Reimagining Livelihoods
Abhishek Mohanty & Gitika Saksena present a paper at EPIC 2021 conference.
Abhishek Mohanty & Gitika Saksena present a paper at EPIC 2021 conference.
Gitika Saksena present a paper at the Response-ability Summit 2021.
Abhishek Mohanty & Gitika Saksena present a paper at the Association of Social Anthropologists of the UK 2021 conference.
How Design Thinking Transforms Organizations and Inspires Innovation
A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers (The Strategyzer Series)
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has engendered narratives around Work from Home (hereinafter WFH) being an inevitability for India Inc. Notwithstanding the obvious cost connotations, when Tata Consultancy Services
We are used to consuming art in very specific forms, and as artificial intelligence shakes that up, we must move towards a renewed legal and cultural understanding of it.
The concept of wellness has undergone significant changes in the post-pandemic era. Health-conscious consumers have been driving the demand for them. Equally, they have broadened the lens with which holistic health is viewed. Particularly popular within this sphere are ingestible forms of wellness: what does this entail, and why is it so attractive?
In the current cultural climate on the internet, there is an emphasis on the need to evade labels, regulation and commodification. Against the background of the trending #corecore hashtag, we examine how creative expression takes place online. Does internet content really need to be classified by genre?
A few weeks ago, the BBC published an article discussing a study that claims the mental-health crisis resulting from the pandemic was ‘minimal’. In the hours that followed the BBC’s posting on Twitter, users began quote-tweeting it alongside the most troubling experiences they underwent during lockdowns, ridiculing the idea that these findings might be based in some truth. The tweet now stands with over 45,000 quote-tweets, carrying an ‘added context’ addendum flagging the fact that the study in question was not based on populations that were likely to have been adversely affected by the pandemic. “The review did not look at lower-income countries, or specifically focus on children, young people and those with existing problems, the groups most likely affected”, states the BBC reporter in the article. “Usually this kind of revisionism takes longer” observes one user in the thread of responses to the BBC, pointing out that it hasn’t been that long since we were isolated from one another, both witnessing and experiencing incredible forms of loss. With our rapid return to normalcy, are our memories of the pandemic changing shape?