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PDF Final draft Gender and the future of work
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by
Pranav M B
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published
Mar 05, 2020
Located in
Internet Governance
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Material Cyborgs; Asserted Boundaries
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by
Nishant Shah
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last modified
Nov 03, 2008 08:14 PM
The essay was published in the European Journal of English Studies in a special issue on Multimedia Narratives. Emerging as an epistemological category with the rise of the Information and Communication Technologies, the cyborg leads to a complex set of negotiations about the production of a cyborg identity. This paper looks at the cyborg as a translator, to see the new mechanics of translation that come into play as the cyborg straddles multiple systems of making meaning and producing itself. Analysing the new social networking systems that have emerged in the last few years, the paper posits the cyborg as not only an author of translated texts but also as produced in the processes of translation. Focusing on one particular instance of the production of a cyborg identity, exploring the various players involved in the process of cyborgification and the material consequences of imagining the cyborg, the paper seeks to analyse the new incomprehensibility or illegalities that the cyborg, in its role as a translator, gets produced within.
Located in
Publications (Automated)
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CIS Publications
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Nishant Shah
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CIS Comments PDP Bill 2019
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by
Pallavi Bedi
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published
Feb 21, 2020
Located in
Accessibility
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Blog
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PDF Gendered Future of Work
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by
Pranav M B
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published
Mar 05, 2020
Located in
Internet Governance
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Economic, social and cultural rights in India: FOSS
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by
Prasad Krishna
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published
Apr 23, 2017
Located in
Openness
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Files
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Economic, social and cultural rights in India: Opportunities for advocacy in intellectual property rights
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by
Prasad Krishna
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published
Apr 20, 2017
Located in
Openness
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Files
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Now Streaming on Your Nearest Screen
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Dec 24, 2011
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last modified
Dec 24, 2011 08:58 AM
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filed under:
Internet Governance,
Research
Digital cinema, especially the kinds produced using mobile devices and travelling on Internet social networking systems like YouTube and MySpace, are often dismissed as apolitical and ‘merely’ a fad. Moreover, content in the non-English language, due to incomprehensibility or lack of understanding of the cultural context of the production, is labeled as frivolous, or inconsequential, writes Nishant Shah in this peer reviewed essay published in the Journal of Chinese Cinemas, Volume 3, Issue 1, June 2009.
Located in
Internet Governance
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Legal and Policy Implications of Autonomous Weapons Systems
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by
Aman Nair
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published
Oct 31, 2020
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last modified
Mar 22, 2021 05:29 AM
Located in
Internet Governance
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Consumer Privacy
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by
Prasad Krishna
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published
Sep 13, 2012
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filed under:
Consumer Rights,
Internet Governance,
Privacy
This chapter will examine the present legal state of consumer privacy in India and seek to understand the gap between policy and implementation of policy. In doing so, it will look at what are the existing avenues for protection of consumer privacy in India, how is the definition of consumer privacy evolving through case law and public opinion, and what are the current challenges to consumer privacy in India. Traditionally speaking, and according to the Consumer Protection Act, 1986, in India, a consumer is a broad label for any person who buys goods or services with the intent of using them for non-commercial purposes. In the typical sense, when people think of themselves as being consumers, they think about transactions with a vendor through a physical exchange of money in a store or through an online exchange for a product or service. Certain services that consumers use put an extraordinary amount of sensitive personal information into the hands of vendors.
Located in
Internet Governance
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Women in the Future of Work
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by
Ambika Tandon and Aayush Rathi
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published
Dec 19, 2018
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last modified
Feb 22, 2019 01:41 AM
Located in
Internet Governance