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This comprehensive MCQ book is meticulously designed to assist Diploma in Pharmacy students in their preparation for the Exit Exam. The book covers all essential subjects, ensuring a thorough understanding of key concepts. Each chapter includes a diverse set of multiple-choice questions, providing students with a robust tool to assess their knowledge and readiness for the exam. 1. Pharmaceutics: Explore questions on dosage forms, drug delivery systems, and pharmaceutical calculations to solidify your understanding of fundamental concepts in pharmaceutics. 2. Pharmacy Law and Ethics: This section focuses on questions related to legal aspects and ethical considerations in pharmacy practice, in...
Dalit literature particularly fiction, autobiography and poetry has emerged as a vital modern literary force in India. The scope and richness of this literature is brilliantly exemplified by novels like Fakira which is the landmark novel in the foundation of Dalit literature in India. Authors like Anna Bhau Sathe illustrate experiences of caste discrimination, untouchability, and Dalit subjugation. The undaunted and ceaseless battle of the protagonist Fakira for the collective welfare of his community forms the core of the narrative. He revolts against the rural orthodox caste system and the British Raj to save his village from utter starvation, humiliation and death.
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International law’s turn to history in the Americas receives invigorated refreshment with Christopher Rossi’s adaptation of the insightful and inter-disciplinary teachings of the English School and Cambridge contextualists to problems of hemispheric methodology and historiography. Rossi sheds new light on abridgments of history and the propensity to construct and legitimize whiggish understandings of international law based on simplified tropes of liberal and postcolonial treatments of the Monroe Doctrine. Central to his story is the retelling of the Monroe Doctrine by its supreme early twentieth century interlocutor, Elihu Root and other like-minded internationalists. Rossi’s revival of whiggish international law cautions against the contemporary tendency to re-read history with both eyes cast on the ideological present as a justification for misperceived historical sequencing.