This article has been republished with permission from IDR Online. This talk was held at Dextrus, and sponsored by the Harish & Bina Shah Foundation. Explaining what the middle class can do | 6.5 min Everybody Loves a Good Drought: Stories from India's Poorest Districts, Volume 10 Palagummi Sainath Penguin Books, 1996 - Credit - 470 pages 3 Reviews Reviews aren't verified, but. Deconstructing India’s water crisis | 9 minĦ. Questioning where agricultural credit is really going | 3 minĤ. Unpacking the agrarian crisis | 2.5 minģ. We recently had the opportunity to host an event in collaboration with PARI, where Sainath addressed the agrarian crisis, India’s water woes, and what we can do about it. That work led to his 1996 book, Everybody Loves a Good Drought: Stories from India’s Poorest Districts, now used as a teaching tool in over 100 universities in India and abroad. The Ramon Magsaysay award recipient is also the author of 'Everybody Loves A Good Drought' and the creator of two documentary films.įollowing the farmers’ marches taking place across India, Sainath and PARI have been working towards generating awareness at both a public and government level. The globalization of inequality - Chapter VI The Globalization of Inequality P. Sainath previously covered the rural beat at The Hindu, and his on ground reportage has drawn significant attention to the country’s farmers and the challenges they face. He is the founder-editor of People's Archive of Rural India (PARI), a digital archive dedicated to people whose voices and stories don't always find space in mainstream media. P Sainath has been documenting stories from rural India for over three decades now.
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