Amulya Reddy is an iconic  name in the world of energy policy and development alternatives.
        His work has inspired  several generations of scholars, policy analysts and activists, and continues  to remain important and relevant. However, his writings are spread out across a  large range of sources: journals, book chapters, newspapers and magazines. This  book selects some of his most salient contributions into one easily accessible  reader. 
  The first part consists of  six papers on technology choice and development alternatives, including three  broad conceptual essays on science, technology and development pathways; three  papers that provide concrete answers; and an article on the World Bank, critically  analysing the policies of one of the leading international financial  institutions. The second section addresses Reddy’s work on energy policy. This  section starts out with a broad overview of the energy crisis in India. It is  followed by a long essay articulating Reddy's policy making framework, his well  known “DEFENDUS” methodology. The next two articles focus on rural contexts,  and discuss goals, strategies, and design criteria for energy provision  therein. The section ends with two broader papers on the lessons of the California  Energy Crisis, and Nuclear Power, respectively. The book is prefaced with an autobiographical  essay, and excerpts of an interview he gave to the editor in the summer of  2002. 
  Reddy was a  citizen-scientist intent on building scientific and technological traditions that  addressed the “needs of the neediest”. His work exemplifies what the noted  social scientist, Ashis Nandy, has described as “alternative sciences”. What is  especially remarkable is that Reddy managed to be a highly original and productive  scientist while defying most of the conventions of how knowledge is produced in  institutionalised science in India.  Equally remarkable is the manner in which he has consistently integrated  morality and social vision with his quest for knowledge making.