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Institution

Indian Institute of Management Bangalore

EducationBengaluru, Karnataka, India
About: Indian Institute of Management Bangalore is a education organization based out in Bengaluru, Karnataka, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Emerging markets & Corporate governance. The organization has 491 authors who have published 1254 publications receiving 23853 citations. The organization is also known as: IIMB.


Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
31 Aug 2008
TL;DR: The paper concludes that through e-government the state reinvents itself, as the e-State, as a powerful, centralized force that disrupts historical practices and relations.
Abstract: Using an extensive case analysis of the Bhoomi system of India, this paper examines the role and nature of the state with regards to the rationale for and deployment of e-government systems. Issues such as the nature of control in governance, the discourse of de-politicization in justifying e-government and the reinvention of the state via electronic means are examined. Analysis of data collected over several years shows that e-government systems are primarily used to centralize control in the hands of the upper echelons of the bureaucracy, a strong discourse of technology and `high modernism' permeates the justification for deploying e-government and this effectively de-politicizes the intent and purpose of the project. The paper concludes that through e-government the state reinvents itself, as the e-State, as a powerful, centralized force that disrupts historical practices and relations.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article examined the emergence and evolution of collective action frames in the palliative care movement in Kerala, India by leveraging secondary data published over seventeen years as well as interviews with thirty movement actors.
Abstract: We examine the emergence and evolution of collective action frames in the palliative care movement in Kerala, India. We do so by leveraging secondary data published over seventeen years as well as interviews with thirty movement actors. Our findings suggest two key themes: First, frames that emerge at the grass-roots level, and in many occasions from bystanders, can become dominant frames of a movement. Second, frame alignment processes may be directed by non-elites towards the elites. These findings diverge from prior literature which emphasizes roles of movement leaders and key actors in framing issues and strategies.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The empirical findings suggest that an increase in the share of the privately provided health care results in higher inequality, and it is shown that the cross-section earnings inequality is non-decreasing in the private share of health expenditure.

11 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: The authors reviewed the status of management education in India and found that most schools are trapped in a cost-quality vicious cycle, even though there are few institutions of excellence that are comparable to the best in the class.
Abstract: The paper reviews the status of Management Education in India and finds that most schools are trapped in a cost-quality vicious cycle, even though there are few institutions of excellence that are comparable to the best in the class. The constraints and opportunities facing the different types of business schools in India are briefly discussed and recommendations are made for improving their performance through a variety of internationally bench-marked programs and activities.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
05 Aug 2020-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: This study demonstrates the feasibility of a “bottom-up”-method to estimate local population density in the between-census years by combining household surveys with contemporaneous geo-spatial data, including village-area and satellite imagery-based indicators.
Abstract: Country-level census data are typically collected once every 10 years. However, conflicts, migration, urbanization, and natural disasters can rapidly shift local population patterns. This study demonstrates the feasibility of a "bottom-up"-method to estimate local population density in the between-census years by combining household surveys with contemporaneous geo-spatial data, including village-area and satellite imagery-based indicators. We apply this technique to the case of Sri Lanka using Poisson regression models based on variables selected using the Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO). The model is estimated in villages sampled in the 2012/13 Household Income and Expenditure Survey, and is employed to obtain out-of-sample density estimates in the non-surveyed villages. These estimates approximate the census density accurately and are more precise than other bottom-up studies using similar geo-spatial data. While most open-source population products redistribute census population "top-down" from higher to lower spatial units using areal interpolation and dasymetric mapping techniques, these products become less accurate as the census itself ages. Our method circumvents the problem of the aging census by relying instead on more up-to-date household surveys. The collective evidence suggests that our method is cost effective in tracking local population density with greater frequency in the between-census years.

11 citations


Authors

Showing all 531 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Kannan Raghunandan4910010439
Saras D. Sarasvathy4110914815
Asha George351564227
Dasaratha V. Rama32674592
Raghbendra Jha313353396
Gita Sen30573550
Jayant R. Kale26673534
Randall Hansen23412299
Pulak Ghosh23921763
M. R. Rao23522326
Suneeta Krishnan20492234
Ranji Vaidyanathan19771646
Mukta Kulkarni19451785
Haritha Saranga19421523
Janat Shah19521767
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202332
202227
202196
202093
201985
201874