Home > Sanjeev Chopra
India's first Hindi map
2 May 2020 8:45 PM ISTThe first Hindi map of Independent India was published in 1952, and the masthead read: 'Bharat ke Rajnaitik Vibhag' or India's Political map. This was...
Integration of princely states
20 April 2020 10:47 PM ISTAssimilation of princely states is the story of how India came to be as we see it today and nothing better than maps can narrate the journey
First map of independent India
12 April 2020 10:35 PM ISTMaps are not only symbols but also stories of the nations they portray and in a nation as diverse and storied as India – these stories are manifold
Coping with COVID
2 April 2020 9:02 PM ISTIn the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, institutions like LBSNAA are adjusting to the new normal, even as they find avenues for making contributions...
Stars in a Constellation
15 March 2020 8:26 PM ISTSelect extracts from a speech given by the writer in an address to officers attending the Mid-career Training Programme at LBSNAA
The new measure of growth!
8 March 2020 8:51 PM ISTMoving past the monotonous use of GDP as a measure of a nation’s progress, supplementary use of Gross Environmental Product is more suited for...
Sciences to the fore!
1 March 2020 8:29 PM ISTReview of the many seminal addresses delivered over the years on the occasion of Uttrakhand Science Congress, reflecting on changing problems and...
Consolidating bureaucracy
23 Feb 2020 9:13 PM ISTIndia’s Civil Services must move beyond single-minded devotion to set ‘procedure’
Pulses to the rescue
16 Feb 2020 8:36 PM ISTNAFED’s emphasis on pulses will help India pursue its Sustainable Development Goals
From rules to roles
9 Feb 2020 8:07 PM ISTNew iGOT 2.0 framework is aimed at creating a proper interface between government service providers and the citizens and situations they serve
Absent dialogue
2 Feb 2020 7:35 PM ISTUse of generalist advisers in the place of experts in ideating India's defence policy has served to only convolute the process
Without reprieve
26 Jan 2020 8:45 PM ISTNew report on policing in India shows recurring patterns of understaffing, lack of training, funds and equipment compounded by a lack of public trust