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Books | 2020

First among equals: T-R-E-A-T leadership for L-E-A-P in a knowledge-based world

Vishal Gupta

Bloomsbury

Journal Articles | 2020

The doctrine of frustration under section 56 of the Indian Contract Act

M P Ram Mohan, Promode Murugavelu, Gaurav Ray, and Kritika Parakh

Indian Law Review

The performance of obligations under a contract may be hindered by unexpected supervening events, leading to contractual uncertainties. The doctrine of frustration paves the way for a just consequence of such an unfortunate event, which has happened without any fault of the contracting parties. The doctrine fills the void in a contract regarding supervening events, based on principles of fairness and equity. Considering the large implications on the obligatory and binding nature of a valid contract, it becomes important to analyse the factors that guide the courts to determine its application. Unlike common law, the Indian Contract law explicitly incorporates the doctrine of frustration under section 56 of the Contract Act. However, the evolution of this doctrine in India has been greatly influenced by English law. This paper attempts to restate the law on the doctrine of frustration as applicable in India.

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Journal Articles | 2020

Alternate solution approaches for competitive hub location problems

Richa Tiwari, Sachin Jayaswal, and Ankur Sinha

European Journal of Operational Research

In this paper, we study the hub location problem of an entrant airline that tries to maximize
its share in a market with already existing competing players. The problem is modelled as a nonlinear
integer program, which is intractable for off-the-shelf commercial solvers, like CPLEX and
Gurobi, etc. Hence, we propose four alternate approaches to solve the problem. The first among
them uses the Kellys cutting plane method, the second is based on a mixed integer second order
conic program reformulation, the third uses the Kellys cutting plane method within Lagrangian
relaxation, while the fourth uses second order conic program within Lagrangian relaxation. The
main contribution of this paper lies in the fourth approach, which along with refinements is the
most efficient. Many of the problem instances that were not solvable using standard techniques,
like the Kellys cutting plane method, have been solved in less than 2 hours of CPU time within
1% optimality gap.

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Journal Articles | 2020

Right of recourse claims based on latent defects in the nuclear energy sector in India: Brace yourself for fact-intensive disputes

M P Ram Mohan and Els Reynaers

The University of Pennsylvania Asian Law Review

This working paper is focused on trying to interpret the meaning of "latent defects" and analysing how a case were to unfold if an operator of nuclear installation were to exercise its right of recourse against a supplier in the event of supply of equipment or material with latent defects, as envisaged under the unique Section 17(b) of the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010 (CLND Act), as adopted by the Indian Parliament. Therefore, this paper presumes and builds on the assumption of some prior knowledge of general nuclear law principles as well as the CLND Act and related debates. We welcome comments on any part of the paper.

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Journal Articles | 2020

Ripples on financial networks

Sudarshan Kumar, Avijit Bansal, and Anindya S. Chakrabarti

The European Journal of Finance

In the financial markets, asset returns exhibit collective dynamics masking individual impacts on the rest of the market. Hence, it is still an open problem to identify how shocks originating from one particular asset would create spillover effects across other assets. The problem is more acute when there is a large number of simultaneously traded assets, making the identification of which asset affects which other assets even more difficult. In this paper, we construct a network of the conditional volatility series estimated from asset returns and propose a many-dimensional VAR model with unique identification criteria based on the network topology. Because of the interlinkages across stocks, volatility shock to a particular asset propagates through the network creating a ripple effect. Our method allows us to find the exact path the ripple effect follows on the whole network of assets.

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Faculty Podcasts | 2020

Prof. Debjit Roy talks about Upstream Challenges in Trucking Supply Chain

Faculty Podcasts | 2020

Prof. Debjit Roy talks about Downstream Challenges in Trucking Supply Chain

Faculty Podcasts | 2020

Prof. A. K. Jaiswal talks about Reverse Innovation

A. K. Jaiswa

Faculty Podcasts | 2020

Sudheesh Nambiath talks to Prof. Arvind Sahay about Global Financial Markets amidst Covid19 Crisis

Faculty Podcasts | 2020

Prof. Tarun Jain talks about his research Accelerated infection testing at scale...

Tarun Jain