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The Economic and Political Weekly, published from Mumbai, is an Indian institution which enjoys a global reputation for excellence in independent scholarship and critical inquiry.
First published in 1949 as the Economic Weekly and since 1966 as the Economic and Political Weekly, EPW, as the journal is popularly known, occupies a special place in the intellectual history of independent India. For more than five decades EPW has remained a unique forum that week after week has brought together academics, researchers, policy makers, independent thinkers, members of non-governmental organisations and political activists for debates straddling economics, politics, sociology, culture, the environment and numerous other disciplines.
EPW is also unique because it is the one forum where there is an exchange of ideas across the social science disciplines - political scientists debate with economists, sociologists read what political scientists have to say, historians study what economists have to say and so on.
EPW, published by the Sameeksha Trust, a registered charitable trust, is the only social science journal of its kind in the world. Where other reputed journals publish either only comments on contemporary affairs or research papers, EPW is unique in that week it publishes analysis of contemporary affairs side by side with academic papers in the social sciences. The only other similar publication which contains short comments and research output is Nature of the U.K., which covers the physical sciences.
EPW has been built over the decades with a shoe-string budget and has experienced considerable financial difficulties. It has grown to be what it is today because of the passion and selfless efforts of its staff, support from its contributors and goodwill from advertisers.
There are a number of features which make EPW special, not just in India or Asia but in the world:
For decades, all young social scientists in India have considered it an honour to first publish in EPW, and the reputation of many of India's leading scholars has been built on work published in the EPW. There are many professional journals in each of the social sciences published in India, but there is no question that for academics the forum to publish in - whether in economics, politics, sociology, politics, the environment or any of the related social sciences, and whether by academics, independent thinkers, members of non-governmental organisations or political activists - remains the Economic and Political Weekly.
Analysis of current affairs and research papers, published every week, is only one aspect of EPW's publication programme. It produces a "Review" of focus issues six to eight times a year, each dealing with one of the following subject areas: Agriculture, Industry and Management, Women's Studies, Science Policy and Labour.
In more recent years, EPW has also been publishing a number of "Special Issues", dealing with a diversity of subjects of contemporary policy interest. They have included, for example, an annual publication on Money, Banking and Finance.
EPW is the one Indian publication to enjoy a global reputation for excellence and scholarship. For more than four decades the EPW has been recognised all over the world as the journal that has provided independent insights into the Indian economy and domestic politics, that has published academic papers of the highest quality in all the social sciences, that has fostered debate on the major economic, social and political issues of the day, and that has been the forum for intellectuals and academics - in India and abroad - to publish their research if they are to reach the widest global readership.