552 research outputs found
Biplab Dasgupta, et al, Village Society and Labour Use.
Sigaut François. Biplab Dasgupta, et al, Village Society and Labour Use.. In: Études rurales, n°92, 1983. pp. 95-96
Structural Adjustment, Global Trade and the New Political Economy of Development
Biplab Dasgupta. Structural Adjustment Global Trade and the New Political Economy of Development. New Delhi. Sage Publications. 1998. Price Indian Rupees 450 (hardback). The author has written a very topical book the relevance of which cannot be understated. At the core of the book the author discusses the concept of the new political economy of development which forms the theoretical underpinnings that lie behind the structural adjustment/ stabilisation programmes of the international financial institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Biplab Dasgupta has very concisely and succinctly analysed the new political economy of development which has, as its centre-piece, a blind faith in the operation of free-market forces. This can be traced back to the Reagan and Thatcher years, which saw a shift away from interventionist policies to allowing the markets to decide
N. D. Abdul Hameed, Rice Revolution in Sri Lanka Biplab Dasgupta, Agrarian Change and the New Technology in India
Étienne Gilbert. N. D. Abdul Hameed, Rice Revolution in Sri Lanka Biplab Dasgupta, Agrarian Change and the New Technology in India. In: Tiers-Monde, tome 19, n°76, 1978. pp. 906-908
Abstract A23: AMPK's role in glioblastoma survival: An insight into its regulation on transcription factors and mTOR
Abstract
AMP kinase (AMPK) is an evolutionarily conserved enzyme required for adaptive responses to various physiological and pathological conditions. The multisubunit structure and sensitivity to various stresses confer complexity to AMPK function which scores beyond energy sensing. Here we show that inhibition of AMPK reduces viability of patient-derived primary Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) lines and tumors. We demonstrate that primary GBM cells coopt the AMPK-CREB1 pathway to coordinate global bioenergetics program through control of the transcription factors HIF1alpha and GABPA. But a growing number of AMPK activators are being developed to treat human diseases such as cancer and diabetes. This may be because AMPK activity can inhibit biosynthetic kinases like mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and acetyl Co-A carboxylase (ACC). We found that AMPK silencing in glioma cells did not affect mTOR or downstream targets. AMPK is not absolutely necessary for mTOR inhibition, suggesting that in certain contexts, activated AMPK and mTOR may coexist. Indeed, this is what we observed in glioblastoma suggesting that basally active AMPK may not be sufficient to put a brake on mTOR. Further analysis of our preliminary data from primary tumor cells on Cap-dependent and well reported procancer IRES dependent translation under tumor microenvironment context will demonstrate significance of AMPK in translational machinery in GBM and will benefit in finding new therapeutic targets.
Citation Format: Rishi Raj Chhipa, Biplab Dasgupta. AMPK's role in glioblastoma survival: An insight into its regulation on transcription factors and mTOR. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on Translational Control of Cancer: A New Frontier in Cancer Biology and Therapy; 2016 Oct 27-30; San Francisco, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2017;77(6 Suppl):Abstract nr A23.</jats:p
Dasgupta Review Revisited
A significant critique of the Dasgupta Review by authors Spash and Hache (2021) has been published in the journal Globalizations. The article is open access, so it is available for anyone to read. We would recommend it to anybody interested in ecological economics and the challenges of valuing Nature. The lead author (Clive Spash) is an ecological economist currently at the Vienna University of Economics and Business
The Long and Continuing Fight to Save Public Education
Episode · I Hate Politics Podcast · With school boards around the country under attack from right-wing extremists, a veteran Silver-Spring based education reporter and author, Karen Chenoweth, has founded a resource to help school board candidates and school board members fight back. Sunil Dasgupta talks to Chenoweth about her website democracy-education.org and her mission. Music from Finster.https://open.spotify.com/episode/7gUiArNXgofhVTx1vweJE
The Fight Against Government Secrecy
Local journalist and author Miranda Spivack has a new book out, Backroom Deals in Our Backyard: How Government Secrecy Harms Our Communities and the Local Heroes Fighting Back. Sunil Dasgupta talks to Spivack about the book, why transparency has been a persistent problem in government, and how the public can fight back. Music by Washington art-pop rock band Catscan!https://open.spotify.com/episode/1UrBdTiUInvcV3xXgjK1R
Review of \u3ci\u3e The Community in Canada: Rural and Urban\u3c/i\u3e Edited by Satadal Dasgupta
This book surveys studies of rural, small town, and urban community in Canada. The first third of the book, written by Dasgupta, provides definitions and perspectives of community. The remainder of the book contains a selection of studies of communities in Canada, mostly sociological and mostly from the 1960s and 1970s. Dasgupta begins with Hillery\u27s 1955 classification of ninety-four definitions of community, noting that all but three of these definitions involve a group of people in \u27social interaction.’” Theories and perspectives on community are organized into five categories: ecological, ethnographic, social system, social or interactional, and conflict approaches. The author examines theoretical approaches developed by social scientists, but more Canadian approaches and materials could have been introduced. For example, in the discussion of settlement patterns, Dasgupta makes no mention of the Canadian Frontiers of Settlement studies of Carl Dawson and associates in the 1930s
What AMZN HQ2 Search Tells Us About Government Transparency
There is a long tradition in political philosophy where democracy and transparency are equated. A new article in the Policy Studies Journal, by UMBC colleagues UMBC’s Eric Stokan, Ian Anson, University of Texas Austin’s Nathan Jensen studied the impact of government transparency on Amazon’s search for its second headquarters to find surprising conclusions: https://doi.org/10.1111/psj.70016 . Sunil Dasgupta talks with lead author Eric Stokan. Music by Frederick, MD,- based country-folk singer-songwriter Susanna Laird.https://open.spotify.com/episode/2bNPVzoK9pPWHkFYzINHU
The Case Against Localism
This year’s Fourth of July episode explores the ideology of localism, a foundational tenet of American political philosophy. Sunil Dasgupta talks with political theorist and author Trevor Latimer about his new book. Small Isn’t Beautiful, where he takes on the widespread presumption that the government closest to us is necessarily the best. Local news re LGBTQ+ book protests, Maryland opens to marijuana, and the Anacostia River opens to swimming after a half-century. Music from the band Finster. Their 2023 album, Crosswinds, now on vinyl: https://t.ly/-bAF. Latimer’s book: https://t.ly/YRjS. MD marijuana FAQ: https://t.ly/-CI6. Anacostia swim event: https://t.ly/KBDf.https://open.spotify.com/episode/7HziMV5wlstZ2D3higJl9
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