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Rao, V. M.
- The Making of Agricultural Price Policy:A Review of CACP Reports
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1 Institute of Social and Economic Change, Bangalore-560072, IN
1 Institute of Social and Economic Change, Bangalore-560072, IN
Source
Journal of Indian School of Political Economy, Vol 13, No 1 (2001), Pagination: 1-28Abstract
The reports issued by the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP), spanning a period of three and a half decades since the mid-sixties, provide a useful documentation of the evolution of agricultural price policy from its inception in the shadow of a severe food crisis through the momentous changes in indian agriculture including the present phase of globalisation.- Book Review
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Authors
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1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, IN
1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, IN
Source
Journal of Indian School of Political Economy, Vol 14, No 2 (2002), Pagination: 367-371Abstract
Book Review Titles:
* Land reforms in India Vol 7: Issues of Equity in Rural Madhya Pradesh.
* Land reforms in India Vol 8: Performance and Challenges in Gujarat and Maharashtra.
- Mapping the Periphery:The Poor Communities in the Southern States
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Authors
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1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, IN
1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, IN
Source
Journal of Indian School of Political Economy, Vol 12, No 2 (2000), Pagination: 235-264Abstract
This paper presents the development characteristics of four broad groups of rural poor: scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, backward castes and religious minorities. The paper is based on the household data collected from thirty selected villages located in the four southern states. The data relate to the year 1992-93. The analysis seeks to bring out the significant differences in the development status among the broad groups of rural poor as also the gap in this respect between the poor and the rural upper strata. The data for the scheduled castes are disaggregated to see the differences across states, village types and sub-castes. An intention of the paper is to suggest that the Panchayat Raj Institutions operating at the district and lower levels could make use of relatively simple household data to identify meaningful subcategories of poor and prioritise anti-poverty programmes in a more effective manner than is possible by a procedure depending only on measurement of poverty. The paper also emphasises the need for researchers and policymakers to go beyond measurement of poverty to understand the poor and to see the link between poverty and the socio-economic environment and policy regime in which the poor operate.- Where Reforms Do Not Reach:Rural Poor in the Vicinity of Bangalore
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Authors
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1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, IN
1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, IN
Source
Journal of Indian School of Political Economy, Vol 12, No 1 (2000), Pagination: 1-19Abstract
The liberalisation-cum-globalisation strategy underlying the current phase of economic reforms in India has the objective of generating growth opportunities much more accessible to the poor than was the case during the planning regime.- Book Review
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Authors
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1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, IN
1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, IN
Source
Journal of Indian School of Political Economy, Vol 16, No 1 (2004), Pagination: 189-190Abstract
Book Review Title:* Andhra Pradesh Development:Economic Reforms and Challenges ahead CentreĀ for Economic and Social Studies.
- Book Review
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The volume under review is the ninth title in the series Land Reforms in India sponsored by Lalbahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration (LBSNAA), Mussoorie. The volume is published a decade after the first volume in the series-on Bihar-was published in 1993! The seminars, on which the volume is based, were held in 1991 and 1994. Interestingly, the seven papers selected from those presented in the seminars account for only a third of the volume. The rest of the papers are, apparently, contributed by scholars who had not participated in the seminars, but were invited later by the editor to write on selected themes relating to land issues in Tamil Nadu. While the editor needs to be commended for this initiative, the volume seems to reflect the diminishing interest in land reforms, except the few passionately committed to the ideology and development strategy underlying land reforms.
Authors
Affiliations
1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore-560012, IN
1 Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore-560012, IN
Source
Journal of Indian School of Political Economy, Vol 15, No 4 (2003), Pagination: 847-848Abstract
Land Reforms in India: Volume 9-Tamil Nadu: An Unfinished TaskThe volume under review is the ninth title in the series Land Reforms in India sponsored by Lalbahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration (LBSNAA), Mussoorie. The volume is published a decade after the first volume in the series-on Bihar-was published in 1993! The seminars, on which the volume is based, were held in 1991 and 1994. Interestingly, the seven papers selected from those presented in the seminars account for only a third of the volume. The rest of the papers are, apparently, contributed by scholars who had not participated in the seminars, but were invited later by the editor to write on selected themes relating to land issues in Tamil Nadu. While the editor needs to be commended for this initiative, the volume seems to reflect the diminishing interest in land reforms, except the few passionately committed to the ideology and development strategy underlying land reforms.