C Disclosure Authorized PEOPLE with DISABILITIES in INDIA: from COMMITMENTS to OUTCOMES

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

C Disclosure Authorized PEOPLE with DISABILITIES in INDIA: from COMMITMENTS to OUTCOMES 41585 Public Disclosure Authorized PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES IN INDIA: FROM COMMITMENTS TO OUTCOMES Public Disclosure Authorized Human Development Unit South Asia Region The World Bank Public Disclosure Authorized May 2007 Document of the World Bank Public Disclosure Authorized Acknowledgements This report was prepared by Philip O’Keefe (Team Leader) based on background papers by a team composed of Venkatesh Sundararaman, Anupriya Chaddha, and N.K. Jangira (Education); Maitreyi B. Das, Madhumita Puri and Namita Jacob (Health); Sophie Mitra and Usha Sambamoorthi (Employment); Meenu Bhambani (Policies and Institutions); Alana Officer (NGOs); Robert Palacios (Social Insurance); Jeff Hammer (Framework), and Sarabjit Singh (Access). Much of the data analysis of both NSS and other surveys was carried out by Corinne Siaens, whose work in particular provided the basis for the socio-economic profile of people with disabilities. Initial data set-up was done by Mehtab Azam. The report has also benefited from a survey and qualitative work carried out in late 2005 in Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu by AC Nielsen/ORG-MARG by a team led by Sumit Kumar. The team benefited from the guidance of officials from the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, including Ashish Khanna, Additional Secretary, former Joint Secretary, Smt. Jayati Chandra, the JS for disability issues, Mr. G.N. Pegu, and Mr. Ashish Kumar, Deputy DG, as well as Smt. Uma Thuli, former Chief Commissioner for Disabilities. There was also guidance provided by an inter-ministerial Technical Advisory Group set up for the work, chaired by MoSJE and consisting of representatives from the Ministries of Health, Labor, Human Resource Development, and Rural Development, as well as an NGO representative. In addition, Mr. Keshav Desiraju from the Ministry of Human Resource Development supported the team’s work. Officials in various states – in particular in Rajasthan, Karnataka, Orissa, Uttar Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu - were also helpful in meeting with team members and providing information. The team is also grateful for guidance and insights received from the following people: Javed Abidi and his staff (NCPEDP); Mithu and Sathi Alur, and their colleagues at the Spastic Society of India, Mumbai; Kevan Moll (VSO); Samir Ghosh (Independent disability consultant); Geeta Sharma (Unnati); Shruti Mohapatra (Swabhiman); Ashok and Asha Hans (SMMRI); participants in the Kolkata Inclusive Education consultation, and in the Mumbai workshop on Disability and Disaster Management, both in November 2005; Sanjeev Sachdeva and Anjlee Agarwal (Samarthya); Bhushan Punani (Blind Persons’ Association); Harsh Mander; and staff of Action- Aid New Delhi. The report was prepared under the overall guidance of Mansoora Rashid (Sector Manager for Social Protection, SASHD), Julian Schweitzer (Sector Director, SASHD) and Michael Carter (Country Manager for India). The team also benefited from useful inputs from peer reviewers, Daniel Mont (Disability and Development Unit, World Bank), Barbara Harriss-White (Oxford University), Lant Pritchett (SASSD), and Jonathan Gruber (MIT), and the comments of Fayez Omar (SASIN), Judith Heumann, Pia Rockhold and Jeanine Braithwaite (Disability and Development Unit), and Dipak Dasgupta (SASPR). Karthika Nair and Gertrude Cooper provided excellent team assistance throughout the work. ii Abbreviations and Acronyms ADL Activities of Daily Living ANM Auxiliary Nurse-midwives AP Andhra Pradesh CAPART Council for the Advancement of People’s Action in Rural Technology CBR Community Based Rehabilitation CDC Centers for Disease Control CPWD Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities CSN Children with Special Needs CWD Children with Disabilities DALYs Disability-adjusted Life Years DC Defined Contribution DIET District Institute for Education Training DISE District Information System for Education DMHP District Mental Health Programme DPEP District Primary Education Programme DPO Disabled Persons Organization DRC District Rehabilitation Center EPFO Employees’ Provident Fund Organization EPS Employees’ Pension Scheme FICCI Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry GOI Government of India IADL Instrumental Activities of Daily Living IAY Indira Avaz Yogana ICDS Integrated Child Development Services ICIDH International Classification of Impairments, Disability and Handicaps IDD Iodine Deficiency Disorders IED Integrated Education of the Disabled IEDC Integrated Education of Disabled Children J&K Jammu and Kashmir LIC Life Insurance Corporation of India MDG Millennium Development Goal MDT Multi Drug Therapy MHRD Ministry of Human Resource Development MI Mental Illness MP Madhya Pradesh MR Mental Retardation MSJE Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment MSS Mahila Swasthya Sanghas iii MTA Mother Teacher Association NCPEDP National Centre for Promotion of Employment for Disabled People NFCP National Filaria Control Program NFHS National Family Health Survey NGO Non Government Organization NHFDC National Handicapped Finance and Development Corporation NIACL New India Assurance Company Limited NLEP National Leprosy Eradication Programme NPS New Pension Scheme NREGS National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme NSS National Sample Survey NSSO National Sample Survey Office NTD Neural Tube Defects OBC Other Backward Class PC Planning Commission PHC Primary Health Centers POA Plan of Action PPI Pulse Polio Immunization campaign PRI Panchayati Raj Institution PTA Parent Teacher Association PWD Persons with Disabilities RCH Reproductive and Child Health RCI Rehabilitation Council of India RRTC Regional Rehabilitation Training Centers SC Scheduled Caste SCA State Channelizing Agency SCERT State Council of Education Research and Training SGRY Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana SGSY Swaranjayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana SHG Self Help Groups SSA Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan ST Scheduled Tribe TBA Traditional Birth Attendants TN Tamil Nadu UP Uttar Pradesh VEC Village Education Committee VRC Vocational Rehabilitation Centre W&CD Women and Child Development WHO World Health Organization WWD Women with Disabilities iv Table of Contents EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ....................................................................................................... x INTRODUCTION AND FRAMEWORK.................................................................................... 1 CHAPTER 1: SOCIO-ECONOMIC PROFILE OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES.................... 7 A. Socio-economic profile of PWD ........................................................................................ 7 B. Conclusions and recommendations .................................................................................. 18 CHAPTER 2: ATTITUDES TOWARDS DISABILITY AND PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES....... 21 Conclusions and recommendations........................................................................................... 29 CHAPTER 3: HEALTH AND PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES ................................................. 33 A. Causes of Disability in India ............................................................................................ 33 B. Prevention of Disability.................................................................................................... 38 C. Curative and rehabilitative health interventions and PWD .............................................. 42 C. Use of Health Services by PWD ...................................................................................... 45 D. Factors affecting PWD access to health care ................................................................... 50 E. Conclusions and Recommendations................................................................................. 54 CHAPTER 4: EDUCATION FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES............................................ 57 A. Indian and International Policy Developments on Education of CWD............................ 58 B. Educational profile of PWD ............................................................................................. 61 C. Public Interventions to Promote Education of Children with Special Needs................... 66 D. Non-government roles in education for CWD ................................................................. 80 E. Conclusions and recommendations .................................................................................. 82 CHAPTER 5: EMPLOYMENT OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES........................................ 84 A. Labor Market status of PWD............................................................................................ 84 B. Determinants of employment for PWD............................................................................ 91 C. Interventions to promote employment among PWD........................................................ 94 D. Conclusions and recommendations ................................................................................ 108 CHAPTER 6: SOCIAL PROTECTION FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES .......................... 109 A. Poverty Alleviation and Social Assistance Schemes for PWD ...................................... 109 B. Disability Insurance in India .......................................................................................... 115 C. Recommendations .......................................................................................................... 121 CHAPTER 7:POLICIES AND INSTITUTIONS FOR PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES IN INDIA123 A. Policies for disability in India .......................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • District Census Handbook, 33-Banda, Uttar
    CENSUS 1961 DISTRICT CENSUS HANDBOOK UTTAR PRADESH 33-BANDA DISTRICT LUCKNOW: Superintendent, Printing and Stationery, U. P. (India) 1965 [Price Rs. 10.00 Preface: • Introduction I-CENSUS TABLES A-GENERAL POPULATION TABLES A-I Area, Houses and Population Appendix II-Number of Villages with a Population of 5,000 and over and Towns with Ii 6 Population unuer 5,000 6 Appendix Ill-Houseless and Institutional Population 6 A--II Variation in Population during Sixty Years 7 Appendix 1951 Population according to the territorial jurisdiction in 1951 and cbanges in area and population invalved in those changes 7 A-III Villages Classified by Population a A-IV Towns (and Town-groups) classified by Population in 1961 with Variation since 1941 9 Appendix New Towns added in 1961 and Towns in 1951 declassified in 1961 10 Explanatory Note to the Appendix 10 B-GENERAL ECONOMIC TABLES B-1 & II Workers and Non-workers in District and Towns classified by Sex and Broad Age-groups 12 B-III Part A-Industrial Classification of Workers and Non-workers by Educational Levels in Urban Areas only 18 Part B-Industrial Classification of Workers and Non-workers by Educational Levels in Rural Areas only 20 B-IV Part A-Industrial Classification by Sex and Class of Worker of Peraona at Work at Household Industry Part B-Industrial Classification by Sex and Class of Worker of Persons at Work in Non-household Industry, Trade, Business, Profession or Service 28 Part C-Industrial Classification by Sex and Divisions, Major Groups and Minor Groups of Persons at Work other than Cultivation 35 Occupational Claasification by Sex of Persons at Work other than Cultivation.
    [Show full text]
  • MIGRATION of NURSING and MIDWIFERY WORKFORCE in the STATE of KERALA This Report Was Prepared by Researchers from Oxford Policy Management (Krishna D
    CASE STUDY | INDIA FROM BRAIN DRAIN TO BRAIN GAIN MIGRATION OF NURSING AND MIDWIFERY WORKFORCE IN THE STATE OF KERALA This report was prepared by researchers from Oxford Policy Management (Krishna D. Rao, Aarushi Bhatnagar, Radhika Arora, Swati Srivastava, Udit Ranjan), the Centre for Development Studies, Trivandrum (S. Irudaya Rajan, Sunitha Syam), the Health Systems Research India Initiative (Arun Nair, S.J. Sini Thomas), and the WHO Country Office for India (Tomas Zapata). Please address all correspondence to Krishna D. Rao ([email protected]) and Aarushi Bhatnagar ([email protected]) © WHO, all rights reserved November 2017 Contents Acknowledgements .......................................................3 6. Discussion ....................................... 29 Abbreviations ...............................................................4 6.1 Production, stock and migration of nurses ....... 29 6.1.1 Production ...................................... 29 Executive summary ........................................................5 6.1.2 Stock .............................................. 30 1. Background ........................................ 7 6.1.3 Migration ........................................ 31 6.2 Factors influencing migration patterns ............ 33 1.1 Kerala state ..................................................9 6.2.1 Endogenous push and pull factors ....... 33 1.2 Migration of health workers........................... 10 6.2.2 Exogenous push and pull factors .........34 2. Objectives .......................................
    [Show full text]
  • THE 10Th Sitting July 1982 PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES
    10th Sitting July 1982 THE PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES OFFICIAL REPORTS [Volume 9] PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE SECOND SESSION (1982) OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF THE FOURTH PARLIAMENT OF GUYANA UNDER THE CONSTITUTION OF THE CO-OPERATIVE REPUBLIC OF GUYANA 10th Sitting 14:00 hrs Thursday, 1982-07-08 MEMBERS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY (75) Speaker (1) *Cde. Sase Narain, O R., J.P., M.P. Speaker of the National Assembly Members of the Government - People’s National Congress (62) Prime Minister (1) *Cde. Dr. P.A. Reid, O.E., M.P., Prime Minister Other Vice-Presidents (4) Cde. S.S. Naraine, A.A., M.P., Vice-President, Works and Transport Cde. H.D. Hoyte, S.C., M.P., Vice-President, Economic Planning and Finance Cde. H. Green, M.P., Vice-President, Agriculture Cde. B. Ramsaroop, M.P., Vice-President, Party and State Matters Senior Ministers (7) Cde. R. Chandisingh, M.P., Minister of Education Cde. R.H.O. Corbin, M.P., Minister of National and Regional Development *Cde. F.E. Hope, M.P., Minister of Internal Trade and Consumer Protection *Cde. H O. Jack, M.P., Minister of Energy and Mines *Cde. Dr. M. Shahabuddeen, O.R., S.C., M.P., Attorney General and Minister of Justice *Cde. R.E. Jackson, M.P., Minister of Foreign Affairs *Cde. J.R. Thomas, M.P., Minister of Home Affairs *Non-elected Member 1 Ministers (7) Cde. U. E. Johnson, M.P., Minister of Co-operatives Cde. J. N. Maitland-Singh, M.P., Minister in the Ministry of Agriculture Cde. Sallahuddin, M.P., Minister, Finance, in the Ministry of Economic Planning and Finance *Cde.
    [Show full text]
  • A Definitional Study of the Private Sector in the Guyanese Economy
    fo 4 L41 A DEFINITIONAL STUDY OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN THE GUYANESE ECONOMY Miss Myrtle D. Bishop Dr. Robert W. Davenport Dr. Kenneth S. Flawm July, 1982 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page I. INTRODUCTION 1 A. Nature of this Study 1 B. Sumary 3 C. The Guyanese Econony in Brief 6 II. AN OVERVIEW OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR AND PRIVATE SECTORS 9 A. Value Added 9 B. Employment 12 C. Public Employment 16 D. Exports 18 E. Taxes 21 F. Investment 22 G. Foreign Investors 26 III. IMPORTANT AREAS OF PRIVATE SECTOR ACTIVITY 29 A. Agriculture 29 B. Forest Products 38 C. Fishing 45 D. Processed Food, Beverages, and Tobacco 47 E. Textiles, Clothing, and Related Manufdctures 50 F. Other Vanufactures 53 G. Construction 55 H. Non-Financial Services 56 I. Banking and Finance 57 J. Other Activities 68 IV. PUBLI(; SECTOR RELATIONSHIPS WITH THE PRIVATE SECTOR 69 A. Structure of the Public Sector 69 R. Nature of Public Sector Activities 71 C. Imports and Exports 73 D. Cooperation and Competition 75 Annex I - Public Corporati6ns 77 Annex II - Activities Carried on by Public Enterprises 80 V. APPENDIX I - Private Sector Organizations APPENDIX II - Business Enterprises - Private Sector VI. FOOTNOTES I. INTRODUCTION A. The Ncture of this Study This study was undertaken on behalf of the Guyana Investment Company Limited, and financed by the United States Agency for International Development under technical services contract USAID-504-OOOO-C-GO-1025-O0. The study team consisted of Ms. Myrtle Bishop, Dr. Robert Davenport, and Dr. Kenneth Flamm, and was led by Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Hugh Desmond Hoyte, S.C. National Assembly Speeches Volume 4 Compiled by Maurice B
    HUGH DESMOND HOYTE, S.C. NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SPEECHES VOLUME 4 8th January 1993 - 6th December 2001 i Hugh Desmond Hoyte, S.C. National Assembly Speeches Volume 4 Compiled by Maurice B. Henry for the National Assembly, Parliament of Guyana, 2012. This edition © The Caribbean Press, 2015 © The National Assembly of Guyana Cover design by Peepal Tree Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without permission. ISBN 978-1-907493-88-1 ii PREFACE On the death of Mr. Linden Forbes Sampson Burnham, President, on 6th August, 1985, Mr. Hugh Desmond Hoyte, Prime Minister, acceded to the Office of President. Following the 9th December, 1985 General Elections he was declared President. As his Biographical Summary shows, he held several Ministerial Offices including Vice-President and Prime Minister prior to these dates. Following the General Election held on 5th October, 1992 Dr. Cheddi Jagan was declared President on the 9th October. Mr. Hoyte became Minority Leader and he held this office until his death on 22nd December, 2002. This collection of his Parliamentary Speeches over the years 1969 to 2001 is the first step taken in keeping with the Fourth Resolved Clause of Resolution No. 67 dated 7th August, 2008 of the National Assembly, which states – “Be It Further Resolved: That this National Assembly calls on the Government to designate a State Institution to be responsible for Historical Research and Documentation to chronicle and archive all of the works of each of the Presidents of Guyana
    [Show full text]
  • THE CULTURE FACTOR: the Effects on Healthcare Decisions Among Guyanese Men Journal of Health Disparities Research and Practice
    THE CULTURE FACTOR: The Effects on Healthcare Decisions Among Guyanese Men Journal of Health Disparities Research and Practice Volume 14 Issue 1 Article 7 © Center for Health Disparities Research, School of Public Health, University of Nevada, Las Vegas 2021 THE CULTURE FACTOR: The Effects on Healthcare Decisions Among Guyanese Men Harrynauth Persaud , CUNY York College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/jhdrp Part of the Community Health and Preventive Medicine Commons Recommended Citation Persaud, Harrynauth (2021) "THE CULTURE FACTOR: The Effects on Healthcare Decisions Among Guyanese Men," Journal of Health Disparities Research and Practice: Vol. 14 : Iss. 1 , Article 7. Available at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/jhdrp/vol14/iss1/7 This Article is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Article in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Article has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Health Disparities Research and Practice by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE CULTURE FACTOR: The Effects on Healthcare Decisions Among Guyanese Men Abstract Culture, religious beliefs, and ethnic customs, all play a role in how patients make healthcare decisions.
    [Show full text]
  • Consuming Globalization: Youth and Gender in Kerala, India
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons GSE Faculty Research Graduate School of Education 6-1-2005 Consuming Globalization: Youth and Gender in Kerala, India Ritty Lukose [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/gse_pubs Part of the Social History Commons Recommended Citation Lukose, R. (2005). Consuming Globalization: Youth and Gender in Kerala, India. Retrieved from https://repository.upenn.edu/gse_pubs/30 Reprinted from Journal of Social History, Volume 38, Issue 4, June 2005, pages 915-935. Publisher URL: http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/jsh/ This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/gse_pubs/30 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Consuming Globalization: Youth and Gender in Kerala, India Abstract In much popular discourse, a short-hand way to mark the advent and impact of globalization is to point to the evidence of "global" youth consuming practices and symbols in often remote corners of the world: during the 1990s, for example, the popularity of the basketball star Michael Jordan and his team the Chicago Bulls in the slums of Brazil and in rural villages in Africa, the spread of hip-hop music around the world, and the popularity of McDonalds among young people in China. These examples have a theory of globalization and youth embedded within them. Youth is seen as a consuming social group, the first ot bend to what is understood to be the homogenizing pressures of globalization, a globalization fundamentally tied to Americanization. Youth consumption practices become an index of the presence and reach of globalization. Disciplines Social History Comments Reprinted from Journal of Social History, Volume 38, Issue 4, June 2005, pages 915-935.
    [Show full text]
  • Persaud JNP 3.2 Final Rev 3 11 17
    Vol. 3. (2), 2017, pp. 97-107 You and Me Forever: The Shared Ancestry of Empire and the Burdens of Leaving* Randolph B. Persaud** If empire left us with anything it must be the Word, and in the Caribbean we really like words, big words, long words, words that are hard to pronounce. Think of exophilic. Indefatigable. Maudlin. Eschatological. We use them like the rushing flames that have been burning the sugar cane fields for hundred years from Guyana on the South American coast to Cuba, that indefatigable island once with a man and a movement. We use them in dramatic outbursts of virile manhood, when indeed boys begin to realize that they might after-all have something to say, not least to the Big Man on top of the hills of Kingston Jamaica or on the seawall by Pradoville II, Sparendam, on the East Coast of Demerara. The connotative is irrelevant, for it is the complexity of sound that really matters. The idea is to use vocabulary that the other person does not understand, that leaves them flummoxed. You know for sure when that happens ‘word would spread,’ the message will get around – to the rum shop, the bottom-house, the seawall, the ball-ground, bit by bit, about that brilliant man with that unfathomable vocab, like a man from England. For nearly a quarter of a century, I told my aunt what a cacophonous voice she has; just like a sitar, I used to say. She always acknowledged my compliment, beaming; a good woman indeed. Words and meaning have an elliptical, cryptic relationship where I come from.
    [Show full text]
  • Child Labour in Mica Mines of Jharkhand- a Situation Analysis Report
    [A situation analysis report] Child Labour in Mica Mines of Koderma & Giridih District of Jharkhand Child in Need Institute 441/A, Ashok Nagar, Ranchi Email: [email protected] Child Labour in Mica Mines of Jharkhand- A situation analysis report Contents Executive Summary 4 Chapter I Introduction 5 Chapter II Overview and problem statement 10 Chapter III Situational Analysis - status of child labour in mica mines of Koderma and Giridih district of Jharkhand 15 Tools for systematic observation 16 Profile of Mines visited for Systematic observation 16 Background of mica picking community 18 Study Methodology 20 Study Design 22 Analysis of Findings 23 Children in Mica mines 38 Network Analysis 39 Key stakeholders and children in mica industry 40 Interaction between players of mica industry 43 Vulnerability Mapping 48 Strategy for child friendly community 50 Annexure 51 2 Child Labour in Mica Mines of Jharkhand- A situation analysis report List of Abbreviations AWC Angan wadi center AWW Angan wadi worker ANM Auxiliary nurse midwife ADPO Additional District program Officer ANC Ante Natal Check up BSMDC Bihar state minerals Development Corporation BDO Block development officer BEO Block education officer CDPO Child development project officer CSO Civil society organization CS Civil Surgeon DC District Collector DPO District program officer DEO District education officer FGD Focus group discussion ICDS Integrated Child Development Scheme JSMDC Jharkhand State Minerals Development Corporation KGBV Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalaya MOIC Medical
    [Show full text]
  • Christian History of East Indians of Guyana
    Shameerudeen: Christian History of East Indians of Guyana CLIFMOND SHAMEERUDEEN Christian History of East Indians of Guyana Historical Footprints Guyana is the only English-speaking country of South America and is part of the English-speaking Caribbean, mainly because of language, culture, and religious background. The formation of this multiethnic community is a result of many historical events. These events are viewed differently, depending on one’s ideology and school of thought. However, it is unde- niably true that the mass migration orchestrated by the British colonizers separated people groups from their places of origin over a span of hun- dreds of years and many generations. The British colonizers are responsible for transporting and settling la- borers from India to the West Indies. These individuals, known as East Indians, were recruited mainly for indentureship, to replace the freed African slaves on the sugar plantations. The indenture system began in 1838 in Guyana and ended in 1917 in the southern Caribbean region. It is estimated that 240,000 East Indians came to Guyana and 144,000 to Trinidad during the indentureship period (Barrow 1996:342). In Trinidad, sixty-eight percent of the East Indians brought during this period were males, while only thirty-eight percent were females (Vertovec 1992:101). A similar gender disparity was found in Guyana, where males were also in the majority (Singh 1993: 223). Crossing the Kala Pani The term kala pani (black waters) encapsulates the treacherous journey of the East Indians leaving their villages, socioreligious environments, and Published by Digital Commons @ Andrews University, 2021 1 Journal of Adventist Mission Studies, Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Fax Cover Sheet
    PUBLIC SIMULTANEOUS DISCLOSURE DOCUMENT OF THE INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK AND THE INTER-AMERICAN INVESTMENT CORPORATION SURINAME IDBG COUNTRY STRATEGY WITH THE REPUBLIC OF SURINAME 2016–2020 NOVEMBER 2016 This document was prepared by Cesar Falconi (Country Representative, CCB/CSU); Alejandro Melandri (CAN/CBO); Chrystol Thomas and Leslie-Ann Edwards (CCB/CSU); Inder Ruprah, Juan Pedro Schmid and Lesley Cassar (CCB/CCB). The team received valuable inputs from Juliana Almeida (VPC/VPC); Olga Gomez Garcia (SPD/SDV), Gerard Alleng and Sara Valero Freitag (CSD/CCS); Jesus Navarrete (CSD/HUD); Carmine Paolo De Salvo (CSD/RND); Steven Hofwijks (CCB/CSU); Carlos Echeverria (ENE/CGY); Roger Sallent (ENE/CSU); Mariko Russell (ICS/CSU); Diego Herrera and Olver Bernal (IFD/CMF); Claudia Stevenson (IFD/CTI); Michael Hennessey (CTI/CDR); Leslie Harper and Gerardo Reyes-Tagle (IFD/FMM); Mario Umaña (INT/TIN); Soledad Bos (SCL/EDU); Judith Morrison (SCL/GDI); Ian Ho-A-Shu (SPH/CTT); Christopher Persaud (TSP/CSU); Rinia Terborg-Tel and Mariska Tjon A Loi (FMP/CSU); Winsome Leslie (MIF/MIF); and Seth Colby (DSP/DCO). In accordance with the Access to Information Policy, this document is being released to the public and distributed to the Bank’s Board of Executive Directors simultaneously. This document has not been approved by the Board. Should the Board approve the document with amendments, a revised version will be made available to the public, thus superseding and replacing the original version. TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • 70 POLICIES THAT SHAPED INDIA 1947 to 2017, Independence to $2.5 Trillion
    Gautam Chikermane POLICIES THAT SHAPED INDIA 70 POLICIES THAT SHAPED INDIA 1947 to 2017, Independence to $2.5 Trillion Gautam Chikermane Foreword by Rakesh Mohan © 2018 by Observer Research Foundation All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from ORF. ISBN: 978-81-937564-8-5 Printed by: Mohit Enterprises CONTENTS Foreword by Rakesh Mohan vii Introduction x The First Decade Chapter 1: Controller of Capital Issues, 1947 1 Chapter 2: Minimum Wages Act, 1948 3 Chapter 3: Factories Act, 1948 5 Chapter 4: Development Finance Institutions, 1948 7 Chapter 5: Banking Regulation Act, 1949 9 Chapter 6: Planning Commission, 1950 11 Chapter 7: Finance Commissions, 1951 13 Chapter 8: Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951 15 Chapter 9: Indian Standards Institution (Certification Marks) Act, 1952 17 Chapter 10: Nationalisation of Air India, 1953 19 Chapter 11: State Bank of India Act, 1955 21 Chapter 12: Oil and Natural Gas Corporation, 1955 23 Chapter 13: Essential Commodities Act, 1955 25 Chapter 14: Industrial Policy Resolution, 1956 27 Chapter 15: Nationalisation of Life Insurance, 1956 29 The Second Decade Chapter 16: Institutes of Technology Act, 1961 33 Chapter 17: Food Corporation of India, 1965 35 Chapter 18: Agricultural Prices Commission, 1965 37 Chapter 19: Special Economic Zones, 1965 39 iv | 70 Policies that Shaped India The Third Decade Chapter 20: Public Provident Fund, 1968 43 Chapter 21: Nationalisation of Banks, 1969 45 Chapter
    [Show full text]