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CLEAR, HOLD BUILD : HARD LESSON OF BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN INDIA SUDEEP CHAKRAVARTI

By: Publication details: HARPER COLLINS PUBLISHERS 2014 NOIDADescription: XXVI, 277P. HARDISBN:
  • 9789351362999
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 323
Summary: How could a group as respectable as Tata get it so wrong with human rights and community engagement in Kalinga Nagar and Singur? What lessons has it learnt? Why did Vedanta Resources Plc insist on mining in the Niyamgiri Hills in the face of opposition from the tribal inhabitants of the region who fear desecration of their god and losing their land and home? How valid are the safety concerns of the residents of Kudankulam protesting against a nuclear power plant? What gives a global giant like Posco the ability to ride over local sentiments in acquiring land for their mammoth steel plant in Odisha? There is growing discontent over the manner in which governments and businesses in India treat communities and stakeholders. Disaffection of project-affected communities over issues of land acquisition, resettlement and rehabilitation has emerged as a major threat to economic growth in India, besides adding to the cost of businesses on account of lost opportunities, delays and liabilities. Driven to the wall, the world of business is finally waking up to the idea of human rights, of true corporate social responsibility. This book offers a must-do checklist for human rights and for responsible business planning and policy-making. Sudeep Chakravarti speaks to senior executives, policy-makers, activists, lawyers and local communities across such conflict zones in India to present a ringside view of the present and future of business and human rights. He breathes fresh understanding into some of the biggest human rights flashpoints in recent years-Vedanta, Tata Steel, Posco, Kudankulam-as well as less visible ones and numerous forgotten projects, places and people that continue to haunt the development story of twenty-first-century India. Clear. Hold. Build. is a groundbreaking work that highlights avoidable battle lines and seeks to change the way governments, businesses and communities talk with each other, treat each other and work with each other.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Main Library SOCIOLOGY (CUP /SH ) 323/ CHA/ 23780 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 11123780
Total holds: 0
Browsing Main Library shelves, Collection: SOCIOLOGY (CUP /SH ) Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
320/ HIL/ 23567 HARD CHOICES 320/ Mas/Sen/ 29885 The Arrow impossibility theorem 320/ Sch/ 30211 Clinton cash : 323/ CHA/ 23780 CLEAR, HOLD BUILD : 327/ RAG/ 23582 DIVIDING LINES 352.3/ Sax/ 30125 Governments of the future in the ICT era 362.5/ PRA/ 18554 THE FORTUNE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE PYRAMID

How could a group as respectable as Tata get it so wrong with human rights and community engagement in Kalinga Nagar and Singur? What lessons has it learnt? Why did Vedanta Resources Plc insist on mining in the Niyamgiri Hills in the face of opposition from the tribal inhabitants of the region who fear desecration of their god and losing their land and home? How valid are the safety concerns of the residents of Kudankulam protesting against a nuclear power plant? What gives a global giant like Posco the ability to ride over local sentiments in acquiring land for their mammoth steel plant in Odisha?

There is growing discontent over the manner in which governments and businesses in India treat communities and stakeholders. Disaffection of project-affected communities over issues of land acquisition, resettlement and rehabilitation has emerged as a major threat to economic growth in India, besides adding to the cost of businesses on account of lost opportunities, delays and liabilities. Driven to the wall, the world of business is finally waking up to the idea of human rights, of true corporate social responsibility.

This book offers a must-do checklist for human rights and for responsible business planning and policy-making. Sudeep Chakravarti speaks to senior executives, policy-makers, activists, lawyers and local communities across such conflict zones in India to present a ringside view of the present and future of business and human rights. He breathes fresh understanding into some of the biggest human rights flashpoints in recent years-Vedanta, Tata Steel, Posco, Kudankulam-as well as less visible ones and numerous forgotten projects, places and people that continue to haunt the development story of twenty-first-century India.

Clear. Hold. Build. is a groundbreaking work that highlights avoidable battle lines and seeks to change the way governments, businesses and communities talk with each other, treat each other and work with each other.

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