Part I Human Development and Capabilities
1: Muhammad Asali, Sanjay G. Reddy, and Sujata Visaria:
Inter-Country Comparisons of Income Poverty Based on a Capability
Approach
2: Amiya Kumar Bagchi: The Capability Approach and Political
Economy of Human Development
3: Lincoln C. Chen: India-China: "The Art of Prolonging Life"
4: Kanchan Chopra: Sustainable Human Well-being: An Interpretation
of Capability Enhancement from a 'Stakeholders and Systems'
Perspective
5: Sakiko Fukuda-Parr: Human Rights and Human Development
6: Jocelyn Kynch: Entitlements and Capabilities: Young People in
Post-Industrial Wales
7: Gustav Ranis, Emma Samman, and Frances Stewart: Country Patterns
of Behavior on Broader Dimensions of Human Development
8: Ashutosh Varshney: Poverty and Famines: An Extension
Part II Gender and Household
9: Bina Agarwal: Engaging with Sen on Gender Relations: Cooperative
Conflicts, False Perceptions and Relative Capabilities
10: Ingela Alger and Jörgen W. Weibull: Family ties, incentives and
development: a model of coerced altruism
11: Lourdes Beneria: From "Harmony" to "Cooperative Conflicts"
Amartya Sen's Contribution to Household Theory
12: Martha Alter Chen: Famine, Widowhood, and Paid Work: Seeking
Gender Justice in South Asia
13: Enrica Chiappero Martinetti: Time and Income: Empirical
Evidence on Gender Poverty and Inequalities from a Capability
Perspective
14: Jane Humphries and Kirsty McNay: Death and Gender in Victorian
England
15: Stephan Klasen: Missing Women: Some Recent Controversies on
Levels and Trends in Gender Bias in Mortality
Part III Growth, Poverty and Policy
16: Isher Ahluwalia: Challenges of Economic Development in
Punjab
17: Montek Ahluwalia: Growth, Distribution and Inclusiveness:
Reflections on India's Experience
18: Pranab Bardhan: Economic Reforms, Poverty and Inequality in
China and India
19: Simon Dietz, Cameron Hepburn, Nicholas Stern: Economics, Ethics
and Climate Change
20: Rizwanul Islam: Has Development and Employment through
Labour-Intensive Industrialization Become History?
21: Robert M. Solow: Imposed Environmental Standards and
International Trade
Part IV Society, Politics and History
22: Sugata Bose: Pondering Poverty, Fighting Famines: Towards a New
History of Economic Ideas
23: Jonathan Glover: Identity, Violence and the Power of
Illusion
24: Ayesha Jalal: Freedom and Equality: From Iqbal's Philosophy to
Sen's Ethical Concerns
25: Mary Kaldor: Protective Security or Protection Rackets? War and
Sovereignty
26: Sunil Khilnani: Democracy and its Indian Pasts
27: Martha C. Nussbaum: The Clash Within: Democracy and the Hindu
Right
28: Elinor Ostrom: Engaging Impossibilities and Possibilities
29: Rehman Sobhan: Agents into Principals: Democratizing
Development in South Asia
Kaushik Basu is Professor of Economics and the C. Marks Professor
of International Studies, Department of Economics, and Director,
Center for Analytic Economics, Cornell University. He has held
visiting positions at CORE (Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium), the
Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), and the London School of
Economics. He has been Visiting Professor at Harvard University,
Princeton University, and M.I.T. In 1992 he founded the Centre for
Development
Economics in Delhi and was its first Executive Director. He is also
a founding member of the Madras School of Economics.
Ravi Kanbur is T. H. Lee Professor of World Affairs, International
Professor of Applied Economics and Management, and Professor of
Economics at Cornell University. He has taught at the Universities
of Oxford, Cambridge, Essex, Warwick, Princeton and Columbia and
has served on the staff of the World Bank in several capacities,
including as Director of the World Bank's World Development Report.
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