Smita Srinivas

8.2K posts

Smita Srinivas banner
Smita Srinivas

Smita Srinivas

@Smita_Srinivas

Economic Dev. Global issues. https://t.co/I2abu687YS. Global Master Class "Master Your Research" Foundations and Frontiers of Economics

Katılım Ocak 2018
1K Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Smita Srinivas
Smita Srinivas@Smita_Srinivas·
We are on Session 3 looking at whether the discipline and leanings represent Western Economics, Development Economics, or something else. How scientific is this enterprise and what precise methods are relevant? Write in if interested in a later cohort.
Smita Srinivas@Smita_Srinivas

Do join us. We begin April 3rd for a 1-month online course on the Foundations and Frontiers of Economics. Tues, Fri April 3-May 5th, 7:30pm-9pm IST (7am PDT, 10am EDT, 2pm UTC/GMT, 4pm CET, 4pm SAST, 10pm Sing). siddhantavijnan.org/course/foundat… Linkedin post here linkedin.com/feed/update/ur…

English
0
0
0
46
Smita Srinivas
Smita Srinivas@Smita_Srinivas·
Fascinating case in liberal democracy. Law, traditions, protections, culture. "The ban is upheld by the Greek Parliament and is recognized within the European Union for spiritual and religious reasons. Attempting to enter can lead to a prison sentence of two months to one year."
Rāma Śēṣan Chandraśēkaran@maa_bhaishiiH

Mount Athos, an autonomous monastic region in Greece, enforces a strict Avaton (prohibition) that bans women and even female animals (except cats to curb mice, lol) from entering the entire peninsula. This rule has been in place for over 1,000 years to maintain monastic celibacy and honor the Virgin Mary. Violating this law can result in legal penalties, including imprisonment. Access is restricted to men with a specific permit. The prohibition extends 500 meters (approx. 1,640 feet) from the coastline. Even tourist boats are restricted to maintaining this distance. The ban is upheld by the Greek Parliament and is recognized within the European Union for spiritual and religious reasons. Attempting to enter can lead to a prison sentence of two months to one year. According to Orthodox tradition, the peninsula is dedicated to the Virgin Mary ("The Garden of the Theotokos"), who is considered the only woman allowed on the mountain. One of the traditions that has been handed down regarding this is that the Virgin Mary was supposedly blown off course when she was trying to sail to Cyprus and landed on Mount Athos. And she liked it so much that she prayed to her son that she should be given it as her own and he agreed. It is still called 'the garden of the mother of God', dedicated to her glory, and she alone represents her sex on Mount Athos. Another tradition has it that centuries ago, after several monks reported visions of the Virgin Mary, following whom it was decided that the Athos monks should devote themselves only to her, and that no other woman should be allowed lest they may outshine her. I am waiting for @AKanisetti (who blocked me recently) to write articles on this too and call the Virgin Mary as controversial because there is a small mountainous peninsula where she won’t allow other women to enter. Please reshare a lot. We need women to enter Athos mountain too. European Union should intervene in this affair asap and our judiciary should enforce our constitutional morality on the Greek Orthodox Church. @halleyji @infinitchy @jsaideepak @labstamil Link for an article reg this : ap.org/news-highlight…

English
0
0
0
43
Smita Srinivas retweetledi
Tyler Austin Harper
Tyler Austin Harper@Tyler_A_Harper·
Years ago I wrote about the collapse of Kendi for WaPo’s now defunct Book World. Interesting to watch him slowly and haltingly creep back into the discourse after setting up shop at Howard. Think this bit aged rather well if I may say so.
Tyler Austin Harper tweet media
Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins@daniel_dsj2110

“People cast aspersions on me as a director in order to cast aspersions on my scholarship,” says Dr. Ibram X. Kendi, “because they do not see a direct way to undermine my scholarship.” nymag.com/intelligencer/…

English
27
74
993
122.8K
Smita Srinivas
Smita Srinivas@Smita_Srinivas·
Remarkable scale and ecological-spiritual use. Naman to this group. "The next cleanup is happening on Sunday, 12th at 7:00 AM, near Kambagiri Swami Temple, Banaganapalle Mandal, Nandyal District."
The Better India@thebetterindia

A temple tank once meant to hold sacred water had turned into a dumping ground filled with trash and liquor bottles. In Ramapuram village, Andhra Pradesh, an ancient Koneru laid forgotten, buried under layers of neglect, slowly losing its history. That is when Poorva Sampada Rakshaka Sena stepped in. Nearly 40 volunteers travelled from different places, some covering hundreds of kilometres, to bring it back to life. They cleared debris, scrubbed every stone, and washed the entire tank, restoring what time had almost erased. And when it was done, the revived Koneru was adorned with Pasupu-Kumkuma, bringing back not just its beauty, but its sanctity. Across India, countless temples, stepwells, and monuments are slipping into ruin, while we continue to build new structures, often forgetting the ones that already carry centuries of history. Through platforms like @teluguabbayikanth, efforts are being made to document and restore these forgotten spaces. But this cannot be a one-person mission. It needs all of us. The next cleanup is happening on Sunday, 12th at 7:00 AM, near Kambagiri Swami Temple, Banaganapalle Mandal, Nandyal District. Show up. Be part of something that restores more than just a place. Credits : teluguabbayikanth1 on IG #SaveOurHeritage #IndiaStories #AndhraPradesh #stepwellrestoration [Heritage Restoration, Stepwell restoration, Community Effort, Andhra Pradesh]

English
0
0
1
32
Smita Srinivas retweetledi
Rahul Palkar
Rahul Palkar@RahulPalkar6·
@JIX5A The New Art Textbooks developed by NCERT do teach this. Do watch the NCERT webinar today as they unveil the new Class 9 textbook for Art Education. A significant part of the written assessment is on the History of Art which includes Music, Dance and Drama besides visual art.
English
1
1
3
185
Smita Srinivas retweetledi
Prasanna Viswanathan
Prasanna Viswanathan@prasannavishy·
With instant triple talaq banned, innovation in the form of Postal Talaq kicks in. 9 women have already received divorce notices via India Post Supreme Court, which spent years outlawing triple talaq, is now being asked to also outlaw the postal version too. CJI Kant's bench has called it a "serious issue requiring urgent final hearing"
Prasanna Viswanathan tweet media
English
8
71
171
7.7K
Smita Srinivas retweetledi
Sridhar Vembu
Sridhar Vembu@svembu·
As a Hindu, I believe the entire Universe is the manifestation of the Divine. All of it - the river, the tree, the snake, the stone, the earthworm, the cow, the monkey, the elephant - all of it is divine manifestation. That belief is not Demonic, it is not Satanic, that is the path to living in harmony with nature and with other human beings. Arrogant, intolerant monotheism - see the video below - that goes around labeling reverence for all of nature as "demonic" and "satanic"- that belief is what makes men do evil. History supplies ample evidence. Hindus did not run crusades. Hindus did not burn witches at the stake. Hindus did not invade nations and enslave people in the name of bringing "Civilization" and "God" to "pagans".
Joel Webbon@JoelWebbon

Explaining how Hinduism is demonic with @alexstein99

English
389
3.2K
11.5K
258.5K
Smita Srinivas
Smita Srinivas@Smita_Srinivas·
Incentives and moral, physical, financial support for learning and healthy competition. People with talent and yes, resources (private, public, other) will manage the rest. Excuses, grievance, assuming that people have the same goals, fire in the belly, or talent is unhelpful.
JIX5A@JIX5A

India didn’t just qualify for the Asian Games in surfing. They maxed out the quota. Four athletes. The maximum allowed. In 6 days, they compete at Butler Bay Beach, Little Andaman. A reef break so remote, you take two ferries just to reach it. Most of India has never heard of it. I hadn’t, until now. This is India’s first-ever surfing appearance at the Asian Games.

English
0
0
0
41
Smita Srinivas
Smita Srinivas@Smita_Srinivas·
Looking forward to speaking on April 17th in my role as Honorary Professor at @UCLSTEaPP @ucl in the Doctoral Training Programme. We will be discussing theory and methods in very applied, practical policy problems. Ph.D. students, prepare for some real discussion.
English
0
0
4
150
Smita Srinivas
Smita Srinivas@Smita_Srinivas·
She would be a strong spokesperson for new Indian social policies. The current welfare design is a race to the bottom of grievances and bad incentives to prove oneself weaker to qualify for fiscal benefits. Support for the truly needy is missing while others live off the system.
The Khel India@TheKhelIndia

“Mere na haath hain, na pair…Phir bhi main kar sakti hoon, toh aap log kyun nahi?” “Divyang ko kabhi kamzor mat samjho… Wahi log duniya ko dikha rahe hain ki woh kuch bhi kar sakte hain.” Some powerful line by Champion Payal Nag ✨❤️

English
0
0
1
34
Smita Srinivas
Smita Srinivas@Smita_Srinivas·
Interested in critical equipment policy under emergency conditions? Economic development, technological capabilities, science policy. Andrew Watkins, David Wield, and I dissect the UK diagnostics and PPE case (England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland). academic.oup.com/spp/article/51…
English
0
1
0
44
Smita Srinivas retweetledi
Rajiv Malhotra
Rajiv Malhotra@RajivMessage·
In the 1990s, I published a long list of atrocities by Muslims invaders in India based on the writings of THEIR OWN scribes and historians. The originals are in Arabic, Turkish, Persian in various museums/archives in those countries. @Ofer_binshtok
Ofer Binshtok - Kafir - עופר בינשטוק@Ofer_binshtok

Roughly 1,400 years of racist and violent Islamic colonialism, driven by thousands of wars and battles, brought approximately 20% of the Earth’s surface under their control. They brutally purged these territories of every culture that inhabited the land. They continue to expand under the commands of the Quran and the Sunnah of Muhammad. List of major wars, conquests, raids, and battles in which Muslim forces attacked or conquered non-Muslim entities – expanded and updated with emphasis on the Indian subcontinent, Africa, Asia, and Europe (including hundreds of significant events). The list includes major battles, campaigns, and raids (not every small raid or local battle, as there were thousands). Organized chronologically. Based on historical documentation. 610–632: Period of Muhammad (Arabian Peninsula) 624: Battle of Badr – against pagan Quraysh tribes. 625: Battle of Uhud – against Quraysh. 627: Battle of the Trench – against Quraysh and pagan tribes. 627: Siege of Banu Quraiza (Arabia) – Campaign against a Jewish tribe following the Battle of the Trench, resulting in the execution of the adult males and enslavement of others. 628: Conquest of Khaybar – against Jewish tribes. 630: Conquest of Mecca – against pagan Quraysh. 629: Battle of Mu'tah – first raid against Byzantium (Christians). 630: Tabuk raid – against Byzantium and Christians. 632–661: Rashidun Caliphate 632–633: Ridda Wars – against Arabian tribes (some non-Muslim). 634: Battle of Ajnadayn – against Byzantium. 636: Battle of Yarmouk – conquest of Syria and the Levant from Christian Byzantines. 636: Battle of al-Qadisiyyah – against Sassanids (Zoroastrians). 637: Conquest of Jerusalem – from Christians. 637–642: Full conquest of Persia. 639–642: Conquest of Egypt – against Byzantium. 644–651: Completion of Persia and Armenia conquests. 643: Naval raids on Debal (Sindh, India) – Initial caliphate maritime expeditions against the Hindu-ruled port of Debal. 661–750: Umayyad Caliphate 647–709: Conquest of North Africa (Maghreb) – against Christian/pagan Berbers and Byzantium (Carthage 698). 670–711: Naval raids on Sicily, Rhodes, Cyprus, Italy (Christians). 711–714: Conquest of Sindh (Pakistan/India) – against Hindus (Muhammad bin Qasim vs. Chach dynasty). 711: Battle of Guadalete – conquest of Spain from Christian Visigoths. 712–718: Full conquest of Al-Andalus (Spain and Lisbon). 717–718: Second siege of Constantinople – against Byzantium. 732: Raid into France – Battle of Tours (Poitiers) against Christian Franks. 673–751: Conquest of Central Asia (Bukhara, Samarkand) – against Turks, Sogdians, and China (Battle of Talas 751). 664–738: Early Arab raids into India (Sindh and Rajputs). 724–738: Campaigns of al-Junayd (India) – Major Umayyad invasions into central and western India, including raids on Ujjain, Malwa, and Gujarat. 750–1000: Abbasid Caliphate + early dynasties 800–900: Naval raids on Italy, Sardinia, Corsica, Rome (Christians). 9th–10th centuries: Raids on southern Italy and Rome. 827–902: Conquest of Sicily – against Byzantium. 846: Raid on Rome (Italy) – Aghlabid forces from the Maghreb and Sicily entered the Tiber, looting the Basilicas of St. Peter and St. Paul Outside the Walls. 904: Sack of Thessalonica (Byzantium) – A fleet led by Leo of Tripoli captured the Byzantine city; historical records note the slaughter and enslavement of over 20,000 Christians. 1015–1016: Invasion of Sardinia – Forces of Mujahid al-Amiri from Al-Andalus occupied portions of the Christian island to establish a permanent base. 1001–1027: 17 raids by Mahmud of Ghazni into India – against Hindus (destruction of temples in Mathura, Somnath, Punjab, Gujarat; hundreds of thousands killed). 1024–1030: Additional conquests in India (Somnath). 1000–1200: Seljuks, Ghaznavids, Ghurids 1064: Conquest of Christian Armenia – by Seljuk Turks. 1071: Battle of Manzikert – against Byzantium. 1070–1085: Conquest of Jerusalem, Syria, Antioch – against Byzantium. 1175–1206: Campaigns of Muhammad of Ghor (Ghurids) into India – conquest of Delhi, Punjab (Battle of Tarain 1192 vs. Rajputs); 1204 conquest of Bengal (Bakhtiyar Khilji). 1193: Destruction of Nalanda University (India) – Ghurid commander Bakhtiyar Khilji destroyed the Buddhist center, slaughtering the inhabitants and burning the library. 1192–1206: Founding of Delhi Sultanate – widespread conquests against Hindus. 1200–1500: Delhi Sultanate, Timur, early Ottomans 1206–1526: Expansion of Delhi Sultanate (Mamluk, Khalji, Tughlaq dynasties) – hundreds of battles against Rajputs, Vijayanagara, southern Indian kingdoms (Madurai 1310–1311, Alauddin Khalji; temple destructions). 1294: Raid on Devagiri (India) – Alauddin Khilji’s expedition against the Hindu Yadava dynasty, resulting in massive plunder and tributary status. 1311: Siege of Madurai (India) – Malik Kafur’s campaign in the far south; systematic looting of temples and seizure of gold and elephants. 1300s+: Conquests in southern India (Madurai Sultanate). 1400: Timur’s Caucasian Invasions – Systematic raids against Christian Georgia and Armenia, characterized by the destruction of hundreds of churches and mass capture. 1398: Timur (Tamerlane) invasion of India – conquest of Delhi, mass slaughter (50,000–80,000 killed), massive looting. 1300–1350: Ottomans conquer Anatolia and cross into the Balkans (Bulgaria, Serbia). 1354–1396: Ottoman conquests in the Balkans (Battle of Maritsa 1371, Battle of Kosovo 1389 – against Serbs, Hungarians, Bulgarians Christians). 1396: Battle of Nicopolis – against European Crusaders. 1453: Conquest of Constantinople – end of Byzantium. 1480: Conquest of Otranto (Italy) – Ottoman forces seized the city and executed 813 residents who refused to adopt the new ideology. 1500–1700: Ottomans, Mughals, Safavids, Barbary states 1521: Conquest of Belgrade – against Hungarians. 1522: Conquest of Rhodes – against Hospitaller Knights. 1526: Battle of Mohács – conquest of Hungary. 1526: Babur founds Mughal Empire in India – conquests against Hindus (Panipat 1526 vs. Lodi). 1529: First siege of Vienna – against Habsburgs. 1529–1543: Jihad of Ahmad Gragn (Africa) – Adal Sultanate invasion of the Christian Ethiopian Empire with Ottoman support; burning of cathedrals and large-scale territorial shifts. 1530–1700: Mughal expansion in India (Akbar, Aurangzeb) – hundreds of battles against Rajputs, Marathas, Sikhs, Hindus (destruction of hundreds of temples). 1565: Battle of Talikota (India) – Coalition of Deccan Sultanates defeated the Hindu Vijayanagara Empire, followed by the total destruction of the imperial capital. 1567–1568: Siege of Chittorgarh (India) – Mughal Emperor Akbar’s conquest of the Rajput fort, followed by the execution of approx. 30,000 Hindu civilians. 1565: Siege of Malta – against Christian knights. 1570: Conquest of Nicosia (Cyprus) – Ottoman siege resulting in the slaughter of an estimated 20,000 Christian inhabitants. 1571: Battle of Lepanto (defeat, but earlier naval raids). 1669: Conquest of Crete – against Venice. 1683: Second siege of Vienna – against Europe. Barbary raids (North Africa, 1500–1800): Hundreds of naval and land raids on European coasts (Italy, Spain, France, England, Iceland 1627 – North African corsairs raided the Icelandic coast, capturing approximately 400 individuals for the slave trade) – plunder and enslavement of Christians (hundreds of thousands of captives). West Africa: Almoravid jihads (1050–1140) against pagan Ghana; Almohad (12th century) against Christians and pagans. 1700–1900: Ottomans, late Mughals, jihads in Africa 1714–1718: Ottoman wars against Venice and Austria. 1730–1900: Ongoing Ottoman wars in the Balkans, Greece, Russia (against Christians). India: Late Mughal wars against Marathas and Hindus; 1857 Sepoy Mutiny (Muslim component against British). Africa: Fulani jihads (1804–1808, Usman dan Fodio) – conquest of Hausa, founding of Sokoto Caliphate against pagans and mixed groups. 1850s: Jihad of Al-Hajj Umar Tal (Mali/Senegal) – conquest of Bambara kingdoms. 1820–1822: Turco-Egyptian Conquest of Sudan – Military expeditions to secure control over the upper Nile and capture slaves from non-Muslim populations. 1881–1899: Mahdist revolt in Sudan – against Egypt/British (including Christians). 1900–present: Modern period 1914–1918: World War I – Ottomans against the Allies (Britain, France, Russia – Christian powers). 1915: Systematic Genocides in Anatolia – The elimination of Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian Christian populations by the Ottoman state apparatus. 1947–1948: 1948 War – Arab states against Israel. 1965, 1971: Indo-Pakistani wars – Pakistan against India. 1967, 1973: Arab-Israeli wars. 1979–1989: Jihad in Afghanistan – Mujahideen against Soviets. 1992–1995: Bosnian War – Bosniaks against Christian Serbs. 1999: Kosovo War – Albanians against Serbs. 2001+: War in Afghanistan – Taliban against USA. 2003–2011: Insurgents in Iraq – against USA. Africa: Boko Haram (2004–present, Nigeria) against Christians; Al-Shabaab (Somalia) against Christians/West; ISIS in the Sahel (Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso) against Christians and governments. 2008: Mumbai attacks – Pakistani jihadists against India. 2014–2019: ISIS Caliphate – against Yazidis, Christians, Shiites, West. 2014–present: Hamas/Hezbollah against Israel (repeated operations). 2021: Taliban return – conquest of Afghanistan (against non-Muslim minorities). 1921: Moplah Uprising (India) – Attacks by the Mappila community against the Hindu population in Malabar, involving massacres and forced ideological changes. Additional notes on specific regions: Indian subcontinent: Hundreds of additional battles in the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire (against Rajputs, Vijayanagara, Ahom in Assam). Africa: Additional jihads in the west (17th–19th centuries) against pagans; Arab slave trade in East Africa. Asia: Timur’s conquests (1370–1405) in Central Asia, Persia, India, Georgia (against Christians); Mughal/Timurid raids. Europe: Hundreds of Barbary raids + Ottoman wars in the Balkans (1700–1900); Crimean Tatar (Muslim) raids on Russia/Ukraine. The list includes only Muslim initiatives against non-Muslims. Wars between Muslims are not included.

English
12
318
908
24.6K