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Amartya Sen

Author of Development as Freedom

88+ Works 6,267 Members 81 Reviews 6 Favorited

About the Author

Amartya Sen, winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Economics, is Lamont University Professor at Harvard University. His many books include Rationality and Freedom (Harvard).

Series

Works by Amartya Sen

Development as Freedom (1999) 1,623 copies, 13 reviews
The Idea of Justice (2009) 798 copies, 8 reviews
Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny (2006) 656 copies, 11 reviews
On Ethics and Economics (1991) 231 copies, 3 reviews
Inequality Reexamined (1992) 228 copies, 2 reviews
Rationality and Freedom (2002) 108 copies
The Quality of Life (1993) — Editor — 96 copies
Home in the World: A Memoir (2021) 88 copies
Utilitarianism and Beyond (1982) — Editor — 84 copies
On Economic Inequality (Radcliffe Lectures) (1973) 79 copies, 2 reviews
Choice, Welfare and Measurement (1982) 52 copies, 3 reviews
Hunger and Public Action (1989) — Editor — 40 copies, 1 review
La démocratie des autres (2004) 34 copies
The Country of First Boys (2015) 24 copies
Globalizzazione e libertà (2002) 12 copies
Reason Before Identity (1999) 12 copies
Peace and Democratic Society (2011) — Editor — 9 copies
Choice of Techniques (1968) 8 copies
El valor de la democracia (2006) 5 copies
A Wish a Day for a Week (2014) 5 copies
Laicismo indiano (1999) 3 copies
Civil Paths to Peace (2007) 2 copies
Identity and violence 1 copy, 1 review
Hemma i världen (2022) 1 copy

Associated Works

Granta 52: Food : The Vital Stuff (1995) — Contributor — 146 copies, 3 reviews
The Cambridge Companion to Adam Smith (2006) — Contributor — 105 copies
AIDS Sutra: Untold Stories from India (2008) — Foreword, some editions — 59 copies
The Community Development Reader (2007) — Contributor, some editions — 31 copies
The Nine Lives of Population Control (1995) — Contributor — 25 copies
Nobelity (2006) — Actor, some editions — 4 copies
Arvo 1 copy

Tagged

anthology (19) culture (62) democracy (22) development (120) development economics (24) economic development (34) economics (498) economy (45) essays (61) ethics (113) fiction (18) gender (19) globalization (41) goodreads (23) Granta (27) history (148) identity (35) India (223) justice (54) liberty (23) non-fiction (255) P (18) philosophy (318) political economy (42) political philosophy (55) political science (34) political theory (34) politics (160) poverty (35) read (21) religion (29) SEN (27) social justice (22) social science (18) society (25) sociology (66) to-read (305) unread (25) violence (29) wishlist (23)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

This is just a few lectures and papers published elsewhere compiled together, but both Sen and Maskin are good writers, so it provides a very useful introduction to Arrow's Impossibility Theorem. I can't imagine why anyone would want such a thing, except for fairly academic reasons. In order to read the proof, it would be helpful to be at least somewhat familiar with how preferences work, so best for students in the second half of their undergraduate degree. Alternatively, if taking the proof as given, it would of use to any student who has completed first year micro. The technical details of the proof are not particularly illuminating - none of the intermediate steps really mean much, so you can skip it.… (more)
 
Flagged
robfwalter | Jul 31, 2023 |
You will be impressed if you look at India's GDP growth rate. But GDP and its growth rate are simplistic measures to understand how a country is faring. India's middle-class is large enough to keep the wheels of the economy chugging along.
Yet, unless everyone participates in economic and social growth, the engine will sputter and die.
In this book, Jean Dreze and Amartya Sen have done an admirable job in analysing India's 'uncertain glory' as they call it.
Our under-investment in public hygiene, public health and education is appalling and alarming.

The authors have managed to walk the tightrope with admirable felicity. They point out the good and the bad. And they do so in a balanced manner, with the proper use of data.

What are their recommendations? I miss this. Barring this omission, the book is excellent. What is sad, is that the book remains relevant even now, years after it was published.
… (more)
 
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RajivC | 3 other reviews | May 15, 2023 |
An amazingly well thought-out treatment of economic development, its goals, its impact on people, and how those people (i.e. the human capital) feeds back into economic development. Sen is careful and thoughtful--and undogmatic--in establishing a framework by which we can enhance the freedom of individuals as well as grow economies.
 
Flagged
qaphsiel | 12 other reviews | Feb 20, 2023 |
One of the best books I have read and urge every Indians and even non-Indians to read it.

 
Flagged
sujitacharyya | 22 other reviews | Sep 25, 2021 |

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Statistics

Works
88
Also by
11
Members
6,267
Popularity
#3,913
Rating
3.9
Reviews
81
ISBNs
321
Languages
18
Favorited
6

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