Some Things I’ve Written, or I’m Still Alive
Posted: September 29th, 2015 | Author: Maha Rafi Atal | Filed under: Business, Foreign Policy, Journalism, South Asia, Technology | Tags: automation, Corporate social responsibility, Feminism, globalization, history, India, Iran, journo ethics, labor, nuclear weapons, women | No Comments »Though I’ve been very quiet on here since starting my PhD, I have actually been commenting quite a bit elsewhere on these here interwebs. For those who aren’t on Twitter (where I do extensive self-promotion in between posting pictures of my food), here are some things I’ve blogged.
I’ve been writing a regular monthly column for the website SciDev.net (who cover the intersection of science, technology and development) on the role of the private sector in development. I’ve covered:
I’ve also blogged a little bit for the blog of my department’s policy journal, which I briefly edited last year. Recent pieces include:
How the Iranian government charmed the Western press, and thereby saved the peace process.
I’ll try to remember to cross-post all future blogging here going forward, and maybe even find time to write some original pieces for this site again soon*.
Finally, I’ve been interviewed about my research over on BBC Radio 3. It’s a special episode on Indian history, so I’m talking about the East India Company, who are one of several key historical predecessors for the kind of contemporary corporate politics I’m researching for my PhD.
*Don’t hold your breath.
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