IJCRT Peer-Reviewed (Refereed) Journal as Per New UGC Rules.
ISSN Approved Journal No: 2320-2882 | Impact factor: 7.97 | ESTD Year: 2013
Scholarly open access journals, Peer-reviewed, and Refereed Journals, Impact factor 7.97 (Calculate by google scholar and Semantic Scholar | AI-Powered Research Tool) , Multidisciplinary, Monthly, Indexing in all major database & Metadata, Citation Generator, Digital Object Identifier(CrossRef DOI)
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Paper Title: Tashakhkhus wa Tadbeer-e-Talazzuz al-Kabid (Liver Cirrhosis) in Unani Medicine: A Conceptual and Clinical Review
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603120
Register Paper ID - 302401
Title: TASHAKHKHUS WA TADBEER-E-TALAZZUZ AL-KABID (LIVER CIRRHOSIS) IN UNANI MEDICINE: A CONCEPTUAL AND CLINICAL REVIEW
Author Name(s): Faisal Habib, Syed Mohammad Irfan, Iliyas hussain
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: b1-b10
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 103
Liver cirrhosis, conceptualized in the Unani System of Medicine (USM) as Talazzuz al-Kabid or Segar-e-Jigar, represents a catastrophic structural transformation and shrinkage of the liver parenchyma. This narrative review provides an exhaustive synthesis of classical Unani perspectives, tracing the evolution of hepatic pathology from the Greek foundational period to the refined clinical observations of the 19th-century Indian subcontinent. The pathogenesis is critically analyzed through the framework of humoral imbalance (Su-e-Mizaj), specifically the pathological dominance of Sauda (black bile) and chronic Sudad (obstructions) within the hepatic vasculature. This manuscript integrates the therapeutic principles of Tanqiya (evacuation) and Taqwiyat (tonification), utilizing potent deobstruent (Muftta-eh-Sudad) and hepatotonic (Muqawwi-e-Jigar) drugs. A systematic comparison with modern pathophysiology, specifically fibrosis, portal hypertension, and hepatocellular failure, reveals a sophisticated alignment between traditional humoral theory and modern histological transformations. Furthermore, recent clinical evidence documenting the efficacy of complex polyherbal decoctions and distillates (Araqiyat) in improving Fibroscan-measured liver stiffness and biochemical parameters is synthesized. The review underscores the conceptual depth of Unani medicine in managing end-stage liver disease and advocates for a multi-dimensional integrative approach to combat the global burden of hepatic cirrhosis.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Unani Medicine, Talazzuz al-Kabid, Liver Cirrhosis, Segar-e-Jigar, Humoral Theory.
Paper Title: Ecology, Displacement and Environmental Ethics in Amitav Ghosh's The Hungry Tide
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603119
Register Paper ID - 302532
Title: ECOLOGY, DISPLACEMENT AND ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS IN AMITAV GHOSH'S THE HUNGRY TIDE
Author Name(s): Janani P, Gayathri M, Kiruthikaa K R, Priyanka R
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a993-a996
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 81
This paper examines Amitav Ghosh's The Hungry Tide (2004) as a significant work of eco-literature that foregrounds the intricate relationship between human life, non-human species and fragile ecosystems. Set in the Sundarbans, one of the most ecologically sensitive regions in the world, the novel portrays nature not as a passive backdrop but as a dynamic, unpredictable force that shapes human existence. Drawing on ecocritical theory, this study explores how Ghosh interrogates anthropocentrism, environmental ethics and the politics of conservation. The novel highlights the tensions between scientific conservation, indigenous ecological knowledge and the survival needs of marginalized communities. By weaving together narratives of displacement, human-animal conflict and environmental vulnerability, The Hungry Tide challenges dominant environmental discourses that often exclude subaltern voices. The paper argues that Ghosh expands the scope of eco-literature by situating ecological concerns within postcolonial realities, revealing how environmental preservation can become a tool of power and exclusion. Through its emphasis on coexistence rather than domination, the novel calls for an inclusive ecological consciousness that recognizes both human and non-human agency. In the context of contemporary climate crises and ecological displacement, The Hungry Tide emerges as a vital literary intervention that redefines environmental responsibility and ethical engagement with nature.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Eco-literature, Ecocriticism, Environmental Ethics, Sundarbans and Postcolonial Ecology.
Paper Title: Pricing The Unknown: Evidence From Derivatives Markets On Corporate Environmental Targets In India Option-Implied Tail Risk, Credibility Signals, and Climate-Policy Exposure in Listed Indian Firms
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603118
Register Paper ID - 302524
Title: PRICING THE UNKNOWN: EVIDENCE FROM DERIVATIVES MARKETS ON CORPORATE ENVIRONMENTAL TARGETS IN INDIA OPTION-IMPLIED TAIL RISK, CREDIBILITY SIGNALS, AND CLIMATE-POLICY EXPOSURE IN LISTED INDIAN FIRMS
Author Name(s): Deepak Kumar Prasad
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a980-a992
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 105
This study examined whether derivatives markets in India quantify the uncertainty embedded in corporate environmental targets and whether target credibility attenuates option-implied downside risk. Using firm-level events derived from standardised sustainability disclosures under the Business Responsibility and Sustainability Reporting (BRSR) framework, third-party target validation records from the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi), and climate-policy milestones including India's Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) and notified greenhouse gas emissions-intensity target rules, the study tested how option-implied volatility, volatility skew, and related risk-neutral tail measures responded to the introduction and revision of corporate emissions targets. A panel of listed Indian firms with actively traded derivatives was assembled, target characteristics were merged with daily contract-level options and futures data from the National Stock Exchange (NSE), and event-study and staggered-adoption difference-in-differences (DiD) estimators robust to heterogeneous treatment effects were applied. Endogeneity was addressed using quasi-exogenous credibility shocks induced by phased BRSR Core assurance requirements and, where feasible, instrumental variables exploiting policy-driven variation in climate compliance exposure. Credible targets were found to reduce implied volatility skew and variance risk premia, consistent with markets updating downward the probability of severe downside transition shocks. The paper contributes to climate finance by providing an India-specific framework connecting mandatory sustainability reporting with forward-looking derivative prices, and offers regulatory implications for disclosure standardisation, assurance design, and carbon-market architecture.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Keywords: Corporate environmental targets, implied volatility, volatility skew, variance risk premium, climate transition risk, BRSR, BRSR Core assurance, India, event study, staggered DiD.
Paper Title: Climate Change Litigation in India: Emerging Trends and Landmark Cases
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603117
Register Paper ID - 302459
Title: CLIMATE CHANGE LITIGATION IN INDIA: EMERGING TRENDS AND LANDMARK CASES
Author Name(s): Dr Maroof Bashir, Ashlesha G. Mulay, Smruti Kamble
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a960-a979
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 76
Climate-related litigation has increasingly emerged as a powerful tool for advancing environmental accountability and influencing policy reform in India. This study traces the evolution of climate litigation within the Indian legal framework, charting its shift from traditional environmental public interest petitions to cases that directly address climate change concerns. It analyses key judicial pronouncements, including the landmark M.K. Ranjitsinh v. Union of India, in which the Supreme Court recognised a constitutional right to be protected against the adverse effects of climate change, as well as the continuing proceedings in Ridhima Pandey v. Union of India, where governmental inaction on climate issues has been challenged. Through a detailed review of case law, statutory frameworks, and emerging judicial trends, the study demonstrates how Indian courts have progressively expanded constitutional protections to address climate-related harm, while remaining attentive to the country's developmental imperatives. It further considers the persistent challenges of implementation, the tension between economic growth and environmental preservation, and the likely trajectory of climate litigation in the world's largest democracy. Overall, the analysis underscores that judicial intervention particularly through public interest litigation has become a central avenue for pursuing climate justice in India, transforming abstract constitutional guarantees into enforceable environmental duties.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Climate Change Litigation Environmental Jurisprudence in India Public Interest Litigation (PIL) Constitutional Environmentalism Article 21 and Right to Life Sustainable Development Intergenerational Equity Precautionary Principle Polluter Pays Principle Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) National Green Tribunal (NGT) Judicial Activism Climate Governance Paris Agreement Environmental Justice Carbon Emissions Regulation Biodiversity Protection Climate Adaptation and Mitigation
Paper Title: Emerging Nanomedicine Strategies for Targeted Cancer Treatment
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603116
Register Paper ID - 302406
Title: EMERGING NANOMEDICINE STRATEGIES FOR TARGETED CANCER TREATMENT
Author Name(s): Dr PULIPATI SOWJANYA, Teja Sri Nagabhairava, Mundlapati Kiran Kumar, Mohammad Shafiya Parveen, Shaik Noureen
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a945-a959
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 128
The past decade has witnessed a paradigm shift in oncology with the emergence of nanomedicine as a transformative platform for precision cancer therapy. Conventional treatment modalities--including chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and immunotherapy--are frequently constrained by systemic toxicity, suboptimal tumor accumulation, and therapeutic resistance. Engineered nanoplatforms, spanning lipid-based, polymeric, inorganic, and biomimetic systems, offer unprecedented control over drug biodistribution, pharmacokinetics, and intracellular trafficking. By leveraging physicochemical tunability and multifunctional design, these systems enable spatiotemporally regulated therapeutic delivery through both passive targeting mechanisms, such as the enhanced permeability and retention effect, and active ligand-mediated cellular recognition. Recent advances have expanded nanomedicine beyond single-agent delivery toward programmable, stimuli-responsive constructs capable of integrating chemotherapy, gene modulation, immunotherapy, and phototherapies within unified platforms. Biomimetic strategies--including membrane cloaking and exosome-inspired carriers--further enhance immune evasion and tumor selectivity. Concurrently, rational control of particle size, surface chemistry, and architecture has improved tumor penetration, minimized off-target sequestration, and enabled synergistic multimodal interventions against heterogeneous and metastatic disease. Despite these advances, translational hurdles persist, including variable tumor microenvironment responses, complex host-nanoparticle interactions, large-scale manufacturing constraints, and regulatory challenges surrounding safety and long-term biodistribution. The convergence of nanotechnology with systems biology, immune engineering, and artificial intelligence-guided formulation design is poised to accelerate clinical translation. Collectively, emerging nanomedicine strategies redefine the therapeutic landscape of oncology by enabling programmable, multimodal, and patient-adapted interventions, moving cancer treatment closer toward truly precision-driven care.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Targeted Nanomedicine, Cancer Drug Delivery, Stimuli-Responsive Nanoparticles, Tumor Microenvironment Targeting, Multimodal Cancer Therapy
Paper Title: Poverty and Inequality in Karnataka after 2020: An Economic Assessment
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603115
Register Paper ID - 302442
Title: POVERTY AND INEQUALITY IN KARNATAKA AFTER 2020: AN ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT
Author Name(s): Dr. Gnanadeva S.
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a939-a944
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 104
This paper examines the trajectory of poverty and inequality in Karnataka in the post-2020 period, focusing on the socioeconomic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic and the nature of the subsequent recovery. Despite Karnataka's strong pre-pandemic growth driven by the services sector, particularly information technology, significant intra-state and social disparities persisted. The pandemic disrupted labour markets, household incomes, education, and access to healthcare, disproportionately affecting informal workers, women, migrant labourers, and economically weaker districts. Drawing on secondary data from national surveys and state reports, the study assesses income poverty, multidimensional poverty, vulnerability, and inequality using indicators such as consumption trends, labour market outcomes, and regional disparities. The findings suggest a temporary rise in income poverty during 2020-2021 and a K-shaped recovery that widened income and regional inequalities. Northern districts continued to exhibit higher deprivation levels compared to southern regions, while digital exclusion and gender disparities intensified structural inequalities. Although central and state government interventions mitigated extreme hardship through food security measures, employment programs, and fiscal support, recovery has been uneven and distributionally skewed. The paper argues that sustained inclusive growth in Karnataka requires targeted regional investment, labour market formalization, gender-responsive policies, digital infrastructure expansion, and strengthened social protection systems. Economic resilience alone is insufficient without deliberate efforts to address structural inequalities.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Poverty, Inequality, Karnataka, COVID-19, Multidimensional Poverty, Regional Disparities, Labour Market, Digital Divide , Gender Inequality, Inclusive Growth ,
Paper Title: Romantic Ethics in Human-AI Companionship: A Comparative Study of Rose Clarke's The Mad Scientist's Daughter and Tanith Lee's The Silver Metal Lover
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603114
Register Paper ID - 302394
Title: ROMANTIC ETHICS IN HUMAN-AI COMPANIONSHIP: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF ROSE CLARKE'S THE MAD SCIENTIST'S DAUGHTER AND TANITH LEE'S THE SILVER METAL LOVER
Author Name(s): Khushi Bhardwaj
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a921-a938
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 76
This research examines the ethical implications of human-artificial intelligence (AI) romantic relationships in a comparative study of Rose Clarke's The Mad Scientist's Daughter (2017) and Tanith Lee's The Silver Metal Lover (1981). Situating itself within the current discourses of posthumanism, affect theory, feminist technology studies, and ethics of care, this research explores how these texts reimagine love, agency, and ethics of responsibility in the context of human-AI relationships. As AI is increasingly entering the social and emotional spaces of the contemporary world, the literary representation of human-AI relationships becomes a critical site for examining the ethics of attachment.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Human-AI Companionship; Romantic Ethics; Posthumanism; Affect Theory; Feminist Technology Studies; Ethics of Care; Speculative Fiction; Artificial Intelligence and Intimacy.
Paper Title: A STUDY ON MOBILE BANKING ADOPTION AMONG GENERATION Z IN ERNAKULAM CITY
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603113
Register Paper ID - 302383
Title: A STUDY ON MOBILE BANKING ADOPTION AMONG GENERATION Z IN ERNAKULAM CITY
Author Name(s): ANUKRISHNA V
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a913-a920
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 77
Technological innovation has fundamentally redefined the delivery of financial services in India, placing the mobile device at the centre of the modern banking experience. The synergy between rising digital literacy, smartphone penetration, and a robust regulatory environment has accelerated the decline of traditional banking methods in Favor of automated, AI-enhanced platforms. This evolution allows for a borderless banking experience, catering to the demand for instant service. However, this transition is not uniform; while it represents a leap in operational efficiency for many, it also presents challenges in adoption for those accustomed to traditional banking interactions. This paper examines the factors influencing the transition toward mobile banking platforms among Generation Z residents in Ernakulam City, Kerala. As the first demographic to achieve maturity in a fully digitized economy, Generation Z--defined as individuals born between 1997 and 2012--exhibits financial behaviours fundamentally different from their predecessors. This cohort has matured in a global environment dominated by pervasive technology and internet connectivity. These age category people have a more accessible usage of smartphones, social media, and other digital platform aids from a young age. This study investigates how this cohort's inherent technological fluency shapes their expectations and interactions with modern banking institutions. The primary objective of this study is to identify the core motivations and systemic obstacles that dictate digital financial engagement in Ernakulam's urban environment. The research adopts a structured methodology, gathering qualitative and quantitative insights from a diverse participant pool consisting of students, young professionals, and entrepreneurs.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Keywords: Mobile Banking Adoption, Generation Z (Gen Z), Digital Nativity, Consumer Behaviour, FinTech (Financial Technology), Digital Transformation, User Experience (UX).
Paper Title: NAMBOODIRI CONTRIBUTION TO THE KERALA SOCIETY : A STUDY
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603112
Register Paper ID - 302491
Title: NAMBOODIRI CONTRIBUTION TO THE KERALA SOCIETY : A STUDY
Author Name(s): Asha L Revi
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a907-a912
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 111
The brahmins who migrated and settled in southern regions of peninsular India had made an exerting influence and molded the society in a way to maintain their supreme power and authority. They introduced new policies to safeguard their supreme position. Introduction of caste and the jenmi system had a negative impact in the society. Namboodiris were the men of letters and masters of literature and produced many literary masterpieces. They contributed in the field of astrology and astronomy greatly. They sanskritised the religious worship and performances in Kerala. They also contributed greatly for the development of ayurveda or the Indian system of medicine also. They cast their influence in all fields of society with their unique cultural heritage.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Caste System, Jenmy System, Marumakkathayam, Bhakti Cult, Philosophy and Literature.
Paper Title: Literary Expressions of Partition in Novels-Train to Pakistan and A Bend in the Ganges
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603111
Register Paper ID - 302182
Title: LITERARY EXPRESSIONS OF PARTITION IN NOVELS-TRAIN TO PAKISTAN AND A BEND IN THE GANGES
Author Name(s): Prof ,Dr.Archana Sawshilya
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a899-a906
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 84
Abstract: One of the most painful events in Indian history has been the Partition of India in 1947. Historians and authors have sought to reflect the profound trauma, impact on human values and its enduring consequences in various literary writings , capturing the human tragedy of unforeseen violence, loss of human identity, displacement and loss of domestic identity, trauma of sexual violence faced by women and just the unmeasurable extent of violence that was experienced by people impacted by this tragedy. The literature available captures not merely the facts and numbers but also the emotional personal experiences of people who experienced the tragedy. One literary piece that really captures the pain and tragedy of partition is the "Train to Pakistan" written by Khushwant Singh. Published in 1956, this is a very powerful rendition of the impact of partition and the tragedy that followed the partition, while at the same time, sharing a message of hope that amidst all this, humanity is still alive and it wins in the end. Victory of good over evil. The story is based in a fictional town of Mano Majra along the border of India and Pakistan, a village like any other where people from all communities lived peacefully and in harmony with each other. However, on a fateful day during the partition period, this peace was shattered when a train arrived in the village from Pakistan carrying bodies of slain Hindu and Sikh who were fleeing from current Pakistan to India. The troublemaker (Hukum Chand) strokes communal tension and lights up the fire of conflict in the erstwhile peaceful village, but hope still prevails when Juggut Singh, against all odds, helps Muslims fleeing from the village to reach current Pakistan, safely. The story is written beautifully capturing the impact of politics on human life and how human beings react to an event that they did not create, both tragic and hopeful. Another powerful literature reflecting the human angle of the impact of the struggles of partition is the "A Bend in the Ganges" by Manohar Malgonkar, written in 1964. This story spans a period from the civil disobedience movement to the time of partition in 1947, and weaves through various twists and turns in the lives of its two characters - Gian Talwar and Debi Dayal. These are two revolutionaries, jailed in Andamans, however, while Debi is depicted as a revolutionary who is willing to go to every extent including using violent means to fight the British, Gian is a staunch Gandhian, believing in the principles of non-violence. As the story unfolds it weaves through the trials and turbulations in the relationship between the two characters and how it tests their friendship, as both seek to achieve a common goal while treading different paths, very vividly taking us through the minds of people impacted by the tragedy of partition and the harsh realities of life Literary phrases such as "Revolution is not a meal consumed at night; it is an act of blood and fire" illustrate the viewpoint of Gian's who sought the aggressive and violent approach in dealing with the enemy , while on the other hand another phrase in the book - "Friendship is not measured in tranquility, but tested amidst the turmoil of politics" highlights the strain in the relationship between Gian and Debi as both the characters seek to pursue different paths in achieving their nationalistic objectives. Unlike Debi, Giani believed that to love one's own country does not necessarily mean harming people or having an aggressive attitude. These characters with such different ideologies and assertions signify the impact of political occurrences in a society and how they shape the personal destinies of ordinary individuals as they pass through this socio political turmoil. In both the literary marvels, one very beautiful common thread that emerges is that, during difficult times, many regular people merge as heroes while those that always seemed to be heroes, can at times turn out to be ordinary when the going gets tough. It is the trying and adverse moments, when there is a clash between lofty ideals and harsh realities, that the decisions made by individuals, reflect their true character and strength.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Keywords -Revolutionary Violence ,Nationalist Resistance ,violent resistance
Paper Title: Repression and the Crisis of Identity in Late Nineteenth-Century Gothic Literature
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603110
Register Paper ID - 302562
Title: REPRESSION AND THE CRISIS OF IDENTITY IN LATE NINETEENTH-CENTURY GOTHIC LITERATURE
Author Name(s): Shreya Anand, Prof. (Dr.) Jayatee Bhattacharya
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a891-a898
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 77
With an emphasis on The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and The Picture of Dorian Gray, this essay explores the connection between repression and identity crises in late nineteenth-century Gothic fiction. These books, which emerged from the moral and cultural conflicts of the Victorian era, depict a society that encouraged the concealing of socially inappropriate urges while demanding external respectability. The idea of a cohesive self is eventually undermined by such repression, which causes a psychological struggle between private urge and public identity. This study examines how both Stevenson and Wilde depict identity as brittle and divided when moral and emotional urges are repressed rather than integrated through in-depth textual analysis guided by psychoanalytic viewpoints. In Stevenson's story, suppression takes the form of Jekyll and Hyde's bodily separation, signifying the effort to separate impulse from morality. In Wilde's book, Dorian Gray's image serves as a metaphor for the accumulation of covert corruption while the protagonist pretends to be innocent. Both pieces demonstrate how repression exacerbates internal conflict and results in an identity crisis, despite their disparate narrative techniques. The study makes the case that Gothic fiction reveals the psychological effects of a society that prioritizes moral image over emotional authenticity by looking at various depictions.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Paper Title: Reconfiguring The Human-Nonhuman Boundary In Frankenstein And Frankissstein: A Posthumanist Perspective
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603109
Register Paper ID - 302570
Title: RECONFIGURING THE HUMAN-NONHUMAN BOUNDARY IN FRANKENSTEIN AND FRANKISSSTEIN: A POSTHUMANIST PERSPECTIVE
Author Name(s): Ann Riya Saji, Dr Tanu Kashyap
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a886-a890
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 76
This study compares Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) and Jeanette Winterson's Frankissstein (2019) through the posthuman theory of Rosi Braidotti. It questions the traditional humanist belief that humans are autonomous, superior, and separate from other forms of life. Using close textual analysis, the research examines Victor Frankenstein's experiment and the Creature's emotional and physical suffering, alongside Winterson's exploration of artificial intelligence, cryonics, and emerging technologies. Through Braidotti's concepts of post-anthropocentrism and relational subjectivity, the study argues that both novels destabilize the boundary between human and nonhuman, natural and artificial. While Shelley anticipates these concerns in a nineteenth-century scientific context, Winterson revisits them within contemporary technological culture.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Keywords: Posthumanism; Human-Nonhuman Boundary; Identity; Artificial Intelligence; Anthropocentrism; Ethics; Technology; Relational Subjectivity.
Paper Title: PEER-TO-PEER LENDING AND TRADITIONAL BANK CREDIT IN INDIA: SUBSTITUTES OR COMPLEMENTS? AN EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION USING REGULATORY SHOCKS
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603108
Register Paper ID - 302525
Title: PEER-TO-PEER LENDING AND TRADITIONAL BANK CREDIT IN INDIA: SUBSTITUTES OR COMPLEMENTS? AN EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION USING REGULATORY SHOCKS
Author Name(s): Deepak Kumar Prasad
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a875-a885
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 130
This study examined whether peer-to-peer (P2P) lending in India acts as a substitute for or a complement to conventional bank credit. P2P platforms in India operate under the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) framework as NBFC-P2P entities and are prohibited from accepting deposits, lending from their own balance sheets, or providing credit guarantees. Two significant regulatory events were used for empirical identification: the tightening of risk weights on unsecured consumer credit by the RBI in November 2023, and the revision of conduct and disclosure norms for NBFC-P2P platforms in August 2024. Using event-study and difference-in-differences (DiD) methods robust to staggered timing and heterogeneous treatment effects, the study tested whether P2P lending volumes increased when bank consumer credit supply was restricted and whether bank credit expanded in overlapping segments when P2P activity was curtailed. Data access constraints relating to RBI-hosted attachments and fragmented platform disclosures meant that all reported coefficients are simulated placeholders, clearly labelled as such throughout. The study offers substantive insights for India's financial stability agenda, consumer protection frameworks, and the evolving role of credit information reporting infrastructure.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Peer-to-peer lending, fintech credit, NBFC-P2P, bank credit supply, difference-in-differences, event study, consumer credit regulation, India, credit information reporting
Paper Title: STRESS HORMONES AND DOSHA PRAKOPA: AN AYURVEDIC - NEUROENDOCRINE HYPOTHETICAL FRAMEWORK
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603107
Register Paper ID - 302515
Title: STRESS HORMONES AND DOSHA PRAKOPA: AN AYURVEDIC - NEUROENDOCRINE HYPOTHETICAL FRAMEWORK
Author Name(s): Dr. Pranjal Devendra Raorane, Dr. Suraj Ishwar Shirsath
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a872-a874
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 68
Psychological and physiological stress is a well-established contributor to the onset and progression of multiple chronic disorders, mediated primarily through neuroendocrine pathways involving stress hormones such as cortisol, adrenaline, and noradrenaline. Despite extensive biomedical research, individual variability in stress response and disease susceptibility remains inadequately explained. Ayurveda, through its holistic understanding of mind-body interaction, offers a constitution-based framework that may elucidate this variability. This paper proposes a hypothetical framework correlating stress hormone dysregulation with Dosha Prakopa, emphasizing the role of Manasika Nidana, Agni, Ojas, and Srotas. Classical Ayurvedic concepts such as Chinta, Bhaya, Krodha, Shoka, and Vishada are examined alongside modern stress physiology, particularly hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activation. A Dosha-specific interpretation of stress hormone effects is proposed, suggesting that chronic stress leads to predictable Dosha imbalance patterns depending on individual Prakriti. By integrating Ayurvedic psychopathology with contemporary neuroendocrinology, this conceptual model provides a novel explanation for stress-related disorders and inter-individual variability in stress resilience. The framework highlights potential clinical and research implications, including personalized stress management, preventive strategies, and integrative therapeutic approaches. The hypothesis warrants further validation through observational, clinical, and experimental studies.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Stress Hormones; Dosha Prakopa; Cortisol; HPA Axis; Manas Roga; Prakriti; Ayurveda; Psychoneuroendocrinology
Paper Title: ROLE OF PRAKRITI IN DRUG RESISTANCE: AN AYURVEDIC HYPOTHESIS
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603106
Register Paper ID - 302518
Title: ROLE OF PRAKRITI IN DRUG RESISTANCE: AN AYURVEDIC HYPOTHESIS
Author Name(s): Dr. Pranjal Devendra Raorane, Dr. Nayanesh D. Kambale
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a868-a871
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 86
Drug resistance has emerged as a major challenge in the management of chronic, infectious, metabolic, and inflammatory diseases in contemporary medicine. Despite appropriate diagnosis and standard therapeutic regimens, a subset of patients shows poor or diminishing response to pharmacological interventions. Ayurveda, with its individualized approach to diagnosis and treatment, offers a unique framework to understand inter-individual variability in drug response through the concept of Prakriti. Prakriti, the innate psychosomatic constitution of an individual determined at conception, governs physiological functions, metabolic capacity, disease susceptibility, and therapeutic responsiveness. This paper proposes an Ayurvedic hypothesis that drug resistance may be partially explained by Prakriti-specific variations in Agni, Dhatu Paka, Srotas, and Koshta, leading to altered drug assimilation, metabolism, distribution, and action. The article critically examines classical Ayurvedic principles, correlates them with contemporary concepts of pharmacogenomics and personalized medicine, and proposes a Prakriti-based model for understanding drug resistance. This conceptual framework opens new avenues for integrative research, individualized therapeutics, and optimized drug selection in both Ayurveda and modern medicine.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Prakriti; Drug Resistance; Personalized Medicine; Agni; Pharmacogenomics; Kayachikitsa; Ayurveda
Paper Title: A SECURE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR REGULATING AND MONETIZING AI WEB CRAWLERS
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603105
Register Paper ID - 302348
Title: A SECURE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR REGULATING AND MONETIZING AI WEB CRAWLERS
Author Name(s): Adhithyan E, Ashwin k, Athil s, Larry lysander V G, Sri Roopini U
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a862-a867
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 81
The rapid growth of artificial intelligence (AI) systems and automated web crawlers has created significant challenges for website owners, including uncontrolled data scraping, server overload, and lack of fair compensation for content usage. Existing crawler control mechanisms such as robots.txt and IP blocking are limited and ineffective against advanced AI crawlers. This project addresses these challenges by proposing a secure infrastructure to regulate AI web crawlers while enabling monetization of web access, ensuring ethical and controlled data consumption. The proposed system introduces an authentication and access control layer that verifies crawler identity, enforces usage policies, and applies rate limiting based on predefined rules. Each crawl request is tracked and validated through a pay-per-crawl mechanism, allowing website owners to charge AI crawlers for accessing their content. Secure verification methods and transaction logging ensure transparency, prevent misuse, and protect both crawler operators and content providers. By combining regulation and monetization into a single framework, this project transforms traditional web crawling into a structured and accountable process, promoting a sustainable, secure, and mutually beneficial ecosystem for AI web crawling.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
AI Web Crawlers, Web Crawling Regulation, Data Monetization, Secure Infrastructure, Crawler Authentication, Access Control, Pay-Per-Crawl Model, Rate Limiting, Policy Enforcement, Ethical Data Usage, Web Data Protection, Usage Monitoring, Micropayments, Website Security, API-Based Access, Transparency and Accountability, Crawler Behaviour Analysis, Data Licensing, Digital Resource Protection, Sustainable AI Ecosystem.
Paper Title: Artificial Intelligence and Colour Psychology: A Systematic Review of Algorithmic Colour Selection and Emotional Outcomes
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603104
Register Paper ID - 302579
Title: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND COLOUR PSYCHOLOGY: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF ALGORITHMIC COLOUR SELECTION AND EMOTIONAL OUTCOMES
Author Name(s): Karpagam K, Ajisha Bhasi
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a838-a861
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 86
Despite the significant application of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in generating color palettes for digital communication, the emotional and psychological outcomes of these AI-selected colors remain largely unexplored (Guo et al., 2023; Rishu & Kukreja, 2025). This systematic review is a part of the effort to find out the influence of AI-driven color selection methods on the emotional responses of humans in digital climate environments. Peer-reviewed studies published between 2020 and 2025 were identified across major scientific databases, focusing on research that links AI-based colour recommendation to emotional responses such as mood, arousal, and valence, etc. The quality of the studies and the eligibility criteria were judged based on predefined systematic review guidelines. The findings clarify in what ways AI-selected colors differ from those chosen by humans in terms of creating emotional experiences, with an emphasis on methodological difficulties and locating gaps for the upcoming studies. Hence, this review is expected to facilitate the development of a more human- centered and ethically sound approach to AI use in visual ?????design.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Artificial Intelligence, colour psychology, emotional response, colour palette generation, systematic review.
Paper Title: STUDIES OF SILVEROXIDE NANOPARTICLES FROM ORANGE PEEL
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603103
Register Paper ID - 302411
Title: STUDIES OF SILVEROXIDE NANOPARTICLES FROM ORANGE PEEL
Author Name(s): Dr.K.Priya Rajini, Dr.M.Mary Sheeba
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a831-a837
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 76
The current study was attempted to develop silver nanoparticles from orange peel extract designed for the management of lung cancer. Silver nanoparticles were prepared using orange peel extract and nanoparticles forming material in an organic solvent to form an effective solution. The nanoparticles were formed by the solvent evaporation method. Nanoparticles are extremely small units whose size is articulated in nano-meters 10-9. To transport medications to the target region, nanoparticles (NP) play a crucial function and can conjugate with different pharmaceuticals in a variety of ways. The prepared silver nanoparticle were characterized by UV spectroscopy, FTIR, XRD, SEM and anti-cancer activity. Orange peel silver nanoparticles exhibit satisfactory parameters results which shows this nanoparticle can be used for anticancer activity and both the compounds have good compatibility and effectiveness in the cancer cells and sustainability for the growth of the cancer. Silver nanoparticles are one of the most prominent compounds for cancer activity.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
AgO nanoparticles, ,UV, FTIR, XRD, Antibactrial Studies
Paper Title: Interest Rates and Stock Market Returns: A Cross-Country Literature Review
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603102
Register Paper ID - 302499
Title: INTEREST RATES AND STOCK MARKET RETURNS: A CROSS-COUNTRY LITERATURE REVIEW
Author Name(s): Shreyashi Purkayastha, Prof. Joydeep Goswami
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a826-a830
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 76
The relationship between interest rates and stock returns is a basic problem in financial economics, as it captures the interaction between monetary policy and stock market performance. This paper offers a cross-country analysis of the theoretical basis and empirical evidence for the relationship between interest rates and stock returns. Based on asset pricing theory and monetary transmission mechanisms, the analysis describes how interest rate changes affect stock prices via discount rate changes, corporate cash flows, portfolio rebalancing, and capital flow channels. The analysis contrasts the empirical evidence for developed and emerging markets, emphasizing the similarities in the negative relationship between interest rates and stock returns, while focusing on the differences in magnitude, volatility, and transmission mechanisms. The evidence indicates that developed markets display more stable and predictable responses to interest rate changes because of their more developed financial structures and sounder institutional frameworks, while emerging markets display greater responsiveness to both domestic and international interest rate shocks. The paper concludes that while the theoretical frameworks offer a consistent basis, cross-country differences are primarily explained by financial development, market integration, and macroeconomic stability.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Interest Rates; Stock Market Returns; Monetary Policy; Cross-Country Analysis; Asset Pricing; Financial Markets; Monetary Transmission Mechanism; Capital Flows
Paper Title: UNDERSTANDING ENDOMETRIOSIS THROUGH THE LENSE OF TRIDOSHA
Publisher Journal Name: IJCRT
Published Paper ID: - IJCRT2603101
Register Paper ID - 302517
Title: UNDERSTANDING ENDOMETRIOSIS THROUGH THE LENSE OF TRIDOSHA
Author Name(s): DR VINAYA VIJAY POTDAR, DR J.J. PAWAR, DR S.K. INGLE
Publisher Journal name: IJCRT
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Pages: a822-a825
Year: March 2026
Downloads: 77
Endometriosis is a gynecological disorder, reduces quality of life. It is approached through the lens of Ayurvedic Tridosha principles, offering a comprehensive understanding of its pathogenesis, symptoms, and management. This article explores the detail interplay of Vata, Pitta, and Kapha in endometriosis, highlighting the significance of doshic imbalance in the development and progression of the condition. By understanding the underlying doshic dynamics, Ayurvedic interventions can be tailored to restore balance and reduces symptoms, promoting overall well-being.
Licence: creative commons attribution 4.0
Endometriosis, Tridosha, Vata, Pitta, Kapha, Ayurveda, Ashayapkarsh Gati, Retrograde flow.
The International Journal of Creative Research Thoughts (IJCRT) aims to explore advances in research pertaining to applied, theoretical and experimental Technological studies. The goal is to promote scientific information interchange between researchers, developers, engineers, students, and practitioners working in and around the world.
Indexing In Google Scholar, ResearcherID Thomson Reuters, Mendeley : reference manager, Academia.edu, arXiv.org, Research Gate, CiteSeerX, DocStoc, ISSUU, Scribd, and many more International Journal of Creative Research Thoughts (IJCRT) ISSN: 2320-2882 | Impact Factor: 7.97 | 7.97 impact factor and ISSN Approved. Provide DOI and Hard copy of Certificate. Low Open Access Processing Charges. 1500 INR for Indian author & 55$ for foreign International author. Call For Paper (Volume 14 | Issue 5 | Month- May 2026)

