14,772 research outputs found
Professor R.B. Singh (1955-2021), an Icon of Indian Geography: A Passage on the Path of Lineage, Legacy and Liminality
Professor R.B. Singh (1955-2021) had been the first Indian Geographer to have the dual distinction of holding the position of the IGU Secretary General and ICSU Scientific Committee Member. He was the first Indian and second Asian Secretary General and Treasurer of the IGU (2018-2022). Professor Singh was a distinguished geographer of 21st Century India who had made distinct academic contributions over the last five decades, illustrated with publishing 16 books, 40 anthologies, and around 260 research papers. He has covered and profusely published researches in 11 fields—Environmental Studies, Geoecology; Land resources, Land use/ Land cover; Water issues, Hydrology; Disaster, Natural Hazard; Quality of Life, Livelihood; Climatic Change, Air Pollution study; Urban Environment, Health, and wellbeing; Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs); Environmental Monitoring; Geography, Development Studies R-U; Mountain Studies, Forestry, Tourism; and RS, GIS, Recent trends appraisal. He had supervised 39 PhD and 81 MPhil dissertations. This paper presents an appraisal of his life journey on the path of Lineage, Legacy and Liminality—a type of biographical highlights in the frame of his practising geography, while also emphasising various niches, distinctions, networks, and collaborative programmes
Cool Roof Impact on Building Energy Need: The Role of Thermal Insulation with Varying Climate Conditions
Cool roof effectiveness in improving building thermal-energy performance is affected by different variables. In particular, roof insulation level and climate conditions are key parameters influencing cool roofs benefits and whole building energy performance. This work aims at assessing the role of cool roof in the optimum roof configuration, i.e., combination of solar reflectance capability and thermal insulation level, in terms of building energy performance in different climate conditions worldwide. To this aim, coupled dynamic thermal-energy simulation and optimization analysis is carried out. In detail, multi-dimensional optimization of combined building roof thermal insulation and solar reflectance is developed to minimize building annual energy consumption for heating-cooling. Results highlight how a high reflectance roof minimizes annual energy need for a small standard office building in the majority of considered climates. Moreover, building energy performance is more sensitive to roof solar reflectance than thermal insulation level, except for the coldest conditions. Therefore, for the selected building, the optimum roof typology presents high solar reflectance capability (0.8) and no/low insulation level (0.00-0.03 m), except for extremely hot or cold climate zones. Accordingly, this research shows how the classic approach of super-insulated buildings should be reframed for the office case toward truly environmentally friendly buildings.The work was partially funded by the Spanish government (RTI2018-093849-B-C31). This work was
partially supported by ICREA under the ICREA Academia programme. Dr. Alvaro de Gracia has received
funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie
Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 712949 (TECNIOspring PLUS) and from the Agency for Business
Competitiveness of the Government of Catalonia. This publication has emanated from research supported (in
part) by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) under the SFI Strategic Partnership Programme Grant Number
SFI/15/SPP/E3125
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India: Domestic Issues, Strategic Dynamics, and U.S. Relations
[Excerpt] President Barack Obama’s Administration has sought to build upon the deepened U.S. engagement with India begun by President Bill Clinton in 2000 and expanded upon during much of the past decade under President G.W. Bush. This “U.S.-India 3.0” diplomacy was most recently on display in July 2011, when the second U.S.-India Strategic Dialogue session saw a large delegation of senior U.S. officials visit New Delhi to discuss a broad range of global and bilateral issues. Many analysts view the U.S.-India relationship as being among the world’s most important in coming decades and see potentially large benefits to be accrued through engagement on many convergent interests. Bilateral initiatives are underway in all areas, although independent analysts in both countries worry that the partnership has lost momentum in recent years. Outstanding areas of bilateral friction include obstacles to bilateral trade and investment, including in the high-technology sector; outsourcing; the status of conflict in Afghanistan; climate change; and stalled efforts to initiate civil nuclear cooperation.
India is the world’s most populous democracy and remains firmly committed to representative government and rule of law. Its left-leaning Congress Party-led ruling national coalition has been in power for more than seven years under the leadership of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, an Oxford-trained economist. New Delhi’s engagement with regional and other states is extensive and reflects its rising geopolitical status. The national economy has been growing rapidly—India’s is projected to be the world’s third-largest economy in the foreseeable future—yet poor infrastructure, booming energy demand, and restrictive trade and investment practices are seen to hamper full economic potential. Despite the growth of a large urban middle-class, India’s remains a largely rural and agriculture-based society, and is home to some 500-600 million people living in poverty. This report will be updated periodically
Channel Integration Approach in the Metropolitan University Libraries in India
The medium which carries out telecommunication is referred to as a channel. In India, the subscriber base of the telecommunication channels is huge, dynamic, and ever-changing. To satisfy the changing channel preferences of the learners of diverse demographics virtually, it is important for the university libraries situated in metropolitan cities in India to integrate multiple channels. The channel integration strategy allows coordinating multiple channels to create and connect different paths for the clients to reach the same organization. The study has featured the channel integration status in the libraries of 46 UGC-listed universities of four metropolitan cities- Chennai, Delhi, Kolkata, and Mumbai. The purposive sampling method has been followed to select the samples for the study and the observation method is used to collect the qualitative data on the channels from the websites of all the selected universities and library web pages. The channel integration features in the website have been emphasized according to Goersch’s six elements. The table on the forms and combination of channels have aided to specify the channel-specific capabilities and information management. The presence of telephone and email in all the university library websites has justified the strategy about the types of communication channels, network, and cost; portability; multimedia sharing; audience outreach and connectivity; accuracy of communication; and information overload/ traffic generation. Except for consistency, the elements like branding channel cross-promotion and logistics are not prominently implemented in the libraries
Scaling up private sector engagement in food security through convergent food innovation : proof of concept and theory of change
To help food businesses develop nutritious food products and make them commercially viable, the project developed the Food Convergent Innovation Accelerator, a virtual platform comprising global and Indian partners spanning societal and industrial sectors. Collaborative leadership was fostered between various partners, including the McGill Centre for the Convergence of Health and Economics (MCCHE, Montreal, Canada) and the National Institute of Food Technology Entrepreneurship and Management (NIFTEM) – a public research university (Sonipat district of Haryana, India). The programme initially focused on pulse foods (and later, millets) as naturally nutritious agricultural commodities that promise high human and economic development impact in India
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