Browsing by Author "Garg, Aditi"
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Item Ahmedabad City Police(MICA, 2019) Garg, Aditi; Gambhir, Bharat; Veer, Karam; Prasad, KshitijThe project involves a lot of stakeholders hence the primary objective was to identify stakeholders and target such stakeholders who have high impact and high involvement. In stages other stakeholders were covered in stages to not only provide corrective but also preventive solution. The nature of the project prevented the group from targeting all stakeholders at once rather a more trickling approach was used to come to a solution. Based on the guidelines given by the client the project did not include instances of domestic violence in the intervention points identified. An Overview The intervention suggestions though are based on qualitative and quantitative study of a single geographic location, jurisdiction area of satellite police station, yet can be generalized to the entire city of Ahmedabad. The team has relied heavily on evolving technology to come with solutions. The project is limited to safety of women in Ahmedabad at public places and does not include domestic violence against women as per the brief given by the client. The are under the project is Satellite police station and specifically the SHE team. The team did identify mind set change as an important aspect to improve safety, but since it is a continuous process the team could not achieve desired result.Item Rural Immersion project : Gian Foundation(MICA, 2020) Garg, Aditi; Jha, Jehi; Shukla, Divyansh; Mohan, Maanas; Hora, Simran; Jain, VeniGrassroots Innovation Augmentation Network (GIAN) has been working upon multiple activities and initiatives to uplift lives and dreams of Indians across geographies and ethnicities. Gian’s mission and vision lies in building innovations as a way to empower, educate and elevate the lives of many local communities. Building innovations from grassroots Indigenous communities throughout their existence have been able to navigate through the worst of crisis and calamities all thanks to generational knowledge acting as a proponent of creative solutions and ideas. In the past few decades migration has played a pivotal role in sharing, spreading and expanding this community knowledge pool. This knowledge richness has potential to unlock multiple opportunities. This years of knowledge dividend is captured in various forms of rituals, traditions and customs practiced locally. However, the real potential lies in exploring such ingenious innovations on the grassroot level and sharing them with larger communities. This model directly benefits the consumer and also rewards entrepreneurship thereby elevating the economical status of innovators who would otherwise be stuck on social and economical barriers.