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Through Villages, Reality and Shackled Minds
Saurabh Bisht
Mansi Singh
Vedika Maheshwari

Perhaps one of the most exciting parts of learning and working with public policy is about understanding the public. Afterall, this public is the soul of public policy. But more often, this soul, and hence the essence, succumbs to the rigidity of preconceived (if not prejudiced) thoughts of institutionalization. Hence, many tools and methods are used (and developed) to ensure that the public stays at the heart of policy (making). One of the many tools to ensure this is surveying. Although the word ‘survey’ is often seen synonymous to filling up online forms, at a deeper level, in person (and in depth) surveys offer details which cannot be possibly captured by the modern digital screens.
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