Events

Comparative Work Ethic Cultures: Comments on India, US and China

Date and Time

July 14, 2015

12:30 pm to

Location

Conference Room, Centre for Policy Research

This talk highlights some major issues, and selected comparative popular social and political cultural features of Indian work and job ethic values, practices and “creative practicalities.” A plea is made to conduct creative researches (especially social-moral, linguistic and political cultural)  on and for 21st century India, where such transnational comparisons, as with US and China, are necessary and instructive.

R. S. Khare (Ph.D. University of Lucknow 1962) is Professor of Anthropology and Director, Center on Critical Human Survival Issues, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. He is a sociocultural anthropologist interested in contemporary anthropological theories, and in comparative discussions of Indian society, nation-state and culture in relation to the modern Western– and American–culture.

Please RSVP to dsbabu@cprindia.org so we can arrange lunch accordingly