Episode 5 of the Viksit Bharat Podcast is now live! In this episode, Dr. Rajendra Pratap Gupta shares his insights on the vital connection between the environment and the economy. He explores how sustainable practices can drive economic growth while addressing pressing environmental challenges. Dr. Gupta also provides his analysis of the Viksit Bharat Budget, shedding light on its implications for India's development and its alignment with environmental and economic goals. Tune in for a thought-provoking discussion that bridges policy, sustainability, and progress! Watch: https://lnkd.in/gxGj8w5g #ViksitBharatAbhiyan #DevelopedIndia2047 #India #Economy #Environment
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🌍💡In this episode, Dr. Rajendra Pratap Gupta, PhD, ideator and founder of Viksit Bharat Abhiyan, shares his insights on the vital connection between the #environment and the #economy. He explores how #sustainable #practices can drive economic growth while addressing pressing #environmental challenges. Dr. Gupta also provides his analysis of the Viksit Bharat Budget, shedding light on its implications for India's #development and its alignment with #environmental and #economic goals. Tune in for a thought-provoking discussion that bridges #policy, #sustainability, and #progress! Watch full episode: https://lnkd.in/gussn9u5 Listen on Spotify: https://lnkd.in/gbNvEkEs Dr. Rajendra Pratap Gupta, PhD Dr. Manpreet Kaur Saptarshi Gargari #Sustainability #EconomicGrowth #ViksitBharat #EnvironmentalPolicy #FutureOfIndia #Progress #GreenEconomy #productivity
Viksit Bharat: Environment & Economy
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"Vision, planning for future in fields like water scarcity, transportation, urbanization, agriculture, economy & environment are needed. Not that you wake up when calamity strikes & you are clueless, caught napping, unable to deal. So leadership, bureaucracy, intellectuals, media & society must plan & prepare accordingly. But, sadly, focus remains on nonsensical things, not real issues." [Shams Ur Rehman Alavi] NOTE: Expertise, intellectualism, research are disliked and seen as useless. Ruffians, rustics & racketeers are respected, seen as people who symbolize power. Can the people in any region survive one or two poor monsoons? Think, act because it's already too late. #India #Vision #Economy #Bureaucracy #Society #Future #Water #Planning
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Reshma Anand focuses on how partnerships can accelerate human transformation in rural India #42FoundationDay
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Arvind Bharathi is running a revolution in India. Get on track with him in Run Bhoomi, Episode 3 of Economies of Khel, where he, Rahul De and Kailash Koushik talk about the transformation of running from an elitist activity to a thriving industry. Catch the latest episode here: https://lnkd.in/dUMp37az Arvind Bharathi, Kailash Koushik
Run Bhoomi | Ep 3 of Economies Of Khel | Radio Azim Premji University
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Dr Shipra Mathur Mathur writes: Rural economy is backbone and rural population is real texture of Bharat. There is steady shift from agriculture, migration of village youth to cities, growing disparity and distress. Historically, villages have served as growth engines, but with urbanization and a capitalist approach, the challenges of the rural remained largely unattended. Self sufficiency of villages could be achieved as investors, start ups and technology see huge potential there. They must remain pure, sustainable and vibrant. It’s our collective duty in whatever capacity we can contribute. Through my initiative (on YouTube) Dharatal Talks, am trying to raise issues of the grassroots from policy perspective. It’s an extension of public service journalism, which I have pursued whole life. Rather, it’s discourse (Vimarsh) where I share my understanding of the issues/people/voices on the margin. Sometime building freewheel conversation with people to add clarity to my own thoughts. https://lnkd.in/eNeZAMeQ
Shipra Mathur India Concerned citizen Vidped 578 August 2024
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Development isn't just about infrastructure or technology—it's about humanity and empathy. Watching individuals carelessly splash floodwater onto others on their way to work reminds us that true progress demands a cultural shift in mindset and behavior. Until we cultivate respect and responsibility towards one another, India’s journey towards becoming a developed nation remains incomplete. #CivicSense #ResponsibleCitizenship
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ABHYUDAYA SESSION REPORT Date- 19/11/2024 Moderator- Shivendra Vikram Singh Members Present-: Gaurav, Anand, Ajay, Uday, Ankit, Abhijeet, Shobhit, Ayush, Harsh, Govinda, Shaurya,Mudit, Rounak, Pinjal, Jaichand, Omjee, Abhinav, Kunal, Riya, Aditya. Listeners : Aryavardhan, Nishant, Nishitn, Vijay, Vaibhav, Shraddha, Matangi, Devank. Topic- Extempore: Overcome Your Stage Fear. Topic Discussed:- 1. Donation a nobal work 2. Conscientiousness- doing the right thing even when no one is seeing you. 3. Taking initiative is core of Leadership 4. Negative impacts of Social media 5. 3 things that you feel unique in BHU and 3 things you don't like and how will you solve the same. 6. India's defence system 7. Russia- Ukraine War 8. Crime against women 9. Types of Government 10. Kashi 11. Air pollution and Delhi 12. Importance of Infrastructural development 13. Press and freedom 14. Importance of Educational societies/club 15. Terrorism 16. Role of discipline in life 17. Role of literature 18. Waste management 19. India's culture Extempore is one among the various forms of public speaking in which the speaker is given little preparation time on a given topic. For this session each speaker was assigned with a topic and alloted a time frame of 3 minutes to deliver their speech and one additional minute to do their research. The participants demonstrated a high level of engagement and enthusiasm while discussing topics of great importance.They were able to critically Analyse the topic, present the facts and figure and deliver their speech in a thoughtful manner , it was a very engaging and innovative session and gave a lot of learnings
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Hello, my name is Mohammad Samiullah, and I am an expert academic content writer with three years of experience. I can help you excel in your academic projects with high-quality, tailored content. Here’s how I can assist you: Essay Writing: Research Analysis: Thesis & Proposals: Report Writing: Creating Presentation Skills: Well familaire with all types of references style including Harvard APA MLA Chicago Oscola IEEE Providing quality content with 0% Plagisrism 0% AI On time Delivery Well Researched and Properly Orgnized Let's discuss further
Development isn't just about infrastructure or technology—it's about humanity and empathy. Watching individuals carelessly splash floodwater onto others on their way to work reminds us that true progress demands a cultural shift in mindset and behavior. Until we cultivate respect and responsibility towards one another, India’s journey towards becoming a developed nation remains incomplete. #CivicSense #ResponsibleCitizenship
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The paradoxical nature of India's reality is quite amusing, as whatever holds true about the country, its opposite seems to be equally valid. It's ironic that despite being the world's 5th largest economy, we find ourselves ranked 142nd in per capita income (~$2.6K) India isn't a singular economy; it's a blend of multiple economies, which can be categorised as:- > India 1 (Consuming Class) - Mexico: o ~30m households, ~120m people, ~$15K per capita o Primary startup market, often the starting point for expansion > India 2 (Aspirant Class) - Indonesia: o ~70m households, ~300m people, ~$3k per capita o Emerging class, heavy consumers, hesitant payers o Key markets: OTT, gaming, edtech, lending o UPI and AutoPay facilitate small transactions > India 3 (Unmonetisable Users) - Sub/Saharan Africa: o ~205Mn households, ~1Bn people, ~$1k per capita o Limited incomes, unable to spend on discretionary goods o Currently not viable for startups Huge shoutout to Blume Ventures for the fascinating insights on the investment landscape in India, from an unconventional POV! Sajith Pai Nachammai Savithiri R Anurag Pagaria #pe #vc #investment #angelinvestment #india #gdpgrowth #blume
The Indus Valley Report 2024 Explainer | Sajith Pai | Anurag Pagaria | Nachammai Savithiri
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Tanya's piece in IDR is spot on regarding the need for a climate-sensitive development approach that supports CSOs in integrating climate considerations into their vital work on the ground. But we have an incredible opportunity - and responsibility - as philanthropic leaders. It's on us to use our voice, our capital, and our influence to shift the larger system. We need to be asking bigger, bolder questions: How can we direct more resources to climate adaptation and resilience, especially for front-line communities? What will it take to accelerate the transition to a low-carbon future that benefits everyone? How do we break down silos and foster real collaboration for integrated climate solutions? As funders, we're uniquely positioned to take the long view, take risks on transformative ideas, and catalyse systemic shifts. That's the kind of leadership this moment demands of us - not dictating solutions but expanding our line of inquiry and circle of collaboration. But it'll take all of us challenging ourselves, challenging the status quo, to meet the scale of this crisis and the opportunity ahead. India Climate Collaborative ClimateRISE Alliance
I am happy to share a thought piece that I recently wrote for India Development Review (IDR). In speaking to different partners from the Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies network, a few repeated concerns by several civil society organisations (CSOs) on addressing climate challenges either reflected technical, capacity, or bandwidth constraints to respond to the crisis as they dealt with livelihood and developmental challenges of their own or a frustration with the 'carbon tunnel vision' at the cost of all other developmental outcomes that donors often thrust on their programmes. Climate change is first and foremost a lived social, economic, and political reality than just a physical change. How can CSOs respond to climate change in their work when they are struggling with basic livelihood and development challenges? What can we, as funders, do to help build this capacity at a systemic level? And most importantly, how can our funding support the transition from a system that works in siloes to one that integrates #climate as a cross-cutting lens that requires coordinated action across the board? Building on the work of several partners, I provide a framework around climate sensitive development that we are thinking about intentionally at RNPF. We invite other donors and CSOs to help inform this agenda. I would love to know if this resonates with your thinking, the ways in which it might be different, and the considerations for your work. With thanks to some of the partners particularly, India Climate Collaborative, Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW), Farmers for Forests (F4F), SEEDS, ClimateRISE Alliance, Navroz Dubash https://lnkd.in/dZp7kc8p
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