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De, H. K.
- Integrated Farming System:Is it a Panacea for the Resource-Poor Farm Families of Rainfed Ecosystem?
Abstract Views :270 |
PDF Views:87
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1 Krishi Vigyan Kendra, OUAT, Keonjhar 758 002, IN
1 Krishi Vigyan Kendra, OUAT, Keonjhar 758 002, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 110, No 6 (2016), Pagination: 969-971Abstract
Rainfed agriculture by resource-poor farm families plays a pivotal role in maintaining global food security. Poor access to resources has been a major concern for the farming community of such risk-prone areas. It is also characterized by social maladies like poverty, malnutrition and migration. Judicious and systematic use of available limited resources through integrated farming system paves the way for generating more employment and thereby could prove a sustainable and potent tool in fighting poverty.- Attachment to Shifting Cultivation among Konyak Naga Tribe in Eastern Himalaya:Choice or Compulsion?
Abstract Views :237 |
PDF Views:94
Authors
Affiliations
1 Central Agricultural University (I), Pasighat 791 102, IN
2 Krishi Anusandhan Bhavan-I, Pusa, New Delhi 110 012, IN
3 ICAR-Central Institute of Freshwater Aquaculture, Bhubaneswar 751 002, IN
1 Central Agricultural University (I), Pasighat 791 102, IN
2 Krishi Anusandhan Bhavan-I, Pusa, New Delhi 110 012, IN
3 ICAR-Central Institute of Freshwater Aquaculture, Bhubaneswar 751 002, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 116, No 8 (2019), Pagination: 1387-1391Abstract
Community attachment to places or practices and the cultural contexts of tribes are subjects of long traditions of research. A few studies, however, have extended these traditions into increasingly marginalized areas located beyond historically deprived upland communities. This study addresses issues related to the sentiments of attachment and constructions of place among the low-income Konyak Naga tribe in Nagaland, situated on the outer fringes of the Eastern Himalaya. Using four-dimensional model proposed by Raymond et al., with factor analysis, the study revealed that in addition to socio-economic factors that affect such connection to land and landscape, place dependence construct (lack of alternate livelihood) is observed to be the most important driver of attachment to the practice of shifting cultivation. This was followed by strong connections with the natural environment or nature bonding of Konyak Naga to the forest. Contribution of economic and traditional institution- bonding with the practice was found among the tribe as a means of livelihood. Sensing that such debate of the socio-spatial environment might be perceived as inconsistent, ill-informed and negative, we discuss implications in relation to cultural diversity and broader concerns about evolving rural poverty.Keywords
Factorial Analysis, Place Attachment Model, Shifting Cultivation, Tribal Communities.References
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