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Dr. Priya Makhija
Priya Makhija (PhD), is currently working with Jain (deemed to be) University – Center for Management Studies, Bangalore, Karnataka, India. She holds a PhD (Management) from Pacific University, Rajasthan on Occupational Role Stress (ORS). She has completed her M.Com, MBA, M.Phil and PGDHRM. She has more than 15 years of experience in teaching B.Com, BBA M.Com and MBA students. Her areas of interest are Women growth as Investor, Women leadership in Higher Education, Enhancing quality of higher education, women as investors, and Employee Retention. She has contributed to academics by attending conferences, webinars, seminars, FDPs and MDPs. She is dedicated faculty and a great mentor for students. She has published research papers nationally and internationally also in Scopus Indexed journals. She has delivered numerous Guest lectures in various Institutes. She has been invited as panel member for conferences. She is being awarded as Prof. Indira Parikh 50 Women in Education Leaders at the World Education Congress. has been elected as for Distinguish Teacher award by MTC Education Global. She is member of AIMS and MTC Global Trust. She has contributed in chapter writing in book on Human resource gamification.
Research Interest:
- Occupational Role Stress,
- Women growth as Investor,
- Women leadership in Higher Education,
- Enhancing quality of higher education and
- Employee Retention,
- Gold Market,
- Financial Inclusion.
- Fintech
Discipline | Count of Research |
---|---|
Human Resource Management | 1 |
Dr. Priya Makhija
, Dr. Elizabeth Chacko
Published Since: November 03, 2020 COVID-19 has been declared pandemic by WHO, the impact of which is still getting assessed. The ways through which this situation has been handled world-wide is social distancing and lockdown. The decline in economic activity and constraints on people’s movements is impacting both manufacturing and services. Underemployment is also expected to grow on a large scale. Labour supply is declining due to quarantine measures and a slowdown in economic activity. |