1,722,408 research outputs found
Childhood Enhancement through Training and Action (CHETNA) annual reports
"Childhood Enhancement through Training and Action (CHETNA), founded under Public Charitable Trust Registration Act, envisions achieving a child-caring society that respects
their rights. Since its establishment in 2002, CHETNA has been engaged in rehabilitation and empowerment of Street and Working Children in Delhi and around, attempting to break the vicious cycle of their poverty and ensure easy access to the basic rights of protection, education, healthcare, participation and opportunities for a livelihood. We have successfully been able to design and implement innovative models,
like, Contact Point-based Alternative Education, Peer to Peer Harm Reduction for substance using children, Street Children Federation, Badthe Kadam, Street to School, etc. with proven outcomes. We work for all kinds of street children, regardless of gender, origin or religion, inspired by an underlying ethic of compassion for their vulnerability and extreme marginalization.
Considering the nature of their vulnerability and
challenges of working with this section of the population, we build deep partnerships with nonprofits, businesses, governments and local administrations, based on a shared vision of prosperity for street and working children. Working with our partners—ranging from socially responsible corporations, NGOs, governments—we are committed to ensure street children their long due rights and improve their quality of life. We attempt to bring change by pioneering innovative models and committed partnership. In developing innovative models and programmes, we actively involve children, and by doing so, we are successful in harnessing their ingenious creativity and skills. Participation of children has been of central significance in our entire activities: we involve them both in designing a model as well as their implementation on the ground. All these have led CHETNA to evolve as a truly child-centred organization. We work with street children in all their forms: working children, out-of-school children, begging children, child labour in factories, children connected with railway stations, children n difficult situations, children using substances, runaway children, etc. Our approach covers their needs from education, health and livelihood to rescuing and repatriation. Time to time CHETNA also provides consultancy to various government ministries and child rights commissions. In
our work, children act as protagonists and staffs and the catalysts for change.
The Self-Exploration Of Chetna In K.R Meera’s Hangwoman: A Feminist Perspective
Introduction: The paper portrayed the character of Chetna Gruddha Mallik in K.R Meera\u27s novel Hangwoman. It examined Chetna\u27s determination and willpower, focusing on her fight for freedom and dignity. The study aimed to delve into the different layers of Chetna\u27s character and her journey towards self-awareness from a feminist perspective.Methods: The analysis involved a close reading of the novel\u27s narrative and character development. It explored how Chetna broke away from the shackles of male domination through her strength and perseverance. The study examined themes of discrimination and disparities that Chetna faced in her struggle to exist in a world that often marginalized women.Results: The findings revealed that Chetna\u27s struggle was highly inspirational to the readers. Her journey and character portrayal challenged the tyrannical norms of society. By defying strict societal conventions, Chetna emerged as a symbol of female emancipation. Conclusions: The paper highlighted K.R Meera\u27s remarkable writing style and the significance of Chetna as a character who embodied strength and resilience. Through Chetna, K.R Meera challenged societal norms and presented a powerful narrative of female empowerment and self-awarenes
The Self-Exploration Of Chetna In K.R Meera’s Hangwoman: A Feminist Perspective
Introduction: The paper portrayed the character of Chetna Gruddha Mallik in K.R Meera's novel Hangwoman. It examined Chetna's determination and willpower, focusing on her fight for freedom and dignity. The study aimed to delve into the different layers of Chetna's character and her journey towards self-awareness from a feminist perspective.Methods: The analysis involved a close reading of the novel's narrative and character development. It explored how Chetna broke away from the shackles of male domination through her strength and perseverance. The study examined themes of discrimination and disparities that Chetna faced in her struggle to exist in a world that often marginalized women.Results: The findings revealed that Chetna's struggle was highly inspirational to the readers. Her journey and character portrayal challenged the tyrannical norms of society. By defying strict societal conventions, Chetna emerged as a symbol of female emancipation. Conclusions: The paper highlighted K.R Meera's remarkable writing style and the significance of Chetna as a character who embodied strength and resilience. Through Chetna, K.R Meera challenged societal norms and presented a powerful narrative of female empowerment and self-awarenes
Budhan Stories S2E4: Corona, Snakes and Vaccine
Episode 4 of Season 2 - Corona, Snakes and Vaccine episode explores traditional snake charmer communities; who lives in small hamlets in forest area. The Madari tribe is a nomadic tribe and they normally follow their own traditional medicines and are reluctant to use allopathic medicines. Madari tribe people were very reluctant to take vaccination because they believed that it is a way to reduce the population and people would die after the vaccination. So such a wonderful people, clever but extremely traditional faced Corona in their own ways.Created (Author) by: Chetna Rathid. Participants: Budhan Theatre, Dakxin Chhara, Atish Indrekar, Ruchika Kodekar, Chetna Rathod, Kushal Batunge, Keyur Bajrange, Anish Garange, Siddharth Garange, Alice Tilche, Akshay Khanna, Yashodara Udupa, Anshul Agrawal, Ankita Jain, Babunath Madari, Sonaben Madari, Nainnath Madari.Supplementary materials include short clips, photographs, poster and subtitles.</p
Early Morning Coffee at CERN podcast episode on quantum entanglement at the LHC
Behind-the-scenes of the new episode of the Early Morning Coffee at CERN (Emc2) video podcast on the topic of quantum entanglement at the LHC. The show is hosted by Steven Goldfarb, directed by Chetna Krishna with Technical Lead Ron Suykerbuyk. The episode features Giulia Negro from the CMS experiment and Yoav Afik from the ATLAS experiment
Study of chopper stabilization in single ended amplifiers
Chopper stabilization is one of the prominent techniques used to overcome low-frequency noise and DC offset errors in CMOS amplifiers. This thesis presents a detailed analysis of this approach. The fundamentals of chopping, followed by the design and underlying tradeoffs of a chopper stabilized amplifier, are included. A chopper stabilized, single ended amplifier in closed loop unity gain configuration is designed using the folded cascode topology in 180 nm CMOS process. This design is verified for functionality by a thorough comparison with its non-stabilized counterpart. Simulation results, including the benefits obtained in terms of reduced flicker noise and an amplified output voltage independent of input DC offsets, are discussed.Submission original under an indefinite embargo labeled 'Open Access'. The submission was exported from vireo on 2020-02-28 without embargo termsThe student, Chetna Malhotra, accepted the attached license on 2019-11-14 at 09:30.The student, Chetna Malhotra, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2019-11-14 at 09:33.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2019-11-15 at 14:20.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #14549 on 2020-02-28 at 17:13:38Made available in DSpace on 2020-03-02T21:58:11Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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LICENSE.txt: 4212 bytes, checksum: 61f2c74bfb740e885a00dbd781bc1aae (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2019-11-1
CERN70 India celebration at India Science Festival
On 11 and 12 January, CERN’s 70th anniversary was celebrated in India at India Science Festival held in Pune, Maharashtra, India. The festival included keynote talks from Joao Antunes Pequenao and Chetna Krishna, CERN Media Lab installations, and a workshop on enhancing science communication through improv skills
Davos Communications Award 2025
At the Davos Communications Summit held from 9 to 11 April 2025, CERN’s communication efforts were recognised with two prestigious Davos Communications Awards. As part of companies and organisations, CERN won the award in for In-house Team of the Year for their work on CERN's golden year of its 70th anniversary, while CERN alumna Chetna Krishna was honoured as a PR Rising Star in the individual category for her contributions to science communication. These awards celebrate the team’s creativity, global impact, and commitment to excellence in public engagement
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
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