Vol. 6 No. 3 (2025): Indian Public Policy Review

This issue opens with "Tales of a few cities" by Debroy and Misra, which uses novel high-frequency railway passenger and geospatial data to analyse post-pandemic urban growth patterns and land use changes across four cities, offering new frameworks for urban planning. Jose and Chathukulam's “Farmer Producer Organisations and Institutional Economics” develops and empirically tests a comprehensive institutional economics framework to assess FPOs in India, highlighting seven key clusters for institutional design and policy, drawing on classical and heterodox theory. In "Reforming the Indian Bar," Aithala and Suresh critically examine the limitations of technology-led reforms in the Indian legal profession, arguing that only regulatory overhaul can resolve fundamental issues of access, trust, and quality in legal services. Ishoo Ratna Srivastav’s commentary, "Designing for Trust Amidst Information Chaos," reflects on how the erosion of trust in the information economy can be countered with thoughtful institutional designs, drawing parallels from history, online reputation systems, and game theory. Finally, Reddy and Goswami’s book review of Eva Dou’s “House of Huawei” analyses the rise of Huawei in the context of China’s techno-nationalism and global power plays, illustrating the entwined relationship between corporate strategy, state ambitions, and geopolitics.