NPRC Journal of Multidisciplinary Research, Vol. 3 No. 2 (2026): Complete Issue Review
Opening Paragraph
The February 2026 issue of the NPRC Journal of
Multidisciplinary Research (Volume 3, Number 2) presents seventeen original
research articles spanning an impressive breadth of disciplinary domains,
including public administration, environmental science, health studies,
economics, education, migration studies, cultural heritage, and technology.
Published by Tribhuvan University Central Library through the Nepal Journals
Online platform, this issue demonstrates the journal's commitment to advancing
knowledge on pressing issues facing Nepal and the broader South Asian region.
The collection is particularly notable for its strong policy orientation, with
most articles offering actionable recommendations for policymakers,
practitioners, and community stakeholders. From examinations of green
governance and sustainable development to analyses of immigrant workers'
vulnerabilities and machine learning applications in economic forecasting, this
issue reflects both methodological diversity and contextual relevance. The following
reviews provide brief analytical summaries of each contribution, highlighting
their research approaches, key findings, and contributions to their respective
fields.
Article 1: Human Rights Approach in Nepal's
Development Strategies: A Critical Overview
Author: Er. Sachindra
Kumar Deo (Pages 1-11)
This foundational article opens the issue with a critical
examination of how the Human Rights-Based Approach (HRBA) has been
operationalized within Nepal's development framework. Through qualitative
analysis of constitutional texts, periodic plans, and institutional reports,
the author assesses the gap between normative commitments and substantive
outcomes. The study reveals that while Nepal has achieved substantial progress
in constitutionalizing fundamental rights and aligning development planning with
HRBA principles and Sustainable Development Goals, a persistent implementation
gap remains. The National Human Rights Commission, despite its constitutional
status and Paris Principles accreditation, faces challenges in enforcing its
recommendations due to weak institutional coordination and political
interference. Through a SWOT analysis, the article identifies federalism and
international partnerships as opportunities, while political instability and
entrenched social inequalities pose significant threats. The author concludes
that without strengthening sub-national governance, institutionalizing rights
education, and ensuring meaningful participation of marginalized groups, HRBA
risks remaining rhetorical rather than transformative.
Article 2: Coping Strategies of Teachers and
Students in Addressing Teaching-Learning Challenges within the Semester System
at Mid-West University
Author: Ramesh Khatri
(Pages 12-23)
This qualitative narrative inquiry explores the challenges
encountered by teachers and students in implementing the semester system at
Mid-West University, a newly established public institution in Nepal's remote
Karnali region. Through in-depth interviews with five teachers and five
students across five graduate schools, the study identifies five thematic
challenges: curriculum-practice mismatch, infrastructure and resource
constraints, ICT skill gaps, time pressure and assessment load, and adaptive self-reliance
amid weak institutional support. Teachers reported teaching outdated content,
such as referencing village development committees long after Nepal's
transition to federalism, and developed coping strategies including selective
teaching, reliance on online resources, and personal investment in teaching
materials. Students faced overcrowded classrooms, inadequate library resources,
and heavy assessment loads, responding through peer learning and self-study.
The study uniquely reveals how both groups demonstrate remarkable adaptability
despite systemic shortcomings, with teachers teaching on holidays and
developing self-prepared materials. The author recommends urgent curriculum
revision aligned with labor market demands, establishment of centralized digital
resource hubs, and balanced assessment policies.
Article 3: Impact of Road Infrastructure to Market
Access and Income Generating Opportunities of Rural Area in Mahottari District
of Nepal
Authors: Bhagu Yadav
& Madhav Prasad Dahal (Pages 24-40)
This mixed-methods study examines how road infrastructure
improvements between 2016 and 2024 have transformed rural livelihoods in three
municipalities of Mahottari District. Drawing on household surveys with 240
respondents, key informant interviews with rural municipality presidents, and
focus group discussions, the research demonstrates that improved road
connectivity has substantially enhanced market access by reducing travel time
and transportation costs. The findings reveal significant livelihood diversification:
while 78.2% of households relied primarily on agriculture before road
development, this figure decreased to 25.8% afterward, with households
transitioning to livestock farming, small businesses, shopkeeping, fishery, and
wage employment. Quantitative analysis shows that average monthly household
income increased from pre-road levels, with a mean impact score of 3.72
indicating strong positive effects. The study confirms Growth Pole Theory,
demonstrating how roads serve as catalysts for local economic development by
connecting rural producers to larger markets, enabling better prices for
agricultural goods, and facilitating access to inputs and services. The authors
recommend continued investment in rural road infrastructure integrated with local
economic planning and value chain development.
Article 4: Green Governance: The Role of Public
Administration in Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals
Authors: Prem Bahadur
Giri, Tek Nath Dhakal, Hari Prasad Ghimire, Uttam Raj Giri & Ajay Giri
(Pages 41-64)
This systematic literature review, conducted using the
PRISMA 2020 framework across Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar
databases, reconceptualizes green governance as an administrative
transformation process rather than merely sectoral environmental policy.
Analyzing 53 studies published since 2020, the authors identify five
fundamental dimensions of green governance: governance mechanisms, bureaucratic
capacity, policy instruments, institutional barriers, and best practices. The
review reveals that comprehensive and inclusive governance systems enhance
policy coherence and legitimacy, while professional and independent
bureaucracies optimize regulatory and adaptive capacity. Notably, the study
finds that sustainability performance is enhanced through combined regulatory,
market-based, and informational tools, yet fragmented institutions, limited
capacity, weak accountability, and political short-termism continue to
constrain SDG implementation. The theoretical contribution lies in positioning
public administration as a constitutive agent mediating between sustainability
aspirations and measurable outcomes. The authors conclude that countries with
stronger administrative capacity and integrated governance systems are more
likely to achieve sustained progress on environmental SDGs, offering policy
implications for inter-ministerial coordination, capacity building,
participatory governance, and performance-based monitoring.
Article 5: Carbon Sequestration Rates Using the
Allometric Equations of the Fast Growing Paulownia tomentosa (Thunb.) in
Central Nepal
Authors: Nabin Raj Joshi
& Gunanand Pant (Pages 65-89)
This original research addresses a critical gap in Nepal's
forestry science by developing species-specific allometric equations for
Paulownia tomentosa, a fast-growing tree species recently introduced to Nepal
for its carbon sequestration and land restoration potential. Through
destructive sampling of nineteen 15-20-year-old trees at ICIMOD's Knowledge
Park in Godavari, the researchers measured biomass across seven tree components
and developed regression models based on diameter at breast height (DBH). The
study finds that the logarithmic model ln(M) = β₀ + β₁ ln(D) provides the most
optimal predictions, with DBH serving as a reliable single predictor while
adding tree height did not improve model performance. The carbon sequestration
analysis reveals remarkable results: mean baseline carbon stock of 149.81 tC
ha⁻¹ in 2014 increased to 202.01 tC ha⁻¹ by 2022, yielding a sequestration rate
of 5.87 tC ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹. This rate exceeds those reported for REDD+ pilot sites in
Nepal and Indian Himalayan forests. The root-shoot ratio of 0.11 indicates
greater aboveground biomass allocation, suggesting the species may not be ideal
for highly erosive slopes. The equations provide smallholders, community forest
managers, and policymakers with practical tools for estimating plantation
productivity and carbon credits.
Article 6: Risks of De-institutionalizing Foreign
Policy in Nepal
Author: Kaushal Kishor
Ray (Pages 90-98)
This timely policy analysis examines the growing trend of
de-institutionalizing foreign policy in Nepal, where formal diplomatic
processes are increasingly bypassed in favor of informal, ad-hoc, and
leader-centric approaches. Drawing on institutionalism and foreign policy
analysis frameworks, the author identifies globalization, rapid advancement of
information technology, democratization of foreign policy, and domestic
political instability as primary drivers. The study critically analyzes how
this trend has led to poor inter-agency coordination, fragmented policy
positions in international negotiations, weakened accountability, and
suboptimal outcomes in areas like climate diplomacy and international
development cooperation. The author draws parallels with Mexico's experience,
where neoliberal reforms led to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs losing
coordination powers in technical areas. In Nepal's context, with 17 governments
in 20 years, political instability has exacerbated institutional erosion, leading
to confusion over institutional arrangements for climate finance negotiations
and challenges in ratifying international agreements like the MCC Compact. The
article concludes that reversing this trend requires enhanced
institutionalization, capacity-building within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
and strengthening of established rules and coordinating mechanisms to ensure
policy continuity, credibility, and efficacy.
Article 7: Crop Insurance in Nepal: Farmers'
Perception on Paddy Crop Insurance and Institutional Performance in Chitwan and
Bardiya Districts
Authors: Shiva Sundar
Ghimire, Shiddi Ganesh Shrestha, Hari Krishna Panta, Govinda Prasad Sharma
& Udit Prakash Sigdel (Pages 99-115)
This comprehensive mixed-methods study investigates the
persistently low penetration of Nepal's subsidized agricultural insurance
program, focusing on paddy farmers in two major grain-producing districts.
Surveying 460 respondents equally divided between insured and non-insured
farmers, supplemented by key informant interviews and focus group discussions,
the research reveals a striking paradox: while farmers appreciate the
government's initiative (index value 0.44), they express strong dissatisfaction
with claim procedures, compensation adequacy (-0.27), and timely payment
(-0.31). Institutional performance assessment shows the Nepal Insurance
Authority receiving negative perceptions across most roles (-0.09 mean index),
particularly in dispute resolution (-0.21) and claim documentation facilitation
(-0.14). Insurance companies performed better on document requirements (0.27)
but poorly on timely claim payment (-0.30). Key barriers include complex
documentation, delayed claim settlement, low awareness, and poor coordination
among implementing agencies. The study uniquely compares Chitwan and Bardiya
districts, revealing significant socio-demographic differences with Bardiya
exhibiting higher illiteracy (39.52%) and ethnic diversity. The authors
recommend standardized technology-based loss assessment mechanisms, trained
loss assessors, simplified procedures, and active dispute resolution roles for
regulatory bodies.
Article 8: Ensemble Based Machine Learning Model for
Prediction of Diabetes
Author: Ramesh Prasad
Bhatta (Pages 116-129)
This technical study evaluates the performance of ensemble
learning algorithms for early diabetes prediction using the PIMA Indian
Diabetes dataset, with important implications for healthcare in developing
countries where early detection can reduce complications and expenses. The
research benchmarks AdaBoost, Gradient Boosting, XGBoost, and a Stacking
Ensemble model against traditional approaches, employing rigorous
preprocessing, cross-validation, and performance metrics including accuracy,
precision, recall, F1-score, and ROC-AUC. Results demonstrate a clear hierarchy
in model performance: AdaBoost achieved 76% accuracy (ROC-AUC 0.81), Gradient
Boosting 79% (0.85), XGBoost 82% (0.88), and the Stacking Ensemble 86% (0.91).
The Stacking Ensemble's superior performance (4.8% relative improvement over
XGBoost) stems from its ability to capitalize on model diversity, combining
AdaBoost's strength in classifying difficult instances, Gradient Boosting's
error learning, XGBoost's complex interaction capture, and logistic
regression's optimal output combination. The balanced precision (0.82) and
recall (0.80) values are particularly critical for medical applications where
minimizing false negatives prevents missed diagnoses. The study concludes that
ensemble methods, particularly stacking, offer robust tools for early diabetes
detection, with implications for developing decision support systems in
resource-constrained healthcare settings.
Article 9: The Chariot, Communities, and State:
Negotiating Heritage Governance in the Bungadya Jatra
Author: Bikash Gnawali
(Pages 130-146)
This ethnographic case study examines the complex
governance dynamics surrounding the Bungadya Jatra (Rato Matsyendranath
Festival), a 7th-century living tradition in Nepal's Lalitpur district. Through
policy analysis, cultural observations during the 2025 festival cycle, and
interviews with eleven key stakeholders including hereditary priests,
carpenters, rope-work specialists, and municipal officers, the research reveals
that the festival's preservation challenges stem not from lack of rules but
from fragmented governance across multiple agencies. The study applies a
triangulated theoretical framework combining Material-Based, Living-Heritage,
and Value-Based approaches to analyze conflicts between the 60-foot wooden
chariot's traditional route and modern urban infrastructure. Findings document
how the Barahi Guthiyar's traditional woodworking skills (using nail-less
joints), the Yawal Guthi's rope-work expertise, and the Paneju priests' ritual
knowledge are threatened by economic pressures and urban encroachment. The
research identifies critical tensions: between material integrity and urban
development, between ritual autonomy and state regulation, and between
traditional funding systems and modern economies. The author proposes a single
Festival Management Authority combining municipal planning with Guthi
traditions, designation of the parade route as a "Mobile Heritage
Corridor," and a "Living Human Treasures" program to support
hereditary practitioners financially and technically.
Article 10: Cultural Retention and Adaptation among
Nepali Immigrants in Canada
Author: Sharad Acharya
(Pages 147-163)
This qualitative study addresses a significant gap in
diaspora literature by examining how Nepali immigrants in Canada navigate the
dual challenge of preserving cultural heritage while integrating into a
multicultural society. Through semi-structured interviews with ten purposively
selected first- and second-generation immigrants, the research employs thematic
analysis within an integrated theoretical framework combining Acculturation
Theory, Transnationalism, Cultural Identity Theory, and Social Remittance
Theory. Findings reveal that major festivals (Dashain, Tihar, Losar) remain
strongly preserved among first-generation immigrants, while minor rituals
decline among younger generations who participate for social rather than
religious reasons. Language maintenance faces significant challenges due to
English dominance in schools and peer interactions, with community institutions
like Gurukul schools playing vital compensatory roles. The study uniquely
documents how Canadian multicultural policies facilitate cultural expression,
with non-Nepali friends wearing saris during Teej celebrations. Digital media
emerges as a crucial tool for cultural continuity, connecting immigrants to
festivals and practices across borders. Intergenerational dynamics show
second-generation youth developing hybrid identities, with some reporting
feelings of marginalization due to limited cultural knowledge. The research
concludes that cultural adaptation does not replace heritage but rather
produces dynamic bicultural identities shaped by family practices, community
support, and multicultural opportunities.
Article 11: Machine Learning for Remittance
Forecasting and Macroeconomic Dynamics in Nepal: An Integrated Analytical
Framework
Author: Bhola Nath
Ghimire (Pages 164-179)
This innovative study develops an integrated machine
learning framework for forecasting remittance inflows to Nepal and analyzing
their macroeconomic impacts, addressing the limitations of traditional
econometric models in capturing nonlinear dependencies and structural breaks.
Using monthly data (2000-2023) from Nepal Rastra Bank, the World Bank, and the
Department of Foreign Employment, the author benchmarks ARIMA and VAR models
against Random Forest, XGBoost, LSTM, and a hybrid LSTM-Attention architecture.
The hybrid LSTM-Attention model achieves remarkable 45% improvement in
forecasting accuracy (4.9% MAPE) compared to ARIMA. SHAP analysis reveals
exchange rate volatility as the most influential predictor, with an inverted
U-shaped effect: moderate volatility (0.02-0.04) increases remittances, while
excessive volatility (>0.06) reduces them. Oil prices show a structural
break after Nepal's 2015 migration policy liberalization, with strong positive
relationships emerging post-reform. Macroeconomic impact analysis using
ML-augmented VAR shows a one-standard-deviation remittance shock increases GDP
growth by 0.35 percentage points (peak at 6 months) and inflation by 0.18
percentage points (peak at 14 months), revealing delayed inflationary
transmission. The study concludes that remittances exhibit a dual macroeconomic
role—stimulating short-term growth while generating delayed inflationary
pressures—recommending policy focus on managing volatility rather than levels.
Article 12: Understanding the Multifaceted
Challenges of Immigrant Women Workers in Nepal
Authors: Namrata Grace
Gurung & Sunita Mainali (Pages 211-219)
This groundbreaking study addresses a critically
under-examined population: immigrant women workers who migrate to Nepal from
other countries, primarily India and Bangladesh, and are employed in informal,
unregulated sectors like domestic work, caregiving, and hospitality. Employing
qualitative critical policy analysis and integrative literature review through
a gender-responsive and intersectional lens, the research reveals how
intersecting structures of gender, class, nationality, and legal status produce
profound marginalization. The analysis demonstrates that Nepal's migration
governance frameworks are structurally biased toward outbound migration, with
policies like the National Action Plan on Business and Human Rights (2024-2028)
failing to extend meaningful protection to inbound workers. Key findings
document that employment in the informal economy places these women outside
standard labor protections, leading to wage exploitation, unsafe working
conditions, and harassment. Immigration status, often irregular or
undocumented, creates barriers to reporting abuse and accessing justice. The
study includes the poignant case of Hira Bhujel, who died after being abandoned
by her employer while undocumented, illustrating the human cost of policy gaps.
The authors call for a paradigm shift toward gender-responsive, intersectional
approaches extending labor rights, monitoring, and grievance mechanisms to all
workers within Nepal's borders regardless of origin or documentation status.
Article 13: The Bhagavad Gita as a Framework for
Sattvic AI: Aligning Artificial Intelligence with Sustainable Development
Authors: Shiva Raj
Adhikari, Hira Lal Shrestha & Dasarath Neupane (Pages 220-229)
This conceptually innovative article bridges ancient
philosophical wisdom with contemporary technological challenges by developing a
unique ethical framework for sustainable artificial intelligence based on
Bhagavad Gita concepts. Critiquing the dominant "move fast and break
things" approach to technology development, the authors argue that without
robust ethical foundations, AI threatens to worsen sustainability crises and
hinder achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. The framework applies
three fundamental Gita concepts: Dharma (Cosmic Duty) to redefine AI's purpose
toward Lokasamgraha (world welfare); Nishkama Karma (selfless action) to
discipline AI development through process-oriented ethical review; and the
three Gunas (Sattva, Rajas, Tamas) as an evaluative framework for AI systems.
The authors develop practical implementation tools including Dharma Statements
articulating AI's cosmic and social duty, Nishkama Development Protocols such
as pre-mortem ethical failure analysis and blind ethical review, and Guna
Impact Assessments (GIA) requiring developers to score systems across Sattvic,
Rajasic, and Tamasic dimensions. The framework proposes governance innovations
including Dharma Councils with veto powers and incentive realignment to overcome
"first-mover disadvantage" for sustainability. This represents the
first systematic application of Bhagavad Gita philosophy to create operational
pathways for ethical and sustainable AI development.
Article 14: Gaps in Teaching Comprehensive Sexuality
Education: A Review of Literature
Authors: Sharmila
Pokharel & Bhimsen Devkota (Pages 230-243)
This systematic literature review examines how
Comprehensive Sexuality Education (CSE) is actually taught to children aged
5-15 years across diverse socio-cultural contexts, with special emphasis on
Nepal where progressive policies coexist with limited classroom practice.
Analyzing 45 peer-reviewed studies from over 15 countries published between
2010-2024, the authors identify three major implementation gaps: inadequate
teacher preparation and discomfort teaching sensitive topics; socio-cultural
and religious barriers creating classroom silence; and reliance on outdated,
lecture-based pedagogy rather than participatory methods. In Nepal, despite
supportive policies, CSE remains fragmented, culturally shame-bound, and
biologically focused, excluding critical topics like consent, gender equality,
and sexual diversity. The review uniquely centers on teaching processes rather
than content, revealing that teachers worldwide agree CSE is necessary but
struggle with implementation due to training gaps, personal values conflicts,
and cultural taboos. Students across contexts desire comprehensive information
but rely on informal, often inaccurate sources. The authors propose Anderson
and Krathwohl's revised Bloom's taxonomy as a framework for moving beyond
factual recall toward critical thinking and practical skill development.
Alternative delivery models including online platforms, peer education, and
community-integrated approaches show promise for Nepal's context, where
internet access is rapidly increasing among adolescents.
Article 15: Behavioural Biases and Mutual Fund
Investment Decisions: The Role of Loss Aversion and Risk Perception
Authors: P Radha, Manju
Priya R & G. Srividya (Pages 244-253)
This quantitative study examines how psychological biases
influence mutual fund investment decisions among 180 retail investors in India,
focusing specifically on loss aversion and risk perception. Using multiple
regression analysis and chi-square tests, the research demonstrates that both
loss aversion (β = -0.410, p < 0.001) and risk perception (β = -0.330, p
< 0.001) have significant negative effects on investment decisions, together
explaining 38% of the variance in investor behavior (R² = 0.38). Cross-tabulation
analysis reveals that investors with low loss aversion show higher proportions
in high investment decision categories, while those with high loss aversion
concentrate in low decision categories. Similarly, investors with low risk
perception demonstrate higher participation in high investment decisions. The
study uniquely quantifies how these biases manifest in specific behaviors:
investors with high loss aversion and elevated risk perception demonstrate
conservative decision-making, premature redemptions during market volatility,
and inconsistent investment patterns that potentially undermine long-term
wealth creation. The findings challenge traditional financial theories assuming
rational investor behavior, supporting prospect theory's assertion that losses
hurt more than equivalent gains feel good. Practical recommendations include
behavioral counseling during market downturns, simplified risk communication
through scenario-based disclosures, and investor education programs focusing on
bias awareness and long-term investing principles.
Article 16: Awareness and Preventive Practices
related to Cervical Cancer among Women in Pokhara Metropolitan City
Author: Rojana Dhakal
(Pages 254-268)
This community-based cross-sectional study assesses
cervical cancer awareness and screening utilization among 464 married women
aged 21-65 years in Pokhara Metropolitan City, addressing a critical public
health concern in Nepal where cervical cancer is a leading cause of
cancer-related morbidity and mortality. Using structured interviews and Bloom's
cut-off points for knowledge assessment, the research reveals alarming gaps
despite high-level awareness. While 90.3% of participants had heard of cervical
cancer, 90% demonstrated poor awareness of the disease and its screening. Only
17.7% had undergone screening, with 61% of those screened reporting Pap smear
tests. The primary reason for non-participation was absence of perceived health
problems (79.8%), followed by inadequate knowledge about the test. Statistical
analysis shows significant associations between awareness levels and
educational status, occupation, age at marriage, parity, and age at first
childbirth. The study contextualizes findings within WHO's 90-70-90 global
strategy for cervical cancer elimination, noting that while national guidelines
recommend Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid (VIA) for women of reproductive
age, screening coverage remains limited with only a small proportion ever screened.
The author recommends targeted culturally sensitive educational interventions
addressing misconceptions about feeling healthy, provider-initiated counseling,
and community-based awareness programs to improve knowledge and promote regular
screening.
Closing Paragraph
Collectively, the seventeen articles in this issue of the
NPRC Journal of Multidisciplinary Research offer a compelling portrait of
contemporary scholarship on Nepal and the broader South Asian region. Several
cross-cutting themes emerge from this diverse collection. First, a persistent
implementation gap between policy intent and practical outcomes appears across
multiple domains—from human rights-based development and educational reform to
agricultural insurance and heritage governance—suggesting that institutional
quality and administrative capacity are as critical as policy design. Second,
methodological innovation is evident throughout, with studies employing machine
learning for economic forecasting and disease prediction, allometric equations
for carbon accounting, and qualitative approaches for understanding migration
and cultural retention. Third, the issue demonstrates strong commitment to
addressing pressing social challenges, including women's health, immigrant
worker vulnerabilities, adolescent sexuality education, and climate-resilient
infrastructure. The journal's multidisciplinary scope enables productive
cross-fertilization of ideas, with governance frameworks from public
administration informing analyses of heritage management, and behavioral
economics insights enriching understanding of investment decisions. As Nepal
continues its federal transition and grapples with sustainable development
challenges, research of this caliber—grounded in local contexts while engaging
with global scholarly conversations—provides essential evidence for informed
policymaking and practice. This issue successfully advances the journal's
mission of bridging academic research with real-world applications in Nepal and
beyond.

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