581 resultados para Kerala,
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The ‘Public interest’, even if viewed with ambiguity or scepticism, has been one of the primary means by which various professional roles of planners have been justified. Many objections to the concept have been advanced by writers in planning academia. Notwithstanding these, ‘public interest’ continues to be mobilised, to justify, defend or argue for planning interventions and reforms. This has led to arguments that planning will have to adopt and recognise some form of public interest in practice to legitimise itself.. This paper explores current debates around public interest and social justice and advances a vision of the public interest informed by complexity theory. The empirical context of the paper is the poverty alleviation programme, the Kudumbashree project in Kerala, India.
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This paper examines social sector expenditures in fifteen Indian states between 1980/81 and 1999/2000 to find out whether the far-reaching economic reforms that began in 1991 had any significant impact on the level and trend of these expenditures; and if there was any such impact, what were the reasons behind the ensuing changes. The empirical analysis in this study shows that revenue became a major determinant of social sector expenditures from the mid 1980s with the result that real per capita social sector expenditures in most states started to decline even before the economic reforms began as states' fiscal deficits worsened in the 1980s. Economic reforms, therefore, largely did not have a major negative impact on expenditures. In fact there was a positive impact on some states, which often were those that received more foreign aid than other states. By the late 1990s, states expending more on the social sector changed from states with a traditionally strong commitment to the social sector, such as Kerala, to states having higher revenues including aid from outside the country.
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Analyzes the role of Dalits (formerly untouchables) in shaping modern India, including discourse about caste, and interrogates the dominant narratives that have been used to represent India's history. This title was made Open Access by libraries from around the world through Knowledge Unlatched.
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Description based on: No. 258, published in 1987.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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The Pan-African (640 Ma) Chengannoor granite intrudes the NW margin of the Neoproterozoic high-grade metamorphic terrain of the Trivandrum Block (TB), southern India, and is spatially associated with the Cardamom hills igneous charnockite massif (CM). Geochemical features characterize the Chengannoor granite as high-K alkali-calcic I-type granite. Within the constraints imposed by the high temperature, anhydrous, K-rich nature of the magmas, comparison with recent experimental studies on various granitold source compositions, and trace- and rare-earth-element modelling, the distinctive features of the Chengannoor granite reflect a source rock of igneous charnockitic nature. A petrogenetic model is proposed whereby there was a period of basaltic underplating; the partial melting of this basaltic lower crust formed the CM charnockites. The Chengannoor granite was produced by the partial melting of the charnoenderbites from the CM, with subsequent fractionation dominated by feldspars. In a regional context, the Chengannoor I-type granite is considered as a possible heat source for the near-UHT nature of metamorphism in the northern part of the TB. This is different from previous studies, which favoured CM charnockite as the major heat source. The Occurrence of incipient charnockites (both large scale as well as small scale) adjacent to the granite as well as pegmatites (which contain CO2, CO2-H2O, F and other volatiles), suggests that the fluids expelled from the alkaline magma upon solidification generated incipient charnockites through fluid-induced lowering of water activity. Thus the granite and associated alkaline pegmatites acted as conduits for the transfer of heat and volatiles in the Achankovil Shear Zone area, causing pervasive as well as patchy charnockite formation. The transport Of CO2 by felsic melts through the southern Indian middle crust is suggested to be part of a crustal-scale fluid system that linked mantle heat and CO2 input with upward migration of crustally derived felsic melts and incipient charnockite formation, resulting in an igneous charnockite - I-type granite - incipient charnockite association.
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Care has come to dominate much feminist research on globalized migrations and the transfer of labor from the South to the North, while the older concept of reproduction had been pushed into the background but is now becoming the subject of debates on the commodification of care in the household and changes in welfare state policies. This article argues that we could achieve a better understanding of the different modalities and trajectories of care in the reproduction of individuals, families, and communities, both of migrant and nonmigrant populations by articulating the diverse circuits of migration, in particular that of labor and the family. In doing this, I go back to the earlier North American writing on racialized minorities and migrants and stratified social reproduction. I also explore insights from current Asian studies of gendered circuits of migration connecting labor and marriage migrations as well as the notion of global householding that highlights the gender politics of social reproduction operating within and beyond households in institutional and welfare architectures. In contrast to Asia, there has relatively been little exploration in European studies of the articulation of labor and family migrations through the lens of social reproduction. However, connecting the different types of migration enables us to achieve a more complex understanding of care trajectories and their contribution to social reproduction.
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Samudra Report No. 73, dated April 2016, features articles from India, Costa Rica, East and North Africa, Algeria, Norway, Sri Lanka, Tanzania and Southeast Asia. The articles from India focus on the construction of a port in Hazira and the livelihoods issues of women fishworkers in Kerala. The SSF Guidelines are covered by reports of workshops held in Costa Rica, Ethiopia, Algiers, Bali, Colombo, Tanzania and New Delhi. The report from Norway discusses the Norwegian Maritime Authority's mandate to raise safety-at-sea standards.
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Before using the basic precipitation data in any agroclimatic study to assess the productivity it is important to check the data series for homogeneity. For this purpose data of 105 locations for the period 1912-1981 over northeast Brazil were used. The preliminary study indicate nonhomogeneity in the time series during 1940's at few locations. The amplitude of variation of time series when taken as 10-year moving average show quite different for different regions. It appears that this amplitude is related to time of onset of effective rains in some extent. There is also great diversity in the fluctuations. They present a great regional diversity. Some diversity. Some of the data in the low latitudes indicate presence of four cycles namely 52, 26, 13 & 6.5. years. The 52-year cycle is also evident in the case of onset of southwest Monsoon over a low latitude zone (Kerala Coast) in India. In the case of south Africa the prominent cycles are 60, 30, 15 & 10 similar situation appears to be present in the higher latitudes of northeast Brazil.
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O crescimento da população gerou a ocupação de grandes áreas da superfície terrestre que provocaram alterações nas paisagens naturais. A apropriação desordenada do território, tendo em conta os espaços urbanos e rurais, trouxe vários impactos negativos ao meio ambiente. As linhas de água são os ecossistemas mais utilizados pelo homem ao longo da história, pela água, pesca, transporte, … e que simultaneamente vai modelando a paisagem pelas alterações do estado físico e modificações nas superfícies por onde corre. O sistema ribeirinho é constituído por vários ecossistemas, relacionados entre si e que são identificados transversalmente. Ao longo do ano é possível identificar, numa linha de água, três níveis: o de cheia durante o escoamento máximo anual no período das chuvas, o médio ao longo do ano e o de estiagem com o escoamento mínimo no pico do verão. Nas margens, a zonagem das espécies ripárias, está relacionada com a altitude, a unidade bioclimática, a distância do “eixo de humidade”, a geomorfologia, o tipo de solos e a matéria orgânica, entre outros fatores. Nas galerias ripícolas do Alentejo são frequentes cinco comunidades vegetais com grande diversidade de espécies, cujas presenças estão relacionadas com os níveis de água ao longo do ano e o tipo de solo: a) Choupais (Populus nigra), em solos sujeitos a prolongados encharcamentos. b) Salgueirais de borrazeiras pretas (Salix atrocinerea), em ribeiras com regime torrencial. c) Amiais (Alnus glutinosa), em solos com toalha freática à superfície. d) Freixiais (Fraxinus angustifolia) em solos húmidos, a comunidade mais comum no Alentejo. A vegetação marginal constitui um sistema elástico importante na proteção mecânica das margens contra o desgaste normal das águas, porque as mantêm seguras, protege o leito, favorece a riqueza piscícola e purifica as águas. Na proteção com sistemas rígidos e impermeáveis, verifica-se um elevado custo e estabilidade ameaçada nos pontos de contacto com as margens naturais, impede a comunicação natural entre a água que corre no leito do rio e a que se desloca em toda a largura do vale, provocando alterações no lençol freático. São vários, os valores associados à paisagem ribeirinha e, a titulo de exemplo, destacam-se: a) Simbólico: o Taj Mahal nas margens do rio Yamuna em Agra – Índia, classificado como Património da Humanidade pela UNESCO (1980) e a ponte Hintze Ribeiro destinada a unir as margens de Entre-os-Rios, em Penafiel e Castelo de Paiva, sobre o rio Douro e que colapsou em 4 de março de 2001, num acidente que provou 59 mortes. b) Histórico: a ponte medieval de San Martín (séc. XIV.) em Toledo – Espanha; o açude e termas romanas do séc. I a IV a.C., na Herdade de Almagrassa (Pisões) – Portugal e a villa romana da Tourega (séc. I a IV) que pertenceu ao senador Julius Maximus (Ivlivs Maximvs), como consta da lapide funerária encontrada na N. Sra. da Tourega (Évora) – Portugal. c) Mítico: a ponte romana em Cangas de Onís com a Cruz de la Victoria no principado de Astúrias – Espanha. d) Cultural: a atividade diária nas margens do rio Kottayam no distrito de Kerala – Índia; um fim de semana na margem do rio Danúbio na cidade de Viena – Aústria; as várzeas de rios goeses: Loutulim (Rio Zuari), Benaulim (represa de Komollam Tollem) e Betul (rio Sal) (Goa) – Índia e várzeas de rios cingaleses (região de Kandy) – Sri Lanka. e) Turístico: o palácio real de verão mandado construir pelo marajá Jagat Singh II (1734-1751) na ilha de Jag Niwas (1,5 ha) no lago Pichola. No fim da década de 60, tornou-se num dos mais famosos hotéis românticos do mundo, o Lake Palace Hotel – Índia e a queda de água de Karpuzkaldiran próximo da cidade de Antalya, cujo acesso é feito por escadas ou de barco – Turquia.