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Indovation

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Indovation (an abbreviation of ‘Indian innovation’) is the process by which innovations are developed in India to serve a large number of people affordably and sustainably in response to conditions of scarcity and diversity. The individual solutions generated by this process are called indovations. The key idea is that poverty is the mother of innovation: reduced circumstances (of the kind found in India) lead to increased effort, creativity and productivity, as reported in the practice of Jugaad among India's rural poor.[1] Examples of indovations include the Tata Nano, the Tata swach water filter, Devi Prasad Shetty's affordable cardiac care hospital, the SELCO's solar lighting solutions for consumers off the electricity grid and The First Identified Inexpensive Solar Water Filter that was designed and invented by Shripad Krishnarao Vaidya, of Nagpur, Maharashtra, India on 23 April 2010. The Specialty of the water filter is Capillary Pumping Technique.[2][3][4][5]

The term indovation was first mentioned in the 2008 book, Smash Innovation,[6] by Dr. Gopichand Katragadda. It was further developed in 2009 by Navi Radjou, the Executive Director of the Centre for India & Global Business (CIGB) at the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge. After several months of field research, CIGB set up a dedicated educational web site called Indovations.net to showcase the affordable and sustainable innovations emanating from India and network Indian entrepreneurs with the rest of the world.[7] On November 10, 2009 Navi Radjou unveiled Indovations.net at the World Economic Forum’s India Economic Summit during a panel discussion entitled ‘Creating the Next Indovations’.[8]

Financial Times has published two articles describing the impact of indovation on the rest of the world.[9][10] Similarly, Asia Society has organized a series of panel discussions throughout 2010 in San Francisco, New York City, Hong Kong, Mumbai, and Delhi, entitled ‘INDOvations: Driving Global Innovations from Emerging Markets’ to explore how India provides a great source of inspiration for both the developed and the developing nations seeking to drive affordable and sustainable business as well as social and cultural innovation.[11]

References

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  1. ^ 2013 Birtchnell, T. Indovation: Innovation and a Global Knowledge Economy in India. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  2. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: How to make your own solar water filter at home | solar water purifier | What is solar water filter. YouTube.
  3. ^ Elite World Records Gallery search www.eliteworldrecords.org/
  4. ^ The Hitavada, Thursday, January 19, 2012, Nagpur.
  5. ^ Limca Book of Records 2011, page 255, solar water filter for rural poor.
  6. ^ Gopichand Katragadda., S.M.A.S.H: Innovation: Smashing The Hand-Mind-Market Barrier, Wiley India, 2008
  7. ^ Connecting Indian innovators with the world Archived 2009-11-13 at the Wayback Machine, Cambridge Judge Business School, 2009-11-09
  8. ^ Video on YouTube
  9. ^ Indian innovators target nation’s high demand, Financial Times, 2010-01-19
  10. ^ The age of ‘indovation’ dawns, Financial Times, 2010-06-15
  11. ^ Video archive of Asia Society’s panel on INDOvations in New York City, 2010-01-28