Asgar gabriel biography of mahatma gandhi
•
Mahatma Gandhi
next →← prev
Brief Intro:
Full name- Mohan Das Karam Chandra Gandhi
Birth Date & place- 2 October in the Kathiawar Peninsula by in Porbandar, Gujarat
Death date & place- 30th January , huvud Delhi (in Birla house)
Parent's name- Karam Chand Uttam Chand Gandhi and Putli bai
Occupation- Leader, Social activist, and lawyer
Spouse name- Kasturba Gandhi (Baa)
Children name- Harilal Gandhi, Manilal Gandhi, Ramdas & Devdas Gandhi
Popular names & nicknames- Bapu, Mahatma Gandhi, father of the nation, etc.
About
Father of Nation, popular as "Mahatma Gandhi," originally known as Mohandas Karam Chand Gandhi was a leader, lawyer, and a great social activist. He was not only a great socialist who played an fantastisk role as a leader in the Independence of India but also a leader who always supported nonviolence and organized Satyagrah protests against British rule; he and thousands of Indians supported his non-violent a
•
Abstract
Introduction
People with inherited and long‐term conditions such as haemophilia have been shown to adapt to their levels of disability, often reporting better quality of life (QoL) than expected from the general population (the disability paradox).
Aim
To investigate the disability paradox in people with haemophilia in the United States by examining preference differences in health state valuations versus the general population.
Methods
We conducted a discrete choice experiment including duration to capture valuations of health states based on patient‐reported preferences. Participants indicated their preferences for hypothetical health states using the EQ‐5D‐5L, where each participant completed 15 of the choice tasks. Response inconsistencies were evaluated with dominated and repeated scenarios. Conditional‐logit regressions with random sampling of the general population responses were used to match the sample of patients with haemophilia. We compared model estimates
•
Introduction
When Narendra Modi assumed office as Indian prime minister in the summer of on the back of an electoral landslide, expectations ran high—but this was not the case in New Delhi’s strategic community. As the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)’s candidate for the post, Modi had led a campaign that principally revolved around reforming governance and rejuvenating the economy, often drawing on his lengthy tenure as Gujarat’s chief minister. As Indian scholar C. Raja Mohan put it, “there was little expectation that a provincial leader like Modi . . . would make a big difference to Indian diplomacy.”1
This pessimism in the run-up to Modi’s election was often punctuated by apprehension. Modi previously had been refused a visa to the United States owing to alleged tacit involvement in religious riots in Gujarat in ; in addition, he counted Ajit Doval as a close adviser—a former intelligence chief, Pakistan hawk, and the founder of a leading Hindu nationalist think tank. Many obser