Amartya sen

  1. Amartya Sen
  2. Amartya Sen
  3. Tracing Amartya Sen’s journey from colonial India to Nobel Prize and beyond – Harvard Gazette
  4. Illusions of empire: Amartya Sen on what British rule really did for India
  5. Amartya Sen – Facts
  6. Take action against Visva
  7. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE


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Amartya Sen

Amartya Sen is Thomas W. Lamont University Professor, and Professor of Economics and Philosophy, at Harvard University and was until 2004 the Master of Trinity College, Cambridge. He is also Senior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows. Earlier on he was Professor of Economics at Jadavpur University Calcutta, the Delhi School of Economics, and the London School of Economics, and Drummond Professor of Political Economy at Oxford University. ... about Office Address: Littauer Center 205 Tel: 617-495-1871 Fax: 617-496-5942 Office Hours (Fall 2022): Wednesdays, 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm, Emerson Hall 214 (walk-ins, no appointment necessary) Staff Support: Phoebe Suh Littauer Center 204 Tel: 617-496-0084 Fax: 617-496-5942 Mailing Address: Harvard University Department of Economics Littauer Center 205, North Yard 1805 Cambridge Street Cambridge, MA 02138

Amartya Sen

Amartya Sen is famous for his significant contributions to Amartya Sen, (born November 3, 1933, Sen was educated at Presidency College in Calcutta (now Kolkata). He went on to study at Collective Choice and Social Welfare (1970)—which addressed problems such as individual rights, majority rule, and the availability of information about individual conditions—inspired researchers to turn their attention to issues of basic welfare. Sen devised methods of measuring Sen was a member of the Development as Freedom (1999); Rationality and Freedom (2002), a discussion of social choice theory; The Argumentative Indian: Writings on Indian History, Culture, and Identity (2005); AIDS Sutra: Untold Stories from India (2008), a collection of essays on the AIDS crisis in India; and The Idea of Justice (2009), a

Tracing Amartya Sen’s journey from colonial India to Nobel Prize and beyond – Harvard Gazette

Life stories from Drew Faust, Howard Gardner, Annette Gordon-Reed, Martin Karplus, Toshiko Mori, Steven Pinker, E.O. Wilson, Paul Farmer, and many more, in the Coming from a long line of Hindu intellectuals and teachers, Amartya Sen enjoyed advantages and freedoms that few others did in a deeply-stratified India of the 1930s, during the waning days of the British empire. Teaching was in his blood, and from an early age, Sen was struck by the stark economic inequities he saw all around him under the British raj. Identifying and understanding the causes and effects that inequalities, like those surrounding poverty or gender, had on people’s lives would become a lifelong intellectual lodestar for the political economist, moral philosopher, and social theorist. Many economists focus on explaining and predicting what is happening in the world. But Sen, considered the key figure at the convergence of economics and philosophy, turned his attention instead to what the reality should be and why we fall short. “I think he’s the greatest living figure in normative economics, which asks not ‘What do we see?’ but ‘What should we aspire to?’ and ‘How do we even work out what we should aspire to?’” said Eric S. Maskin ’72, Ph.D. ’76, Adams University Professor and professor of economics and mathematics. Over his 65-year career, Sen’s research and ideas have touched many areas of the field. He’s credited as one of the founding fathers of modern social-choice theory with his landmark 1970 ...

Illusions of empire: Amartya Sen on what British rule really did for India

During my days as a student at a progressive school in West Bengal in the 1940s, these questions came into our discussion constantly. They remain important even today, not least because the British empire is often invoked in discussions about successful global governance. It has also been invoked to try to persuade the US to acknowledge its role as the pre-eminent imperial power in the world today: “Should the United States seek to shed – or to shoulder – the imperial load it has inherited?” the historian Niall Ferguson Read more Arguing about all this at Santiniketan school, which had been established by The frequent temptation to compare India in 1757 (when British rule was beginning) with India in 1947 (when the British To illustrate the relevance of such an “alternative history”, we may consider another case – one with a potential imperial conquest that did not in fact occur. Let’s think about Commodore Matthew Perry of the US navy, who steamed into the bay of Edo in Japan in 1853 with four warships. Now consider the possibility that Perry was not merely making a show of American strength (as was in fact the case), but was instead the advance guard of an American conquest of Japan, establishing a new American empire in the land of the rising sun, rather as Robert Clive did in While we can see what actually happened in Japan under Meiji rule, it is extremely hard to guess with any confidence what course the history of the Indian subcontinent would have taken had the Bri...

Amartya Sen – Facts

Share this • Share on Facebook: Amartya Sen – Facts Share this content on Facebook Facebook • Tweet: Amartya Sen – Facts Share this content on Twitter Twitter • Share on LinkedIn: Amartya Sen – Facts Share this content on LinkedIn LinkedIn • Share via Email: Amartya Sen – Facts Share this content via Email Email this page Amartya Sen Facts Life Amartya Sen was born into a Baidya family in Santiniketan, Bengal, in India. His father was a professor of chemistry in Dhaka (now part of Bangladesh), where Sen also received his first education. After university studies in Kolkata, India and at Cambridge, UK, where Sen received his PhD in 1959, he has held professorships in India and at Oxford and Cambridge universities, as well as in the US, including at Harvard University. Sen is married to Emma Rothschild and has four children from two previous marriages. Work Which are the most important and fundamental resources in a community and how should we divide them? One focus of Amartya Sen's research is how individuals' values can be considered in collective decision-making and how welfare and poverty can be measured. His efforts stem from his interest in questions of distribution and, in particular, the lot of society's poorest members. Sen's studies have included famines, to create a deeper understanding of the economic reasons behind famine and poverty. To cite this section MLA style: Amartya Sen – Facts. NobelPrize.org. Nobel Prize Outreach AB 2023. Thu. 15 Jun 2023.

Take action against Visva

By Suryagni Roy: Scores of eminent personalities, including academicians and researchers, from the country and abroad wrote to President Droupadi Murmu, seeking action against Visva-Bharati University Vice-Chancellor Prof. Bidyut Chakrabarty over his administration's move to evict In the letter addressed to President Murmu, who is the visitor of Visva-Bharati, the academicians condemned the central varsity's letters to Amartya Sen "using indecent language" and making allegations that the economist "illegally grabbed the land of Visva-Bharati which they cannot substantiate". The letter said the university administration did not take any action for the "alleged illegal occupation of land", but it was now "making an issue" when Prof. Bidyut Chakrabarty "is under the scanner for his abysmal failure to run Visva-Bharati". ALSO READ | Among those who wrote the letter to President Murmu were George E Akerlof (Nobel laureate), Utsa Patnaik, Akeel Bilgrami, P. Sainath, Sunanda Sen, John Harriss, James Boyce, Prabhat Patnaik, Jayati Ghosh, Nibedita Menon, KL Krishna, Pulin Nayek, Supriyo Tagore, Sabujkoli Sen, Supriya Chaudhuri, Anthony D’Costa, Pronab Sen, Ramprasad Sengupta, Jomo Kwame Sundaram, CP Chandrasekhar, and many others. They said the Vice-Chancellor had repeatedly criticised Amartya Sen, who has "ideological differences" with the BJP-led central government. "...The Vice-Chancellor is wrongfully trying to get the support of the government as well as trying to shift the fo...

BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

Amartya Sen is Thomas W. Lamont University Professor, and Professor of Economics and Philosophy, at Harvard University and was until 2004 the Master of Trinity College, Cambridge. He is also Senior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows. Earlier on he was Professor of Economics at Jadavpur University Calcutta, the Delhi School of Economics, and the London School of Economics, and Drummond Professor of Political Economy at Oxford University. Amartya Sen has served as President of the Econometric Society, the American Economic Association, the Indian Economic Association, and the International Economic Association. He was formerly Honorary President of OXFAM and is now its Honorary Advisor. His research has ranged over social choice theory, economic theory, ethics and political philosophy, welfare economics, theory of measurement, decision theory, development economics, public health, and gender studies. Amartya Sen’s books have been translated into more than thirty languages, and include Choice of Techniques (1960), Growth Economics (1970), Collective Choice and Social Welfare (1970), On Economic Inequality (1973, 1997); Poverty and Famines (1981); Utilitarianism and Beyond (jointly with Bernard Williams, 1982); Choice, Welfare and Measurement (1982), Commodities and Capabilities (1985), The Standard of Living (1987), On Ethics and Economics (1987); Hunger and Public Action (jointly with Jean Drèze, 1989); Inequality Re-examined (1992); The Quality of Life (jointly with M...