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1

Maxwell, December, and Sarah Robinson. "Safety for American Indian Women." Advances in Social Work 19, no. 1 (2020): 181–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.18060/22608.

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American Indian/Native American (AI/NA) women are disproportionately affected by intimate partner violence (IPV). The Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act (VAWA) of 2013 included new provisions under the Title IX Safety for Indian Women. This act created funding for the implementation of modern criminal justice structures allowing tribal governments to prosecute non-Indian perpetrators. Although this piece of legislation is meant to address the high prevalence of gender-based violence perpetrated against AI/NA women, it has not been analyzed using indigenous or feminist perspectives. A policy analysis model was developed, incorporating indigenous values, feminist perspectives, tribal critical race theory, and social construction and historical contexts to examine Title IX's goals, social values, and outcomes from an indigenous perspective. The analysis reveals the intentions of Title IX to promote indigenous values of empowerment and interdependence but fails to account for the historical marginalization of AI/NA people and the tendency of AI/NA women to distrust law enforcement. Although Title IX did create cultural change and enhance acknowledgment of IPV improvements are needed to make a more indigenous-focused, feminist-based policy. These suggestions include providing access to culturally sensitive law enforcement approaches for AI/NA women, accounting for historical factors, and creating a standardized pathway for prosecution, which incorporates feedback from tribal members.
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2

Ganesan, Sudhir, Anita Shankar Acharya, Ravi Chauhan, and Shankar Acharya. "Prevalence and Risk Factors for Low Back Pain in 1,355 Young Adults: A Cross-Sectional Study." Asian Spine Journal 11, no. 4 (2017): 610–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.4184/asj.2017.11.4.610.

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<sec><title>Study Design</title><p>Cross-sectional study.</p></sec><sec><title>Purpose</title><p>To evaluate the prevalence and various risk factors for low back pain (LBP) in young adults in India.</p></sec><sec><title>Overview of Literature</title><p>LBP is an emerging problem in adolescents, with an incidence that is the highest in the third decade of life worldwide. Various risk factors such as obesity, smoking, family history, stress, and exercise have been described in the literature. This study was conducted because of paucity of data in the Indian literature.</p></sec><sec><title>Methods</title><p>A total of 1,355 (741 males and 641 females) young Indian Administrative Service aspirants and medical postgraduate aspirants aged 18–35 years were enrolled in the study. The subjects completed a detailed, semi-structured questionnaire that gathered data regarding their sociodemographic profile and factors considered to be risk factors for LBP. Anthropometric measurements, including height and weight, were measured and body mass index was calculated.</p></sec><sec><title>Results</title><p>Most subjects (90.6%) were aged 20–29 years (mean, 24.49; range, 18–35 years). Results indicated that the following factors were associated with LBP in young adults: marital status, previous history of spine problems, strenuous exercise, job satisfaction, monotony, stress, daily number of studying hours, and family history of spine problems (<italic>p</italic><0.05). However, age, sex, smoking, alcoholism, coffee intake, mode and duration of travel, diet, frequency of weightlifting, wearing heels, studying posture, and frequency and type of sports activities were not associated with LBP.</p></sec><sec><title>Conclusions</title><p>The study identified various modifiable and non-modifiable risk factors that precipitated LBP in young adult Indians. Identifying these risk factors at an early stage will prevent LBP progression to a chronic disease state, thereby improving an individual's quality of life and increasing productivity.</p></sec>
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3

Bosco, Aju, Prakash Venugopal, Ajoy Prasad Shetty, Rajasekaran Shanmuganathan, and Rishi Mugesh Kanna. "Morphometric Evaluation of Occipital Condyles: Defining Optimal Trajectories and Safe Screw Lengths for Occipital Condyle-Based Occipitocervical Fixation in Indian Population." Asian Spine Journal 12, no. 2 (2018): 214–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.4184/asj.2018.12.2.214.

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<sec><title>Study Design</title><p>Computed tomographic (CT) morphometric analysis.</p></sec><sec><title>Purpose</title><p>To assess the feasibility and safety of occipital condyle (OC)-based occipitocervical fixation (OCF) in Indians and to define anatomical zones and screw lengths for safe screw placement.</p></sec><sec><title>Overview of Literature</title><p>Limitations of occipital squama-based OCF has led to development of two novel OC-based OCF techniques.</p></sec><sec><title>Methods</title><p>Morphometric analysis was performed on the OCs of 70 Indian adults. The feasibility of placing a 3.5-mm-diameter screw into OCs was investigated. Safe trajectories and screw lengths for OC screws and C0–C1 transarticular screws without hypoglossal canal or atlantooccipital joint compromise were estimated.</p></sec><sec><title>Results</title><p>The average screw length and safe sagittal and medial angulations for OC screws were 19.9±2.3 mm, ≤6.4°±2.4° cranially, and 31.1°±3° medially, respectively. An OC screw could not be accommodated by 27% of the population. The safe sagittal angles and screw lengths for C0–C1 transarticular screw insertion (48.9°±5.7° cranial, 26.7±2.9 mm for junctional entry technique; 36.7°±4.6° cranial, 31.6±2.7 mm for caudal C1 arch entry technique, respectively) were significantly different than those in other populations. The risk of vertebral artery injury was high for the caudal C1 arch entry technique. Screw placement was uncertain in 48% of Indians due to the presence of aberrant anatomy.</p></sec><sec><title>Conclusions</title><p>There were significant differences in the metrics of OC-based OCF between Indian and other populations. Because of the smaller occipital squama dimensions in Indians, OC-based OCF techniques may have a higher application rate and could be a viable alternative/salvage option in selected cases. Preoperative CT, including three-dimensional-CT-angiography (to delineate vertebral artery course), is imperative to avoid complications resulting from aberrant bony and vascular anatomy. Our data can serve as a valuable reference guide in placing these screws safely under fluoroscopic guidance.</p></sec>
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4

Dey, S., and J. F. Moyen. "About this title - Archean Granitoids of India: Windows into Early Earth Tectonics." Geological Society, London, Special Publications 489, no. 1 (2020): NP. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/sp489.

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Granitoids form the bulk of the Archean continental crust and preserve key information on early Earth evolution. India hosts five main Archean cratonic blocks (Aravalli, Bundelkhand, Singhbhum, Bastar and Dharwar). This book summarizes the available information on Archean granitoids of Indian cratons. The chapters cover a broad spectrum of themes related to granitoid typology, emplacement mechanism, petrogenesis, phase-equilibria modelling, temporal distribution, tectonic setting, and their roles in fluid evolution, metal delivery and mineralizations. The book presents a broader picture incorporating regional- to cratons-scale comparisons, implications for Archean geodynamic processes, and temporal changes thereof. This synthesis work, integrating modern concepts on granite petrology and crustal evolution, offers an irreplaceable body of reference information for any geologist interested in Archean Indian granitoids.
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5

Reid, Anthony. "The Indian Dimension of Aceh and Sumatra History." Journal of Maritime Studies and National Integration 4, no. 2 (2020): 64–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/jmsni.v4i2.8639.

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Indonesia’s maritime boundary with India, lying barely 100km from Banda Aceh, appears quiet and of little interest to policy-makers, in contrast to almost all the other contested boundaries with Malaysia, China, the Philippines, and Australia. India’s historical relations with Sumatra have also drawn less scholarly or popular attention than those with the Arab, Persian, and Turkish worlds, or with Java, the Peninsula, and China. It is one of the imbalances and justifying the “Indian Ocean’ in the title of International Centre for Aceh and Indian Ocean Studies. It is also supported by arguing that northern Sumatra’s most important historical relationship outside Sumatra itself was for long with India. The time must come when this neighbourly maritime relationship is normalised in the context of improving Indonesia-India ties.
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6

Scherer, Joanna Cohan. "Horace Poolaw: Photographer of American Indian Modernity (Smith)." Museum Anthropology Review 11, no. 1-2 (2017): 42–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.14434/mar.v11i1.23551.

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7

Patil, Nirmal D., Sudhir K. Srivastava, Sunil Bhosale, and Shaligram Purohit. "Computed Tomography- and Radiography-Based Morphometric Analysis of the Lateral Mass of the Subaxial Cervical Spine in the Indian Population." Asian Spine Journal 12, no. 1 (2018): 18–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.4184/asj.2018.12.1.18.

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<sec><title>Study Design</title><p>This was a double-blinded cross-sectional study, which obtained no financial support for the research.</p></sec><sec><title>Purpose</title><p>To obtain a detailed morphometry of the lateral mass of the subaxial cervical spine.</p></sec><sec><title>Overview of Literature</title><p>The literature offers little data on the dimensions of the lateral mass of the subaxial cervical spine.</p></sec><sec><title>Methods</title><p>We assessed axial, sagittal, and coronal computed tomography (CT) cuts and anteroposterior and lateral X-rays of the lateral mass of the subaxial cervical spine of 104 patients (2,080 lateral masses) who presented to a tertiary care public hospital (King Edward Memorial Hospital, Mumbai) in a metropolitan city in India.</p></sec><sec><title>Results</title><p>For a majority of the parameters, males and females significantly differed at all levels (<italic>p</italic><0.05). Females consistently required higher (<italic>p</italic><0.05) minimum lateral angulation and lateral angulation. While the minimum lateral angulation followed the order of C5<C4<C6<C3, the lateral angulation followed the order of C3<C5<C4<C6. The lateral mass becomes longer and narrower from C3 to C7. In axial cuts, the dimensions increased from C3 to C6. The sagittal cut thickness and diagonal length increased and the sagittal cut height decreased from C3 to C7. The sagittal cut height was consistently lower in the Indian population at all levels, especially at the C7 level, as compared with the Western population, thereby questioning the acceptance of a 3.5-mm lateral mass screw. A good correlation exists between X-ray- and CT-based assessments of the lateral mass.</p></sec><sec><title>Conclusions</title><p>Larger lateral angulation is required for Indian patients, especially females. The screw length can be effectively calculated by analyzing the lateral X-ray. A CT scan should be reserved for specific indications, and a caution must be exercised while inserting C7 lateral mass screws.</p></sec>
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8

Srivastava, Abhishek, Rajat Mahajan, Ankur Nanda, et al. "Morphometric Study of C1 Pedicle and Feasibility Evaluation of C1 Pedicle Screw Placement with a Novel Clinically Relevant Radiological Classification in an Indian Population." Asian Spine Journal 11, no. 5 (2017): 679–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.4184/asj.2017.11.5.679.

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<sec><title>Study Design</title><p>A retrospective computed tomography (CT)-based morphometric study of 84 C1pedicles in an Indian population focusing on critical morphometric dimensions vis-a-vis C1 pedicle screw placement.</p></sec><sec><title>Purpose</title><p>To determine the feasibility of C1 pedicle screw placement in an Indian population and propose a novel classification system for the same.</p></sec><sec><title>Overview of Literature</title><p>At present, C1 pedicle screws are rarely used, and very few studies have focused on the feasibility of pedicle screw placement in terms of racial, gender, and ethnic variations in anatomical structures. There are no CT-based data on C1 pedicles that assess the feasibility of pedicle screw placement in the Indian population.</p></sec><sec><title>Methods</title><p>We measured C1 pedicle diameter on CT coronal scan images of 42 adult patients. Extramedullary height (EMH) and intramedullary height (IMH) were measured. We examined the differences between the right and left atlas pedicles and compared measures between males and females. These data were analyzed using significance tests. Based on the results, we propose a novel classification system, which we believe will help in determining the feasibility of C1 pedicle screw placement.</p></sec><sec><title>Results</title><p>Forty-two adult patients (84 pedicles) were examined. Average EMH and IMH were 4.48±0.91 and 0.86±0.77, respectively. Approximately, 32% of the C1 pedicles had bone thicknesses of <4 mm, 49% had IMH of <1 mm, and 38% had no pedicles. The average thickness in women was 4.21±0.93 mm, which was significantly thinner than that in men (4.73±0.81 mm, <italic>p</italic>=0.004). Right and left pedicles were not significantly different.</p></sec><sec><title>Conclusions</title><p>Our data indicate that approximately one-third of the Indian population may not be suitable candidates for C1 pedicle screw placement. Caution should be exercised while placing type 1B and type 2 pedicles based on our proposed classification system.</p></sec>
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9

Indiran, Venkatraman, Vadivalagianambi Sivakumar, and Prabakaran Maduraimuthu. "Coccygeal Morphology on Multislice Computed Tomography in a Tertiary Hospital in India." Asian Spine Journal 11, no. 5 (2017): 694–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.4184/asj.2017.11.5.694.

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<sec><title>Study Design</title><p>A retrospective, cross-sectional study of 213 patients who presented for abdominal computed tomography (CT) scans to assess coccygeal morphology in the Indian population.</p></sec><sec><title>Purpose</title><p>There have been relatively few studies of coccygeal morphology in the normal population and none in the Indian population. We aimed to estimate coccygeal morphometric parameters in the Indian population.</p></sec><sec><title>Overview of Literature</title><p>Coccygeal morphology has been studied in European, American, Korean, and Egyptian populations, with few differences in morphology among populations.</p></sec><sec><title>Methods</title><p>A retrospective analysis of 213 abdominal CT scans (114 males and 99 females; age, 7–88 years; mean age, 47.3 years) was performed to evaluate the number of coccygeal segments, coccyx type, sacrococcygeal and intercoccygeal fusion and subluxation, coccygeal spicules, sacrococcygeal straight length, and sacrococcygeal and intercoccygeal curvature angles. Results were analyzed for differences in morphology with respect to sex and coccyx type.</p></sec><sec><title>Results</title><p>Types I and II coccyx were the most common. Most subjects had four coccygeal vertebrae; 93 subjects (43.66%) had partial or complete sacrococcygeal fusion. Intercoccygeal fusion was common, occurring in 193 subjects. Eighteen subjects had coccygeal spicules. The mean coccygeal straight length was 33.8 mm in males and 31.5 mm in females; the mean sacrococcygeal curvature angle was 116.6° in males and 111.6° in females; the mean intercoccygeal curvature angle was 140.94° in males and 145.10° in females.</p></sec><sec><title>Conclusions</title><p>Type I was the most common coccyx type in our study, as in Egyptian and Western populations. The number of coccygeal vertebrae and prevalence of sacrococcygeal and intercoccygeal fusion in the Indian population were similar to those in the Western population. The mean coccygeal straight length and mean sacrococcygeal curvature angle were higher in males, whereas the intercoccygeal curvature angle was higher in females. Information on similarities and differences in coccygeal morphology between different ethnic populations could be useful in imaging and treating patients presenting with coccydynia.</p></sec>
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10

Srivastava, Abhishek, Geetanjali Nanda, Rajat Mahajan, et al. "Computed Tomography-Based Occipital Condyle Morphometry in an Indian Population to Assess the Feasibility of Condylar Screws for Occipitocervical Fusion." Asian Spine Journal 11, no. 6 (2017): 847–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.4184/asj.2017.11.6.847.

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<sec><title>Study Design</title><p>A retrospective computed tomography (CT)-based morphometric study of 82 occipital condyles in the Indian population, focusing on critical morphometric dimensions with relation to placing condylar screws.</p></sec><sec><title>Purpose</title><p>This study focused on determining the feasibility of placing occipital condylar screws in an Indian population using CT anatomical morphometric data.</p></sec><sec><title>Overview of Literature</title><p>The occipital condylar screw is a novel technique being explored as one of the options in occipitocervical stabilization. Sex and ethnic variations in anatomical structures may restrict the feasibility of this technique in some populations. To the best of our knowledge, there are no CT-based data on an Indian population that assess the feasibility of occipital condylar screws.</p></sec><sec><title>Methods</title><p>We measured the dimensions of 82 occipital condyles in 41 adults on coronal, sagittal, and axial reconstructed CT images. The differences were noted between the right and left sides and also between males and females. Statistical analysis was performed using the <italic>t</italic>-test, with a <italic>p</italic>-value of <0.05 considered significant.</p></sec><sec><title>Results</title><p>Mean sagittal length and height were 17.2±1.7 mm and 9.1±1.5 mm, respectively. Mean condylar angle/screw angle was 38.0°±5.5° from midline, with mean condylar length and width of 19.6±2.6 mm and 9.5±1.0 mm, respectively. Average coronal height on the anterior and posterior hypoglossal canal was 10.8±1.4 mm and 9.0±1.4 mm, respectively. The values in females were significantly lower than those in males, except for screw angle and condylar width. Based on Lin et al.'s proposed criteria, eight of 82 condyles were not suitable for condylar screws.</p></sec><sec><title>Conclusions</title><p>Preliminary CT morphometry data of the occipital condyle shows that condylar screws are anatomically feasible in a large portion of the Indian population. However, because a small number of population may not be suitable for this technique, meticulous study of preoperative anatomy using detailed CT data is advised.</p></sec>
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11

Ordon, Kimberly. "Aboriginal Title: The Trials of Aboriginal Indian Title and Rights: An Overview of Recent Case Law." American Indian Law Review 13, no. 1 (1987): 59. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20068266.

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Whaley, Gray H. "Coos Bay Indians in the “Courts of the Conqueror”." Pacific Historical Review 91, no. 4 (2022): 463–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/phr.2022.91.4.463.

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This article is based on two American Indian cases that arose from aboriginal title claims to coastal Oregon in the U.S. Court of Claims, Coos Bay (1938) and Alcea (1946), both subsequently upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. The cases set important precedents in judicial Indian law on the eve of the Indian Claims Commission. Coos Bay and Alcea also caused the creation of two distinct tribes of Coos Bay Indians: the Coos tribe included in the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw (Coos Bay); and the Coos tribe included in the Coquille Indian Tribe (Alcea). The latter were the only Coos Indian plaintiffs eligible to join the Alcea victory after the Coos Bay loss in the Supreme Court. The division caused considerable enmity between the two tribes, an unfortunate result, which this article attempts to alleviate by examining the reasons behind the split.
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13

Gibson, Mary Ellis. "INTRODUCTION: ENGLISH IN INDIA, INDIA IN ENGLAND." Victorian Literature and Culture 42, no. 3 (2014): 325–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150314000011.

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As we planned this special issue of Victorian Literature and Culture, the editors of VLC and I engaged in a lively exchange – what title could capture such a sprawling arena of concern? Victorian India seemed short and sweet. And yet one must ask, which Victorian India? Whose Victorian India? Do we mean India and Indians in the British Isles? British traders, soldiers, and administrators in Britain or Indian subjects across the subcontinent? What about an imagined Britain in India? An imagined India in Britain? The essays collected here represent varied answers to these questions. They also chart the recent parameters of what Albert Pionke calls in his essay “the epistemological problem of British India.” Before returning succinctly to the baker's dozen articles assembled here – for readers will want to encounter them without unnecessary commentary – I turn to the conjoined issues animating both these essays and much recent work on British imperialism: issues of historiography and epistemology.
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14

Lee, Chee Kean, Tiam Siong Tan, Chris Yin Wei Chan, and Mun Keong Kwan. "Surgical Morphometry of C1 and C2 Vertebrae: A Three-Dimensional Computed Tomography Analysis of 180 Chinese, Indian, and Malay Patients." Asian Spine Journal 11, no. 2 (2017): 181–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.4184/asj.2017.11.2.181.

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<sec><title>Study Design</title><p>Clinical imaging study.</p></sec><sec><title>Purpose</title><p>To study the surgical morphometry of C1 and C2 vertebrae in Chinese, Indian, and Malay patients.</p></sec><sec><title>Overview of Literature</title><p>C1 lateral mass and C2 pedicle screw fixation is gaining popularity. However, there is a lack of C1–C2 morphometric data for the Asian population.</p></sec><sec><title>Methods</title><p>Computed tomography analysis of 180 subjects (60 subjects each belonging to Chinese, Indian, and Malay populations) using simulation software was performed. Length and angulations of C1 lateral mass (C1LM) and C2 pedicle (C2P) screws were assessed.</p></sec><sec><title>Results</title><p>The predicted C1LM screw length was between 23.2 and 30.2 mm. The safe zone of trajectories was within 11.0°±7.7° laterally to 29.1°±6.2° medially in the axial plane and 37.0°±10.2° caudally to 20.9°±7.8° cephalically in the sagittal plane. The shortest and longest predicted C2P screw lengths were 22.1±2.8 mm and 28.5±3.2 mm, respectively. The safe trajectories were from 25.1° to 39.3° medially in the axial plane and 32.3° to 45.9° cephalically in the sagittal plane.</p></sec><sec><title>Conclusions</title><p>C1LM screw length was 23–30 mm with the axial safe zone from 11° laterally to 29° medially and sagittal safe zone at 21° cephalically. C2P screw length was 22–28 mm with axial safe zone from 26° to 40° medially and sagittal safe zone from 32° to 46° cephalically. These data serve as an important reference for Chinese, Indian, and Malay populations during C1–C2 instrumentation.</p></sec>
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15

Bertenthal, Alyse D. "Providing Equal Educational Opportunities: Title IX and Indian Tribal Schools." University of Chicago Law Review 69, no. 3 (2002): 1271. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1600648.

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Chothe, Vikas, Supriya Shah, and Kaustubh Ghodake. "PA01.29. Querries in the minds of Indian adolescents regarding menses. (Old Title) / Ignorance in urban Indian girls around menstruation: a qualitative analysis (New Title)." Ancient Science of Life 32, no. 5 (2012): 79. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0257-7941.112073.

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CHERESHNEVA, Larisa Aleksandrovna. "CONSTITUTIONS OF JAWAHARLAL NEHRU AND LIAQUAT ALI KHAN: CORRELATION OF POLITICAL STRATEGY AND STATE AND LEGAL REALIA OF INDEPENDENT INDIA AND PAKISTAN (1947–1956)." Tambov University Review. Series: Humanities, no. 174 (2018): 210–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.20310/1810-0201-2018-23-174-210-216.

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India and Pakistan, which emerged on the political map of the world 70 years ago, with the end of two hundred years of colonial rule of Britain, appeared to be the first states in the South Asia that demonstrated the uniqueness of the algorithms of the sovereignty of the liberated countries of the East. To what extent was it possible to combine tradition and modernization in their state-building? Return to the Eastern despotism, monarchical princely forms of governing or the creation of republics? What was the role in the States of free Hindustan to be supposed for their religion, religious institutions? Could the system of separation of powers correspond to the traditional ideas of many Indian and Pakistani peoples about power? We describe the characteristics of the program models of the state system, developed by the leading political forces of Colonial India – the All-Indian National Congress and the Muslim League for the future independent Hindustan, and their correlation with the real state and legal foundations of the Indian Union and Pakistan, formed in 1947–1956. It is noted that the League had only a general idea of the state formation and nation-building of Pakistan, which could not but affect the specifics of the Muslim project “Two Nations-two Indias” and subsequently led Pakistan to slide to the military dictatorships. The interrelation of the development of democratic legislation with the ideas of social justice, equality of national and ethno-religious minorities and the title majority is shown, the emphasis is placed on the risks of violation of the historical multiculturalism of the Indian civilization. We have involved the Indian, Pakistani and British documentaries on state-legal, historical and political issues, archival materials of the National Archives of India.
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Nikolskaia, Kseniia D. "Bartolomäus Ziegenbalg on the Religion of the Indian South." Vostok. Afro-aziatskie obshchestva: istoriia i sovremennost, no. 5 (2022): 253. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s086919080021609-6.

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Since the beginning of the XVIII century, a periodical was published at the University of the Saxon city of Halle under the title «Der Königlich. dänischen Missionarien aus Ost-Indien eingesandte ausführliche Berichte». It published texts sent from the city of Tranquebar in Southern India. Lutheran preachers, employees of the Danish Royal Mission, had been working in this city since 1706. For the first years, the mission was led by pastor Ziegenbalg, one of the founders of European Tamil studies. Most of the texts in the publication were written by him. Those texts sent by the pastor from India mainly dealt with the existence of the Tranquebar Lutheran community. At the same time, some publications were devoted to completely different problems. They told about the country where the missionaries conducted their work: about its geography, natural conditions, political structure, customs and traditions, about the daily life of Indians, and finally, about religion and mythology. Information about the religion of inhabitants of the South of India was later included in the fundamental work of Bartolomeus Ziegenbalg «Genealogie der Malabarischen Götter». However, this work was refused to be published in Europe for many years. It was issued only in 1867. Until that time, the main source of information about the religion of South India for European scholars remained only those notes that were printed in «Der Königlich. dänischen Missionarien aus Ost-Indien eingesandte ausführliche Berichte». A translation of one of those curious notes is offered to your attention.
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Williams, Lucy Fowler. "Native Fashion Now: North American Indian Style (Kramer et al)." Museum Anthropology Review 11, no. 1-2 (2017): 47–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.14434/mar.v11i1.23553.

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BES, LENNART. "Sultan among Dutchmen? Royal dress at court audiences in South India, as portrayed in local works of art and Dutch embassy reports, seventeenth–eighteenth centuries." Modern Asian Studies 50, no. 6 (2016): 1792–845. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x15000232.

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AbstractFrom the fourteenth century CE onwards, South Indian states ruled by Hindu kings were strongly influenced by politico-cultural conventions from Muslim-governed areas. This development was, for instance, manifest in the dress and titles of the rulers of the Vijayanagara empire. As has been argued, they bore the title of sultan and on public occasions they appeared in garments fashioned on Persian and Arab clothing. Both adaptations exemplified efforts to connect to the dominant Indo-Islamic world. From Vijayanagara's fragmentation in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, new Hindu-ruled kingdoms arose. We may wonder to what extent those succeeding polities continued practices adopted from Islamic courts. With that question in mind, this article discusses royal dress at court audiences in four Vijayanagara successor states, chiefly on the basis of embassy reports of the Dutch East India Company and South Indian works of art. It appears that kings could wear a variety of clothing styles at audiences and that influences on these styles now came from multiple backgrounds, comprising diverse Islamic and other elements. Further, not all successor states followed the same dress codes, as their dynasties modified earlier conventions in different ways, depending on varying political developments.
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Rao, Udai. "Sub-regional Maritime Security Challenges: A Cooperative Approach." Artha - Journal of Social Sciences 15, no. 4 (2016): 31. http://dx.doi.org/10.12724/ajss.39.3.

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The Indian Ocean Region has today emerged as the most important region of strategic concern. With India and China trying to establish their clout over this region and using it to propel themselves to the title of a Superpower. Indian Ocean becomes an interesting site for maritime security studies. This article attempts to trace the different areas of concern for all the stakeholders involved in the management of this sub-regional maritime security challenge. Maritime cooperation and security would ensure secure and safe seas which in turn would allow resurgence of our economies in a mutually beneficial manner. The sub-regional grouping with Maldives and Sri Lanka has to transcend beyond the South Asia sphere, encompassing Seychelles and Mauritius and would be a ‘Bottom Up Approach’ to shaping the maritime strategic environment in the Indian ocean.
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Legrandjacques, Sara. "Law of the Strongest? A Global Approach of Access to Law Studies and Its Social and Professional Impact in British India (1850s–1940s)." Social Sciences 10, no. 3 (2021): 113. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci10030113.

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This paper examines how access to law studies in British India challenged social stratifications within the colony, from the 1850s up to the 1940s. It highlights the impact of educational trajectories—colonial, imperial and global—on social positions and professional careers. Universities in British India have included faculties of law since the foundation of the first three universities in 1857. Although numerous native students enrolled at these Indian institutions, some of them chose to pursue their legal training in the imperial metropole. Being admitted into an Inn of Court, they could consequently become barristers, a title that was not available for holders of an Indian degree. This dual system differentiated degree-holders, complexifying the colonial hierarchy in a way that was sometimes denounced by both the colonized and the imperial authorities. Last but not least, access to higher education also impacted gendered identities: academic migration at times allowed some Indian women to graduate in Law but these experiences remained quite exceptional until the end of the Second Word War.
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Brulotte, Ronda. "Crafting Identity: Transnational Indian Arts and the Politics of Race in Central Mexico (Shlossberg)." Museum Anthropology Review 10, no. 1 (2015): 42–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.14434/mar.v10i1.20589.

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Praveenraj, Dr D. David Winster. "Exploring Consumer Reviews for Men’s Fashion Accessories in Online Purchase Platforms Using Sentiment Analysis." Revista Gestão Inovação e Tecnologias 11, no. 2 (2021): 676–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.47059/revistageintec.v11i2.1704.

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The recent trend in the Indian menswear market has witnessed the infusion of western styles. Result of this is a promising market in India for men’s fashion accessories like caps, sunglasses, bracelets, rings etc. One among the accessories is earrings for man. This product category has got line extensions like studs, hoops, non-piercing magnetic type and piercing studs etc. Keeping in consideration the whooping growth of the men’s earrings market in the online purchase platforms, this study is done with an objective to explore the reviews for this product category to arrive at some insights. For this study descriptive research design has been adopted. Using the scraper tool in Python software, the data (user’s reviews for men’s earrings) was collected from the top two online vendors in India (Amazon and Flipkart). Sentiment analysis is done with R software using the text analytical package “sentiment”. Then the sentiment scores was deployed in ANOVA to test for any significant differences in star ratings and the product variant purchased by the customer taking the Comment Sentiment Scores and Title Sentiment Score. The results have shown that there is a significant difference between the star ratings and Comment Sentiment Scores, Title Sentiment Score. Bivariate correlation is applied to test the relationship between Comment Sentiment Score, Title Sentiment Score and star ratings. The result revealed that star ratings, Comment Sentiment Scores and Title Sentiment Score have a significant relationship with each other.
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Black, Liza. "Objects of Survivance." Museum Anthropology Review 15, no. 1 (2021): 106–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.14434/mar.v15i1.31781.

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Dr. D. P. Digole. "A Critique of Muslim Orthodoxy and Inter-communal Tensions in Hamid Dalwai’s Indhan." Creative Launcher 5, no. 5 (2020): 98–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.53032/tcl.2020.5.5.13.

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The present paper intends to offer a critical reading of Hamid Dalwai's celebrated novel Indhan (1965) as “a critique of Muslim orthodoxy and inter-communal tensions”. This classic Marathi narrative has acquired the status of pan-Indian masterpiece after its brilliant English translation under the title Fuel by the renowned translator Dilip Chitre (1938-2009).The novel offers a deeply perceptive view of small-town life in rural Konkan and the emerging inter-communal tensions. The references to key historical events and time-markers in the narration help in contextualizing this novel in larger perspective and making it a pan-Indian masterpiece deserving to be placed among the immortal literary classics like Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan, Amrita Pritam’s Pinjar (1956), Bhisham Sahni’s Tamas (1973), Chaman Nahal’s Azadi (1975).
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Harriss, John. "The Great Tradition Globalizes: Reflections on Two Studies of ‘The Industrial Leaders’ of Madras." Modern Asian Studies 37, no. 2 (2003): 327–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x03002038.

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The title of the paper alludes to Milton Singer's book When A Great Tradition Modernizes: an anthropological approach to Indian civilization, and particularly to Part IV of the book. This has the title ‘Modernization and Traditionalization’ and includes a long essay called ‘Industrial Leadership, the Hindu Ethic and the Spirit of Socialism-described in a review by Richard Park at the time as ‘the capstone’ of the book as a whole.
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Shorter, David Delgado. "Our Lives: Collaboration, Native Voice, and the Making of the National Museum of the American Indian (Shannon)." Museum Anthropology Review 9, no. 1-2 (2015): 191–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.14434/mar.v9i1-2.19184.

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Kotin, Igor Yu, Nina G. Krasnodembskaya, and Elena S. Soboleva. "India of 1920s as Seen by Soviet Playwright, Consulting Indologists, Theater Critics." RUDN Journal of Russian History 20, no. 1 (2021): 125–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2312-8674-2021-20-1-125-144.

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The authors of this contribution analyze the circumstances and the history of a popular play that was staged in the Soviet Union in 1927-1928. Titled Jumah Masjid, this play was devoted to the anti-colonial movement in India. A manuscript of the play, not indicating its title and the name of its author, was found in the St. Petersburg Branch of the Archive of the Russian Academy of Sciences among the papers related to A.M. and L.A. Meerwarth, members of the First Russian Expedition to Ceylon and India (1914-1918). Later on, two copies of this play under the title The Jumah Masjid were found in the Russian Archive of Literature and Art and in the Museum of the Tovstonogov Grand Drama Theatre. The authors of this article use archival and published sources to analyze the reasons for writing and staging the play. They consider the image of India as portrayed by a Soviet playwright in conjunction with Indologists that served as consultants, and as seen by theater critics and by the audience (according to what the press reflected). Arguably, the celebration of the 10th anniversary of the October Revolution in Russia in 1927 and the VI Congress of the Communist International (Comintern) in 1928 encouraged writing and staging the play. The detailed picture of the anti-colonial struggle in India that the play offered suggests that professional Indologists were consulted. At the same time the play is critical of the non-violent opposition encouraged by Mahatma Gandhi as well as the Indian National Congress and its political wing known as the Swaraj Party. The research demonstrates that the author of the play was G.S. Venetsianov, and his Indologist consultants were Alexander and Liudmila Meerwarth.
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Haque, Ziaul. "Krishna Bharadwaj. Accumulation, Exchange, and Development: Essays on the Indian Economy. New Delhi: Sage Publications. 1994. 395 pages and Index. Hardbound. Indian Rs 350.00. Paperback. Indian Rs 195.00." Pakistan Development Review 34, no. 2 (1995): 165–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.30541/v34i2pp.165-167.

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Before her death in 1992, Professor Krishna Bharadwaj had reached the prime of her intellectual growth so that her mature thought on classical political economy and her ideas on development paradigms had begun to coalesce into a single whole. As the title of the book under review implies, this work of the late Indian economist comprises a study of the general problems of economic growth, accumulation, exchange, distribution, and development based on the theory of surplus, including its generation, appropriation, and distribution in society. The author applies classical theory to the complex development process in the developing economies, and to the specific problems of the Indian economy in the industrial, agricultural, and commercial sectors.
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Kapoor, Kanta, and O. P. Goyal. "Web‐based OPACs in Indian academic libraries: a functional comparison." Program 41, no. 3 (2007): 291–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/00330330710774165.

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PurposeThe paper seeks to provide a comparative analysis of the functionality of five web‐based OPACs available in Indian academic libraries.Design/methodology/approachSame‐topic searches were carried out by three researchers on the web‐based OPACs of Libsys, VTLS's iPortal, NewGenLib, Troodon, and Alice for Windows, implemented in five academic libraries in India. Their functionality was compared using criteria selected from the literature on OPAC searching.FindingsThe web‐based OPACs investigated offered a range of facilities for searching by author, title, control number and by keywords. Federated searching across several e‐collections was limited.Originality/valueThis paper should be a useful source of information to librarians who are planning to introduce web‐based OPACs and also for software vendors who wish to improve the functionality of their products.
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Vinski, Sarah. "Errata for “Lack of association between IRF6 polymorphisms and nonsyndromic oral clefts in South Indian population,” Volume 1, No 1." Dentistry 3000 1, no. 1 (2013): 30. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/d3000.2013.15.

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This page reflects errors that were found in the article “Lack of association between IRF6 polymorphisms and nonsyndromic oral clefts in South Indian population," Volume 1, No 1 of Dentistry 3000. 1. Gurramkonda, Venkatesh, Jyotsna Murthy, Altaf Hussain Syed, & Bhaskar VKS Lakkakula. "Lack of association between IRF6 polymorphisms and nonsyndromic oral clefts in South Indian population." Dentistry 3000 [Online], 1.1 (2013): n. pag. Web. 3 Sep. 2013 The article title should be “Evidence of association between IRF6 polymorphisms and nonsyndromic oral clefts in South Indian population.” Last updated Wednesday, September 4, 2013
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P.S, Pratheep. "The Impact Of Tourism On Indian Culture." KnE Social Sciences 1, no. 3 (2017): 429. http://dx.doi.org/10.18502/kss.v1i3.765.

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<p>Tourism is an important, even vital, source of income for many regions and countries. Increased leisure time and changes in lifestyle and consumption have given renewed importance to tourism. Travel outside a person's local area for leisure was largely confined to wealthy classes, who at times travelled to distant parts of the world, to see great buildings, works of art, <a title="Multilingualism" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multilingualism">learn new languages</a>, experience new cultures, and to taste different <a title="Cuisine" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisine">cuisines</a>. Tourism also encourages respect for and preservation of monuments and heritage properties.” At the interface between culture and tourism lies a series of deep and challenging issues relating to how we deal with issues of political engagement, social justice, economic change, belonging, identity and meaning. Tourism is a cultural phenomenon. It both impacts cultures and society, and is shaped by cultures and society. There is a deep influence of tourists and tourism on host country. Tourism is genuinely powerful and unique force for change in the community. Tourist impact has been most noticeable in lesser developed countries but is not entirely restricted to them. The cultural impact of tourism is concerned with the question of protecting and maintaining the cultural heritage and certain allied issues. The paper is an attempt to discuss the impact of tourism on Indian culture. The research design of this paper will be descriptive in nature.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Keywords: </strong><em>Manila Declaration, Tradition, Value system, tribal tourism, Globalization<strong></strong></em></p>
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Gupta, B. M., S. M. Dhawan, and Ritu Gupta. "Mobile Research in India : A Scientometric Assessment of Publications Output during 2007-16." DESIDOC Journal of Library & Information Technology 38, no. 1 (2018): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.14429/djlit.38.1.12130.

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The paper examines 13021 Indian publications on mobile research during 2007-16,as covered in Scopus database. The Indian publications were downloaded using a search strategy which uses the search term ‘mobile*’ in the two tags, namely ‘keyword tag’ and ‘Article Title tag’ and restricting it to the India in ‘country tag’ and period 2007-16 in ‘date range tag’. The Indian mobile research output experiencing an annual average growth rate of 22.64 per cent, global share of 5.88 per cent, citation impact of 2.11 and international collaborative publication share of 11.28 per cent during 2007-16. Computer Science, among subjects, contributed the largest publication share (74.61), engineering (38.32%), mathematics and social sciences (6.94% and 6.54), etc. during 2007-16. Amongst14 subfields identified in India’s mobile research, mobile networks contributed the largest publication share (53.19%), followed by mobile telecommunication systems (35.09%), Mobile communication (29.22%), mobile ad hoc networks (26.86%), mobile security (20.62%), etc. The most productive 20 Indian organisations and authors together contributed 25.64 per cent and 5.11 per cent share to the overall publications output of India in mobile research during 2007-16.The top 20 journals contributed 23.0 per cent share to the Indian journal output during 2007-16. Only 14 publications have registered citations from 109 to 548 and these together received3259 citations, with 232.79 citations per paper. Conclude that India is still not a leading country in the world on mobile research both in terms of quantity and quality of research. In view of strategic and global importance and to increase the research output and quality, the Indian Government needs to identify this area as one of the national priority area, involving much larger R&D investments and trained manpower and also increase international collaboration with leading mobile research hubs.
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Hughes, Bethany. "The Indispensable Indian: Edwin Forrest, Pushmataha, and Metamora." Theatre Survey 59, no. 1 (2018): 23–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040557417000473.

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Edwin Forrest, then a not-yet-famous actor, spent the summer of 1825 living in the greater New Orleans area among the Choctaw. It has been alleged that he spent these months with his friend Choctaw chief Pushmataha. From this relationship, Forrest learned how to play “Indian,” acquiring knowledge that informed his later interpretation of the title character in John August Stone's 1829 play Metamora; or, The Last of the Wampanoags. Accounts of Forrest's time with Pushmataha appear in biographies of the actor and critical assessments of his acting. In none of these texts is the fact of their relationship disputed.
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Banerjee, Ranjana. "The Story of Vsevolod Ivanov’s “Return of the Buddha”: Symbolism of the Title." Studies in Theory of Literary Plot and Narratology 15, no. 2 (2020): 63–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/2410-7883-2020-2-63-71.

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Since the 19th century, many writers and poets have shown interest in the spiritual values of the East, including India. Buddhism, the religious and philosophical teachings of Gautam Buddha, emerged in India in the First Millennium BC as a reaction against dogmas. It attracted the special attention of many Russian writers, from Leo Tolstoy to the most popular contemporary postmodernist writer, Victor Pelevin; often has been the subject of their creative work. The eminent writer from Siberia, Vsevolod Ivanov, holds a special place among these writers. Throughout his life, he engaged himself in the study of India and Indian spiritual teachings, including Buddhism. His admiration for Eastern philosophy (especially Buddhism) in all probability stemmed from the unique location of his Eurasian native land, which was the merging point of European and Asian culture. In the troubled years of early twentieth century, Vsevolod Ivanov was looking for a solution to the problems of the West (Russia) in Eastern philosophy, and some of his works were woven around this topic. The story “The Return of the Buddha” is one of them. The story deals with the physical and spiritual journey of a few during the turbulent times of the Civil war in Russia. The statue of Buddha is perceived in different ways by the characters accompanying it. For some, the statue signifies the supreme spiritual power, and for others, it is just one of the objects of the material world.
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Al zhery, Dr Nahy Abid Ibrahem. "Symbols of Sufism and Gratitude (Al-Irfan)in the poetry of Igbal Al-Lahouri." ALUSTATH JOURNAL FOR HUMAN AND SOCIAL SCIENCES 225, no. 1 (2018): 247–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v225i1.121.

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The Indiana poet Mohammad Iqbal Al-Lahouri is one of the great poets who shined Like as star in the Indian subcontinent in the past 100 years. He became a distinguished literary phenomenon in today's world. Many literary works and were written about him. One of the important aspects of Iqbal's poetry is the reflection of mystical concepts and knowledge in his poems as was the case of Sufi scholars one of which is the great persian Sufi poet (JalaluddinAl-Roumi). That is why the current research came under this title.
 (symbols of Sufism and Gratitude (Al-Irfan)in the poetry of Igbal Al-Lahouri).
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Zagyi, Nándor. "18–19. századi magyar India-utazók emlékezete." Modern Geográfia 17, no. 2 (2022): 67–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.15170/mg.2022.17.02.05.

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The present study provides a comprehensive overview of the 18th–19th century Hungarian or Hungary-related India travellers. In this context, relying upon the author’s subjective value judgement, individuals who visited India and South Asia, respectively, at any point during the period indicated in the title are systematized according to the strength of their work’s and oeuvre’s connection to the Indian subcontinent, as well as their social backgrounds, occupations, motives and goals, and not least the value of their contribution to travel and scientific literature and their significance in the history of science. In the case of India travellers in the strict sense, i.e. whose oeuvre is closely intertwined with India, the author devotes a separate analysis to the everyday and scientific aspects of their memory, their positions in memory space, the appearance of their memory in physical form, and the reasons behind the differences perceptible in these issues.
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Mondal, Dhiman, and Sibsankar Jana. "Collaborative Authorship Trend in Leading Indian LIS Journals." DESIDOC Journal of Library & Information Technology 38, no. 5 (2018): 320. http://dx.doi.org/10.14429/djlit.38.5.12917.

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<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>The published articles in leading Indian LIS journals during 2012-2017 have been mapped to depict the authorship pattern and collaboration trend in LIS domain of India. The study assessed the collaborative authorship trend on using different parameters like journal wise pattern, year wise collaboration, co-authorship index, ranked list of most productive authors and the level of collaboration. The Lotka’s law on author productivity has also been tested </span><span>to confirm the applicability of the law to the present data set. It is found that two-authored papers are predominant </span><span>(48%) in LIS publications and the collaborated articles of multi-authorships received greater average citations. Besides, in Indian LIS discipline, maximum collaboration occurs in intra-institutional level and inter-institutions within state level. Therefore, it is recommended that the LIS schools across the country should also consider inter- departmental collaboration to produce more quality works on emerging and innovative research areas. </span></p></div></div></div>
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Knack, Martha C. "The Saga of Tim Hooper's Homestead: Non-Reservation Shoshone Indian Land Title in Nevada." Western Historical Quarterly 39, no. 2 (2008): 125–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/whq/39.2.125.

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Krishnan, Vijaya, and Dr Sarada Sridhar. "INDIAN MRIDANGAM ARTIST AND ASSOCIATED MUSCULOSKELETAL DISORDERS." ShodhKosh: Journal of Visual and Performing Arts 3, no. 1 (2022): 341–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.29121/shodhkosh.v3.i1.2022.113.

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Background: Percussion artists are prone to develop musculoskeletal injuries. Mridangam is one of the most popular accompaniments in an Indian Carnatic Music recital. Thus, the aim of the study is to explore the prevalence of musculoskeletal disorders amongst Mridangam artists.
 Methodology: This was a descriptive cross-sectional study. Mridangam artists from various music school participated in the study over the period of 6 months. Self-made questionnaire was administered to artists comprising of demographic data, practice habits, and information about instrument usage.Using a video camera, the posture was recorded and analyzed. The recorded video was evaluated for risk factors.
 Results: This study revealed a 40% prevalence of playing related musculoskeletal affection among the Mridangam artists. Low back region was the most affected followed by knee and shoulder.
 Conclusion: The assessment of hazards revealed that the artists have medium exposure level of risk factors. Mridangam a form of percussion instrument has minimal detrimental effects on the artists must be promoted more. Title: Indian Mridangam Artist and Musculoskeletal Disorders
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Faridah, Siti, and Dian Hartati. "KOMPARASI FEMINISME PADA PUISI WENI SURYANDARI DAN RUPI KAUR." SeBaSa 5, no. 1 (2022): 138–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.29408/sbs.v5i1.4628.

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The purpose of this study is to describe a comparison of feminist views on two poems by Indonesian poets and Indian poets. The poems compared by the researchers include the title "Perempuan Perkasa" written by Weni Suryandari and the poem entitled "Kaur a Woman of Shiki" written by the Indian poet Rupi Kaur. The approach used is comparative literature, which is an attempt to compare two or more literary works from different countries, such as two works of poetry from Indonesia and India. This research is a comparative study with the object of research in the form of feminism views contained in the two poems. The data collection method used in this research is the documentation method. The results of the research on Weni Suryandari's poetry introduce an assumption that a woman has extraordinary strength, she is able to be a man's support and even a woman can protect a man. Meanwhile, Rupi Kaur's poetry shows that women have freedom and women also have the ability to be pillars of those around them. Keywords: Literature Comparative, Feminism, Poetry
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Hiremath, Gourishankar S., Hari Venkatesh, and Manish Choudhury. "Sports sentiment and behavior of stock prices: a case of T-20 and IPL cricket matches." Review of Behavioral Finance 11, no. 3 (2019): 266–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/rbf-04-2018-0043.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine whether the emotions and sentiments related to the outcome of the sporting event influence the investment making process. Design/methodology/approach This study uses the data on stock prices of firms sponsoring the Indian premier league (IPL) teams and data on Indian stock market. The event-study frameworks along with autoregressive moving average and GMM regression are employed to empirical quantify the impacts of the performance of the IPL teams on the stock market returns of the sponsors’ stocks and response of Indian stock market to the outcome of T-20 international matches. Findings The paper finds that the team winning IPL title in a season has a positive impact on the returns of the sponsors’ stocks of a particular team, whereas loss of team has a negative impact on returns. The outcome of the cricket matches played by team India in the T-20 has a negligible effect on the Indian stock market. Practical implications The finding of the study implies the coexistence of emotions and rationality at different points in time and the relevance of adaptive market hypothesis to explain such time-varying behavior. Originality/value The present investigation is first of its kind to test whether the performance of the IPL cricket team can influence the stock returns of the sponsors. This research shows that sentiment related to sports event such as cricket influences the decision-making process and thus affects underlying stock prices.
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Buliński, Tarzycjusz. "School and social development among the E'´ñepa Indians of the Venezuela Amazon: an anthropological approach." Estudios Latinoamericanos 34 (December 31, 2014): 189–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.36447/estudios2014.v33-34.art8.

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In this article, I would like to test how accurate is the notion that school is one of the main factors in the social development of Indian communities. According to this view, school education improves the social, political, economic and cultural situation of the Indian peoples of South America. This is a position widely circulated among the national community in the region and is the basis for development programs and projects carried out among the Indians 1.1 would like to examine to what extent this view is correct with respect to the Enepá Indians living in the Venezuelan Amazon. I approach the question of what impact schools have on the development of these communities from an anthropological perspective, and thus from the point of view of Indian social practices. The article consists of four parts. In the first part, I characterize the current socio-cultural situation of the southern E’ñepá and the activities related to school education among them, and introduce the reasons why I chose this people for my analysis. In the second part, I indicate a problem posed by analyses from within the dominant non-anthropological current of reflection on development, and present the anthropological approach to the issues referred to in the articles title. In the third part, I describe the development that is said to result from a school’s operation according to the intercultural education program being carried out among the Enepá. In the fourth section, I show, based on the example of the spread of the practice of writing how, by means of an anthropological approach, one can assess the real impact of the school on the social development of the E’ñepá Indians.
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Yano, M. "The Hsiu-Yao Ching and its Sanskrit Sources." International Astronomical Union Colloquium 91 (1987): 125–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0252921100105949.

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The Hsiu-yao Ching ( HYC) is a Chinese text on Indian astrology composed in the middle of the eighth century. Its full title can be rendered as 'Good and bad time and day and beneficient and maleficient mansions and planets promulgated by Bodhisattva-Mañjuśrī and other sages'. As the title shows the book is ascribed to the legendary Mañjuśrī and other sages, but the actual author is the Buddhist monk Amoghavajra (A.0.705-774) whose native place was somewhere in north India. His Chinese name Pu-k'ung Ching-kang is a literal translation of the Sanskrit name. Like most of the texts on Buddhist astrology and astronomy, HYC is contained in Vol.21 of the Taisho Tripitaka compiled by the Japanese Buddhist scholars during the Taisho Period (1912-1926). From many corruptions in the texts it seems that the compilers were not much interested in Buddhist astrology and astronomy in general, and that they did not try to secure better manuscripts either. Specifically in the case of HYC they simply based their edition on the text of the Korean Tripitaka and put in the footnotes the variant readings found in the Chinese Tripitaka of the Ming Dynasty.
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Editoral, E. "Corrigendum: Request that it is necessary replace .pdf file for the paper: Performance investigation of compression ignition engine using empirical correlation for burning duration." Thermal Science 24, no. 1 Part A (2020): 426. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/tsci180730232e.

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CORRIGENDUM: DOI REFERENCE: https://doi.org/10.2298/TSCI180125149K by Simeon Oka, Editor-in-Chief of the journal Thermal Science request that it is necessary replace .pdf file for the paper PERFORMANCE INVESTIGATION OF COMPRESSION IGNITION ENGINE USING EMPIRICAL CORRELATION FOR BURNING DURATION by Ajeet KUMAR*, Jeevan Vachan TIRKEY, and Shailendra Kumar SHUKLA Centre for Energy and Resources Development, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi, India Original scientific paper https://doi.org/10.2298/TSCI180125149K published in the journal THERMAL SCIENCE: Year 2018, Vol. 22, No. 3, pp. 1311-1323 since since authors find some errors that must be corrected and sent new .pdf file to replace existing one New manuscript has the same title and authors and the same number of pages, only errors are corrected PERFORMANCE INVESTIGATION OF COMPRESSION IGNITION ENGINE USING EMPIRICAL CORRELATION FOR BURNING DURATION by Ajeet KUMAR*, Jeevan Vachan TIRKEY, and Shailendra Kumar SHUKLA Centre for Energy and Resources Development, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi, India <br><br><font color="red"><b> Link to the corrected article <u><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/TSCI180125149K">10.2298/TSCI180125149K</a></b></u>
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Bilbija, Marina. "“Dear Anglo”: Scrambling the Signs of Anglo-Modernity from New York to Lagos." American Literary History 32, no. 4 (2020): 645–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajaa023.

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Abstract This essay reveals the surprising ties within an African American print franchise: the Anglo-African Magazine, the Weekly Anglo-African, and their various iterations between 1859 and 1865 and a Lagos journal also titled The Anglo-African (1863–65). The link was Robert Campbell, the West Indian editor of the Lagos paper and former contributor to the New York ones. I show how Campbell not only borrowed his title from his African American colleagues but also adapted their editorial models for hailing abolitionist publics and constituting interpretative communities. As these Anglo-African journals proliferated from New York to Lagos, “Anglo-African” became a racialized title associated with a particular kind of journal, rather than just a racial term. A salient feature of an “Anglo-African” type of journal was its scrambling of its titular term and its prefix Anglo. Thus, in the US papers, Anglo became a shorthand for a black publication, while their Nigerian counterpart inserted the US and African-America into the “Anglo” world of the Lagos Anglo-African. By decoupling “Anglo” from whiteness in one context, and from Britishness in the other, these editors forged a black Atlantic counterculture that worked at what Paul Gilroy has called the “hidden internal fissures” of modernity.
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48

Hieta, Erik. "“Awakening the Racial Spirit”: Indians, Sámi, and the Politics of Ethnographic Representation, 1930s–1940s." American Studies in Scandinavia 51, no. 1 (2019): 23–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.22439/asca.v51i1.5789.

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The article focuses on the efforts by scholars and activists in the 1930s–1940s to reinvigorate discussions of cultural preservation for indigenous peoples at the transnational level. It focuses in particular on the correspondence between, and overlap in, the efforts of ethnographers in the United States and Finland to secure homelands for the indigenous Sámi and American Indians as the cornerstone of cultural preservation efforts. The title, “awakening the racial spirit,” a term used by U.S. Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier (1934–1945), highlights the extent to which ethnographic representations of the time built on racialized and stereotyped images from the past to project onto indigenous peoples a distinctive future. Increasingly, both Sámi and American Indians engaged with and disrupted such representations. The impacts of the efforts to document and demarcate a distinctive indigenous past continue to underpin and inform indigenous rights discussions to this day.
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49

Chand, B. B., and Ramesha B. "Indian Government Websites : A Study." DESIDOC Journal of Library & Information Technology 37, no. 5 (2017): 346. http://dx.doi.org/10.14429/djlit.37.10964.

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<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>Transparency and accountability, participation and services are some of the important priorities of governments across the word today. Information plays an essential role in achieving all there objectives which is largely being delivered by using websites. Study of these websites entails the role of governments in disseminating information and providing services to the user community. The current study uses 6 key parameters with 55 indicators to evaluate the performance of 81 central government ministries and departments. It is found that all the websites are </span><span>following guidelines related to identifier with utmost importance, where as the scores in information, usability and </span><span>security parameters are quite acceptable. It is also found that the score with respect to participation and services it is very low. Correlation analysis shows strong relationship between information and usability and usability and participation. The study also observes that most of the websites mostly facebook or tweeter for social networking. The information facilitation index shows that Ministry of External Affairs has the highest score of 0.875 and the lowest score lies with Department of Agricultural Research and Education. Though information is being delivered through the websites can be accessed with little efforts, the concern is that when it comes to citizen participation and service delivery there is quite a lot to be improved. </span></p></div></div></div>
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50

Chand, B. B., and Ramesha B. "Indian Government Websites : A Study." DESIDOC Journal of Library & Information Technology 37, no. 5 (2017): 346. http://dx.doi.org/10.14429/djlit.37.5.10964.

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Abstract:
<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>Transparency and accountability, participation and services are some of the important priorities of governments across the word today. Information plays an essential role in achieving all there objectives which is largely being delivered by using websites. Study of these websites entails the role of governments in disseminating information and providing services to the user community. The current study uses 6 key parameters with 55 indicators to evaluate the performance of 81 central government ministries and departments. It is found that all the websites are </span><span>following guidelines related to identifier with utmost importance, where as the scores in information, usability and </span><span>security parameters are quite acceptable. It is also found that the score with respect to participation and services it is very low. Correlation analysis shows strong relationship between information and usability and usability and participation. The study also observes that most of the websites mostly facebook or tweeter for social networking. The information facilitation index shows that Ministry of External Affairs has the highest score of 0.875 and the lowest score lies with Department of Agricultural Research and Education. Though information is being delivered through the websites can be accessed with little efforts, the concern is that when it comes to citizen participation and service delivery there is quite a lot to be improved. </span></p></div></div></div>
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