H.Y. Siddiqui

The book further argues that while changes have occurred in the three countries but overall these societies as such have not modernised. Not only the gender gap in accessing education, health, and economic and political participation remains very wide, the gap between rural and urban population in respect of economic opportunities and access to social services also continues to exist.
Despite differences in the size of economy and nature of polity, the situation in the three countries is quite similar, with minor differences in achievements during the past fifty years. India has the advantage of being a more politically stable and economically stronger country, but it has also failed so far to achieve the goals of poverty eradication, universal literacy, and health for all.
It is hoped that the book will raise issues of interest to policy makers, practitioners and scholars, to help them rethink their strategies of development, particularly in view of global economic and political changes.
H.Y. Siddiqui teaches social work in the Department of Social Work, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. He has visited Center for Social Development at George Warren Brown School of Social Work, Washington University at St Louis (USA) as a Fulbright Scholar, and Massey University in New Zealand and McMaster University in Canada as Visiting Professor.
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