003293651.

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Patel, Sujata, D. Parthasarathy, and George Jose. Mumbai / Bombay. Routledge India, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003293651.

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Baum, Richard. Bombay mix. Citron Press, 1998.

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Taraporevala, Sooni. Salaam Bombay! Penguin Books, 1989.

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Jorien, Hakvoort, ed. Bombay ijs. Anthos, 1998.

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Shiv, Sharma. Bombay wallah. Minerva Press, 2000.

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Markandaya, Kamala. Bombay tiger. Penguin, Viking, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bombay"

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Kleesiek, K., C. Götting, J. Diekmann, J. Dreier, and M. Schmidt. "Bombay-Phänotyp." In Springer Reference Medizin. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-48986-4_608.

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Kleesiek, K., C. Götting, J. Diekmann, J. Dreier, and M. Schmidt. "Bombay-Phänotyp." In Lexikon der Medizinischen Laboratoriumsdiagnostik. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-49054-9_608-1.

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Gopalan, Lalitha. "Bombay Noir." In A Companion to Film Noir. Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118523728.ch29.

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McPherson, Annika. "Bombay (1995)." In Lexicon of Global Melodrama. transcript Verlag, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/9783839459737-052.

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Gopalan, Lalitha. "Bombay Noir." In Cinemas Dark and Slow in Digital India. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-54096-8_4.

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Lentin, Sifra. "Finance, desi and videshi." In Mercantile Bombay. Routledge India, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003182894-5.

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Lentin, Sifra. "Introduction." In Mercantile Bombay. Routledge India, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003182894-101.

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Lentin, Sifra. "How Bombay became the confluence of commerce and culture." In Mercantile Bombay. Routledge India, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003182894-1.

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Lentin, Sifra. "Émigrés of the Bombay Presidency." In Mercantile Bombay. Routledge India, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003182894-4.

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Lentin, Sifra. "Mercantile and a multicultural city." In Mercantile Bombay. Routledge India, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003182894-6.

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Conference papers on the topic "Bombay"

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"Message from IEEE Bombay Section." In 2014 International Conference on Electronic Systems, Signal Processing and Computing Technologies (ICESC). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icesc.2014.113.

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"IEEE Bombay section symposium [Front matter]." In 2016 IEEE Bombay Section Symposium (IBSS). Frontiers of Technologies: Fuelling Prosperity of the Planet and People. IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ibss.2016.7940191.

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Kulkarni, A. M., B. G. Fernandes, S. V. Kulkarni, and S. A. Khaparde. "Power engineering laboratories at IIT Bombay." In Energy Society General Meeting. IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/pes.2008.4596151.

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Moudgalya, Kannan M., Rahul Deshmukh, and Arvind Patil. "Synchronous distance education at IIT Bombay." In 2009 International Workshop on Technology for Education (T4E). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/t4e.2009.5314107.

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"Message from the IEEE Bombay Section Chairman." In 2009 2nd International Conference on Emerging Trends in Engineering and Technology (ICETET 2009). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icetet.2009.145.

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KHANOLKAR, R. S., G. L. VISAVALE, and B. N. THORAT. "SOLAR DRYING OF HERPADON NEHEREUS – BOMBAY DUCK." In The Proceedings of the 5th Asia-Pacific Drying Conference. World Scientific Publishing Company, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812771957_0192.

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"Message from the IEEE Bombay Section Chair." In 2010 3rd International Conference on Emerging Trends in Engineering and Technology (ICETET). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icetet.2010.5.

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Raju, A. V., S. Ramanan, R. D. Chaurasia, and K. K. Jha. "Experience of Side-Track in Bombay High Field." In SPE India Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/39564-ms.

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"Message from SMC Chapter Chair, IEEE Bombay Section." In 2011 4th International Conference on Emerging Trends in Engineering and Technology (ICETET). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icetet.2011.79.

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Sahay, B. "Geology and Hydrocarbon Potential of Bombay Offshore Basin." In Offshore Technology Conference. Offshore Technology Conference, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.4043/4908-ms.

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Reports on the topic "Bombay"

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Kadam, K. Environmental Life Cycle Implications of Using Bagasse-Derived Ethanol as a Gasoline Oxygenate in Mumbai (Bombay). Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/772426.

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Few, Roger, Mythili Madhavan, Narayanan N.C., et al. Voices After Disaster. Indian Institute for Human Settlements, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24943/vad09.2021.

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This document is an output from the “Voices After Disaster: narratives and representation following the Kerala floods of August 2018” project supported by the University of East Anglia (UEA)’s GCRF QR funds. The project is carried out by researchers at UEA, the Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS), the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Bombay, and Canalpy, Kerala. In this briefing, we provide an overview of some of the emerging narratives of recovery in Kerala and discuss their significance for post-disaster recovery policy and practice. A key part of the work was a review of reported recovery activities by government and NGOs, as well as accounts and reports of the disaster and subsequent activities in the media and other information sources. This was complemented by fieldwork on the ground in two districts, in which the teams conducted a total of 105 interviews and group discussions with a range of community members and other local stakeholders. We worked in Alleppey district, in the low-lying Kuttanad region, where extreme accumulation of floodwaters had been far in excess of the normal seasonal levels, and in Wayanad district, in the Western Ghats, where there had been a concentration of severe flash floods and landslides.
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Menon, Shantanu, Kushagra Merchant, Devika Menon, and Aruna Pandey. Youth for Unity and Voluntary Action (YUVA): Instituting an ideal. Indian School Of Development Management, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.58178/2303.1021.

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This case study traces the journey of Youth for Unity and Voluntary Action (YUVA), an NGO which was co-founded in Mumbai (erstwhile Bombay) in 1984 by a young graduate Minar Pimple along with a group of his lecturers and peers from the Nirmala Niketan College of Social Work, together looking to evolve an indigenous model of social work practice. To say that times have changed in India since YUVA’s inception 38 years ago would be an understatement. Despite this, the organization’s spirit continues to echo its founding purpose and values, and provide a space in which the most marginalised of young and like-minded people can come together, understand their rights and responsibilities as citizens, and work together towards shared ideals. Even today, the majority of the people who work with YUVA (meaning “youth”) come from marginalised backgrounds. Such talent composition is not the norm, even in civil society. Seeded with feminist ideals—in particular that of nurturing a careful and life-long sensitivity for the socio-politically marginalised, and standing by them in their strive for social justice—YUVA’s historical record is a statement of how a steadfast commitment to principles can eventually find home in a settled and satisfying practice. This case study lays out both what that historical record speaks and what it speaks between the lines. What the record directly speaks of is the radical milieu in which YUVA came into being, how it became a significant civil society presence in its own right, how it multiplied new initiatives, and how it underwent a difficult leadership transition and financial stresses, yet strived hard to remain relevant. Between the lines, the record hints at how an alert, attuned and active academic milieu constitutes a real treasure—a reminder that perhaps seems appropriate for the times; and narrates the story of how a feminist organization deeply committed to social justice operates from the inside, of the people who make it and how they make and remake it. organizations of this nature have an important place in the annals of Indian civil society but have not received a proportionate space within the documented field of organizational development and talent management. This case study provides an opportunity for learners to explore the idea, relevance and practices of a feminist organization, through the travails and triumphs of one of the oldest ones in India.
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Rosas, Ramón, and Arturo Pedraza. Evaluación para sistemas de bombeo de agua: Hoja de cálculo. Inter-American Development Bank, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0009803.

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Con el propósito de mejorar el servicio de agua potable que se brinda a la sociedad de los países de América Latina, se ha desarrollado una metodología regional de eficiencia energética y mantenimiento que puede ser aplicada por empresas de agua. La presente hoja de cálculo de eficiencia energética describe paso a paso la metodología de cálculo para aplicar durante la evaluación de eficiencia energética. La hoja incluye datos de un ejemplo, los cuales deben ser reemplazados en cada sistema y equipo en estudio, con la información correspondiente. También están disponibles una Guía para la hoja de cálculo, un Manual de mantenimiento para sistemas de bombeo de agua y un Manual de evaluación de eficiencia energética para sistemas de bombeo en empresas de agua y saneamiento.
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Mata, Ana M., and María Berrocal. Calcio, neurodegeneración y bombas de calcio en el Alzheimer. Sociedad Española de Bioquímica y Biología Molecular, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.18567/sebbmrev_216.202306.dc003.

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Scowcroft, Brent, Richard Burpee, Bill Hoehn, John Lenczowski, and Jim Courter. Scowcroft Independent Bomber Force Review,. Defense Technical Information Center, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada328231.

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ANALYTIC SCIENCES CORP ARLINGTON VA. Heavy Bomber Industrial Capabilities Study. Defense Technical Information Center, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada304376.

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Seager, Samuel C. Bomber Requirements: From the Top-Down. Defense Technical Information Center, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada397231.

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Eisenhart, James E. The Combined Bomber Offensive: A Retrospective. Defense Technical Information Center, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada401851.

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ANALYTIC SCIENCES CORP ARLINGTON VA. Executive Summary. Bomber Industrial Capabilities Study. Defense Technical Information Center, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada297340.

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