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The National Career Service (NCS) is a career service in India operated by the Indian Government's Ministry of Labour and Employment. It was launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 20 July 2015, aimed at replacing the existing nationwide system of Employment Exchanges with IT-enabled Career Centers. [ 1 ]
Here We Are: American Dreams, American Nightmares (A Memoir) by Aarti Namdev Shahani; Can't Is Not an Option: My American Story by Nikki Haley; The Other One Percent: Indians in America by Sanjoy Chakravorty, Devesh Kapur, Nirvikar Singh; Good Girls Marry Doctors: South Asian American Daughters on Obedience and Rebellion by Piyali Bhattacharya
During World War II, more than 400,000 American soldiers were sent to India. [3]After the end of British colonial rule in India in 1947, the "colonial third culture" surrounding employment, which featured expatriates in superior roles, natives in subordinate roles, and little informal socialisation between the two, began to be replaced with a "co-ordinate third culture", based around the ...
In October 2013, the Supreme Court of India, in the case of TSR Subramanian & Ors vs Union of India & Ors [53] ordered both Government of India and State governments to ensure fixed tenure to civil servants. The court asked senior bureaucrats to write down the oral instructions from politicians so that a record would be kept of all the decisions.
The service, consisting of civil servants is entrusted with handling the foreign relations of India and providing consular services, and to mark India's presence in international organizations. [4] It is the body of career diplomats serving in more than 160 Indian diplomatic missions and international
Labour in India refers to employment in the economy of India. In 2020, there were around 476.67 million workers in India, the second largest after China. [ 2 ] Out of which, agriculture industry consist of 41.19%, industry sector consist of 26.18% and service sector consist 32.33% of total labour force. [ 2 ]
The book was selected by The New Yorker and The New Republic as a Best Book of 2012; [24] [25] by Newsweek as one of its three Must Reads on Modern India; [26] and by The New York Times Book Review as an "Editors' Choice." [27] The book was short listed for the Shakti Bhatt Prize, [28] and an episode from the book was excerpted in The New ...
In a review of the book, Aditya Menon stated in the weekly Indian English-language news magazine India Today magazine that "... Pax Indica promises to be a seminal work on Indian diplomacy" and that "Tharoor covers almost every possible aspect of the foreign policy challenges before the country in the 21st century", providing insights on "India's relations with the US, Pakistan, the UN".