SPECIAL MENTIONS the Following Matters of Public Importance Were Raised/Laid on the Table with the Permission of the Chair Durin

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

SPECIAL MENTIONS the Following Matters of Public Importance Were Raised/Laid on the Table with the Permission of the Chair Durin SPECIAL MENTIONS The following matters of Public Importance were raised/laid on the Table with the permission of the Chair during the Session: — Sl.No. Date Name of the Subject Time taken Member Hrs.Mts. 1. 24- Shrimati Vanga Need to amend the PNDT 0-02 02- Geetha Act in order to protect girl 2006 children in the country. 2. -do- Dr. Alladi P. Establishment of Maritime 0-02 Rajkumar University at Vishakhapatnam. 3. -do- Dr. Gyan Prakash Need to fulfill allotment of 0-02 Pilania petrol pumps promised to Kargil war widows. 4. -do- Shri Kripal Parmar Need to investigate into 0-02 the display of name of Kaman Setu as Aman Setu during the Republic Day parade. 5. -do- Shri Santosh Need to strengthen the rail 0-02 Bagrodia linkage in Rajasthan. 6. -do- Shrimati Kum Kum Need to fix responsibility 0-02 Rai for harassment of women in the country. 7. -do- Shriamti N.P. Need to announce revival 0-02 Durga package for the Bharat Heavy Plates and Vessels Limited Visakhapatnam. 8. 24- Shri Ravula Plight of Chenchus, 0-01 02- Chandra Sekar aprimitive tribals of 2006 Reddy Mahaboob Nagar District in Andhra Pradesh. 9. -do- Shri Pyarelal Increase in the prices of 0-02 Khandelwal wheat. 10. -do- Shri Jai Parkash Need for granting full 0-02 Aggarwal statehood to Delhi. 11. -do- Shrimati Kamla Danger posed to Silk 0-02 Manhar Worm Seed Centre at Raigarh. 12. -do- Shri K. Rama Need to take immediate 0-02 Mohana Rao measures to control Chickungunya virus in Sl.No. Date Name of the Subject Time taken Member Hrs.Mts. Andhra Pradesh. 13. -do- Shri Karnendu Decline in wheat 0-03 Bhattarcharjee production in the country. 14. -do- Shri Prasanta Need to issue 0-01 Chatterjee commemorating stamps and coins on the 150th year of the First Armed Struggle for India’s Independence. 15. -do- Shri Narayan Singh Need to provide adequate 0-01 Manaklao facilites and safety standards at Alang Ship Breaking Yard. 16. -do- Shri Sharad Firing on farmers at 0-02 Anantrao Joshi Chander Bazar, Vidharba, Maharashtra. 17. -do- Shri Ram Narayan Need for uniform age limit 0-03 Sahu of senior citizens in the country. 18. 24- Shrimati Prema Need for strict compliance 0-03 02- Cariappa of guidelines laid down by 2006 the Supreme Court on sexual harassment at work places. 19. -do- Shri Janardhana Need to revive the 0-07 Poojary Kudremukh Iron Ore Company Limited, Karnataka. 20. -do- Shri Ram Nath Firing in Tinsukia by the 0-02 Kovind Paramilitary Forces. 21. -do- Shri Rama Muni Need to set up a 0-02 Reddy Sirigireddy regulatory body to oversee road safety on National Highways. 22. -do- Shri Harish Rawat Need for giving SC status 0-08 to Bangali Community, OBC status to Gorkha and Scheduled Area status to Dharchual-Munsyari- Joshimath in Uttaranchal. 23. 01- Shri Rama Muni Need to take immediate 0-01 03- Reddy Sirigireddy measures for development 2006 of Cuddapah Airport. 24. -do- Dr. Gyan Prakash Female foeticide in the 0-03 Sl.No. Date Name of the Subject Time taken Member Hrs.Mts. Pilania country. 25. -do- Shri B.S. Exploitation of children in 0-02 Gnanadesikan the country. 26. -do- Shri Amar Singh Privatization of Airports in 0-02 the country. 27. -do- Shrimati N.P. Need to encourage 0-02 Durga bamboo cultivation in the country. 28. 01- Shri K. Chandran Need to review the direct 0-01 03- Pillai recruitment of 2006 Probationary Officers through campus interviews by Public Sector Banks. 29. -do- Shri Shantaram Need to grant permission 0-02 Laxman Naik to celebrate feasts at Anjediva Island in Goa. 30. -do- Shrimati Prema Need to impose ban on 0-02 Cariappa participation of school children in various functions held in the country. 31. -do- Shrimati Syeda Increasing road accidents 0-03 Anwara Taimur in the cities. 32. -do- Shri Nandi Yellaiah Need to abolish taxes on 0-02 Insulin throughout the country. 33. -do- Shri B.K. Need for early clearance of 0-02 Hariprasad tourism projects in Karnataka awaiting centre’s approval. 34. -do- Shri Harish Rawat Need to amend the 0-02 Delimitation Act in view of the conditions in hilly areas of the country. 35. -do- Dr. Radhakant Lack of maintenance of 0-01 Nayak Libraries and Reading Rooms in Orissa. 36. -do- Shrimati Vanga Need for mandatory tests 0-02 Geetha of HIV/AIDS before marriage. 37. 01-03- Shri Karnendu Poor condition of tea 0-02 2006 Bhattacharjee gardeners in Barak Valley Sl.No. Date Name of the Subject Time taken Member Hrs.Mts. (Assam). 38. -do- Shrimati Mohsina Problem being faced by 0-03 Kidwai handloom weavers of Varanasi and Gorakhpur. 39. 02- Shri Lekhraj Need to give approval to 0-02 03- Bachani Gujcot Act of Gujarat 2006 State. 40. -do- Shri Rudra Need to check the growing 0-02 Narayan Pany market of obscene books in Delhi. 41. -do- Dr. Prabha Thakur Need to rejuvenate the 0-02 neglected traditional water sources in Rajasthan. 42. -do- Shri Suresh Need to pay royalty to the 0-02 Bhardwaj State of Himachal Pradesh for the Hydro-Electric Project commissioned prior to 1990. 43. -do- Shrimati Kamla Need to open a Passport 0-02 Manhar Office in the State of Chhattisgarh. 44. -do- Shri Vijay J. Darda Need for augmenting 0-03 public preparedness towards disaster management. 45. -do- Shri C. Perumal Demand to drop proposal 0-02 to amend the Indian Post Office Act. 46. 02- Shri Sharad Farmers’ suicides in 0-02 03- Anantrao Joshi Vidarbha. 2006 47. 06- Shri Santosh Plight of undertrials 0-02 03- Bagrodia languishing in prisons. 2006 48. -do- Shrimati Jamana Need to provide Rajasthan 0-03 Devi Barupal its share of water from the Ravi River. 49. -do- Shri Jai Parkash Increasing crime in Delhi 0-02 Aggarwal and urgent need to modernise Delhi Police. 50. -do- Shri Motilal Vora Problems in giving 0-02 honorary pension to Freedom Fighters. Sl.No. Date Name of the Subject Time taken Member Hrs.Mts. 51. -do- Shri Kalraj Mishra Need to start the Shiv 0-02 Ganga Express Train from Varanasi. 52. -do- Shri Laxminarayan Need to accord early 0-01 Sharma clearance for environmental project of Madhya Pradesh. 53. -do- Shri Ramadhar Need to open a Railway 0-01 Kashyap Recruitment Board in Bilaspur (Chhattisgarh). 54. -do- Shri Lalit Kishore Need for minimum support 0-03 Chaturvedi price and storage of mustard crop in Rajasthan. 55. -do- Shrimati Jaya Death of birds in Okhla 0-02 Bachchan Sanctuary, Delhi. 56. -do- Ms. Pramila Plight of Silk fibre and 0-03 Bohidar handloom weavers. 57. 06- Shri Vijay J. Darda Need for a concerted 0-03 03- approach towards rural 2006 telecommunication connectivity. 58. -do- Shri Amar Singh Miserable condition of 0-01 farmers in the country. 59. -do- Shri Lekhraj Need for repatriation of 0-03 Bachani fishermen from Gujarat arrested and return of boats etc. captured by Pakistan authorities. 60. -do- Shri Harish Rawat Need to give financial 0-01 assistance to the drought affected state of Uttaranchal along with other relief measures. 61. -do- Shri Karnendu Need for exemption of 0-03 Bhattacharjee excise duty to wood based industry in North-Eastern region. 62. 09- Shrimati Syeda Need to tap natural 0-01 03- Anwara Taimur resources for power 2006 generation in Assam. 63. -do- Shrimati Kamla Need for proper 0-02 Manhar arrangement of irrigation and water conservation Sl.No. Date Name of the Subject Time taken Member Hrs.Mts. system to increase the agricultural production in the State of Chhattisgarh. 64. -do- Shri Matilal Sarkar Need to widen the scope of 0-03 AIBP scheme in Tripura. 65. 09- Shri Rama Muni Need to increase number 0-02 03- Reddy Sirigireddy of Mobile Testing Labs in 2006 Andhra Pradesh to check adulteration of petroleum products. 66. -do- Shri B.K. Need for implementation 0-01 Hariprasad of Rajiv Gandhi Grameen Vidyutikaran Yojana in Karnataka. 67. -do- Shrimati N.P. Need for legislative 0-02 Durga framework on non- biodegradable solid waste in the country. 68. -do- Dr. Narayan Singh Need to address the 0-02 Manaklao problem of gender disparity in education. 69. -do- Shri Kripal Parmar Need to stop illegal mining 0-02 in Chakki barrage on Himachal Pradesh-Punjab border. 70. -do- Dr. Alladi P. Plight of backward classes. 0-02 Rajkumar 71. -do- Shri T.S. Bajwa Need to give compensation 0-02 to farmers of border areas whose land is being used for defence purpose in Jammu and Kashmir. 72. -do- Shrimati S.G. Plight of brick chamber 0-02 Indira industry and its workers. 73. -do- Shri E.M. Need for setting up of a 0-02 Sudarsana tripartite body for the Natchiappan disposing of NRI claims. 74. 09- Shri P.K. Damage caused to crops 0-03 03- Maheshwari due to hailstorm in Madhya 2006 Pradesh. 75. -do- Shri Harendra Need to include the Jats 0-02 Singh Malik living in Jammu region in Sl.No. Date Name of the Subject Time taken Member Hrs.Mts. the OBC list. 76. -do- Shrimati Hema Women empowerment. 0-02 Malini 77. -do- Shri Sanjay Raut Import of wheat by the 0-01 Government at high prices. 78. -do- Shri K. Rama Need to take measures for 0-03 Mohana Rao safety and security of Andhrites in UAE. 79. -do- Shri Pyarelal Bangladeshis allegedly 0-02 Khandelwal serving as resident agents of the terrorist organisations.
Recommended publications
  • CONTENTS Digital.Pmd
    Bharatiya Manyaprad International Journal of Indian Studies Vol. 5 No.1 Annual July 2017 Executive Editor Sanjeev Kumar Sharma FORM-IV 1. Place of Publication : Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Ahmedabad Kendra 2. Periodicity : Annual 3. Printer’s Name : Dr Neerja A Gupta Nationality : Indian Address : II Floor Rituraj Apartment Opp. Rupal Flats, Nr St. Xavier’s Loyola Hall Navrangpura, Ahmedabad 4. Publishers’ Name : Dr Neerja A Gupta Nationality : Indian Address : II Floor Rituraj Apartment Opp. Rupal Flats, Nr St. Xavier’s Loyola Hall Navrangpura, Ahmedabad 5. Editor’s Name : Dr Neerja A Gupta Nationality : Indian Address : II Floor Rituraj Apartment Opp. Rupal Flats, Nr St. Xavier’s Loyola Hall Navrangpura, Ahmedabad 6. Name and Address of the: Nil Individuals who own the Newspaper and partners/ Shareholders holding more than one percent of the Capital I, Neerja A Gupta, hereby declare that the particulars are true to my knowledge and belief. Sd. (Neerja A Gupta) Bharatiya Manyaprad International Journal of Indian Studies Vol. 5 No.1 Annual 2017 Contents Editorial v Invited Articles 1. Indian Ness A.K. Srivastava 9 2. Art and Aesthetics: A Global Perspective of Swami Vivekananda Santi Nath Chattopadhyay 14 3. Yoga: Answer to All Ailments Jagat Motwani 31 Research Articles 1. Revisiting Portuguese Colonization in India Susheel Kumar Sharma 43 2. Why Transcendentalism Failed in the West: Hinduism and the Obliteration of the Self KBS Krishna 735 iv 3. Native Modernity in Literature: A Socio-Cultural Perspective Kavita Tyagi 857 4. Indian Mind in Mythology Virali Patoliya 100 5. Doctrines of Good Governance from Shukraniti and Contemporary Relevance Pawan Kumar Sharma 106 6.
    [Show full text]
  • New Indian Ant:Iqijary
    New Indian Ant:iqijary A monthly Journcl of Oriental Research in Archoeology, Art, Epigrophy, Ethnology, Folklore, Geography, History, Languages, Linguistics, Literature, Numismatics, Philoso­ phy, Religion and all subjects connected with lndology. VOLUME IV 1941-42 Edited by S. M. KATRE, M. A., Ph. D. ( London) and P. K. GODE, M. A. \NDz~ ......~"tl~ -- 3 \. ~ug.\983 KARNATAK PUBLISHING HOUSE BOMBAY ( INDIA) ;SOME NOTES ON THE HISTORY OF THE FIG (FICUS . CARICA) FROM FOREIGN AND INDIAN SOURCES By P. K. GODE, Poona. According to the history of the Fig (Ficus:Carica) recorded in the Ency­ r:lopoodiaBritannica,1 it was probably one of the earliest objects of cultivation. , There are frequent allusions to it in the Hebrew Scriptures. According to ; Herodotus it may have been unknown to the Persians in the days of the First Cyrus. Pliny mentions varieties of figs ani::11the plant played an im­ ..portant part in Latin myths. This history of the fig testifies to the high value • set upon the fruit by' the nations of antiquity but it says nothing about its · early existence in India or its importation to the Indian provinces known to the Greeks and Romans. According to Dr. AITCHISONIZ the Fig orFicus Carica was " probably a of Afghanistan and Persia "3 and it is indigenom; in the Badghis 1. Vide p. 228 of Vol. IX of the Fourteenth Edn. 1920. 11 From !he ease with which the nutritious fruit can be preserved it was probably one of the earliest · objects of cultivation ...... antiquity." I may note here the points in the para ,, noted above:- ( 1) Fig must have spread in remote ages over Agean and Levant ; (2) May have been unknown to Persians in the days of the First Cyrus according to a passage in Herodotus ; (3) Greeks received it from Caria (hence the name Ficus Carica) ; ( 4) Fig, the chief article of sustenance for the Greeks-laws to regulate their exportation-Attic Figs celebrated throughout the East-improved under Helenic Culture ; .
    [Show full text]
  • Lady S.: Portuguese Medley Free
    FREE LADY S.: PORTUGUESE MEDLEY PDF Jean van Hamme,Philippe Aymond | 48 pages | 07 Apr 2015 | CINEBOOK LTD | 9781849182225 | English | Ashford, United Kingdom Slings & Arrows Sitting at a restaurant, the guests are seen shifting in their seats, trying to get a glimpse of the singer. While Nadia has performed in Portugal in the past and has already established a career in Goa as a Fadista; this trip, which was meant to be for an academic purpose, ended up being a fantastic musical journey full of inspiration and rich experiences. Nadia had recently gone to Portugal to do a Portuguese language course at the University of Aveiro. I was told that I have a Portuguese soul with an exotic feel. It may be recalled Nadia had performed alongside the renowned Portuguese fadista "Marco Rodrigues and the famous Portuguese Fadista, Claudia Duarte, at their respective concerts held in Goa in the past. Rui Baceira. Being called to perform at the World Goa Day in Porto init gave her Lady S.: Portuguese Medley opportunity to sing at various Casas de Fado across Portugal, something she enjoyed performing this time around as well. A Seraulim girl and the granddaughter of Ponda, Nadia grew up in Lady S.: Portuguese Medley home Lady S.: Portuguese Medley always had music playing every day and she reminisces about the days that paved the path to who she is today. I also remember my dad training me to participate in my first Portuguese singing competition wherein he taught me Lady S.: Portuguese Medley song in a single day and I participated with it.
    [Show full text]
  • Title Title Daily Current Affairs Capsule 19Th December 2020
    Title Daily Current Affairs Capsule 19th DecemberTitle 2020 Pakistan approves chemical castration of sex offenders Pakistan has approved the chemical castration of rapists as part of sweeping new legislation sparked by outcry over the gang rape of a mother on a motorway. New laws approved by President Arif Alvi will see rape cases expedited through the courts and create the country’s first national sex offenders register. Pakistan is a deeply conservative and patriarchal nation where victims of sexual abuse often are too afraid to speak out, or where criminal complaints are frequently not investigated seriously. In September, protests erupted after a mother was raped on the side of the road in front of her children when her car broke down near Lahore. Goa Liberation Day 2020: 19 December Goa Liberation Day is observed on December 19 every year in India and it marks the day Indian armed forces freed Goa in 1961 following 450 years of Portuguese rule. The Portuguese colonised several parts of India in 1510 but by the end of the 19th-century Portuguese colonies in India were limited to Goa, Daman, Diu, Dadra, Nagar Haveli and Anjediva Island. The Goa liberation movement, which sought to end Portuguese colonial rule in Goa, started off with small scale revolts. The 36-hour military operation, conducted from December 18, 1961, was code-named ‘Operation Vijay’ meaning ‘Operation Victory,’ and involved attacks by the Indian Navy, Indian Air Force and Indian Army. All India Radio's weekly magazine 'Sanskrit Saptahiki' airs its 25th episode All India Radio's weekly magazine 'Sanskrit Saptahiki' aired its 25th episode.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    www.toprankers.com Table of Contents 01. INTERNATIONAL NEWS 02. NATIONAL NEWS 03. SPORTS 04. SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 05. OBITUARY 06. APPOINTMENTS AND RESIGNATIONS 07. IMPORTANT DAYS 08. SUMMITS AND MOU’S 09. AWARDS AND RECOGNITION 10. RANKING 11. BOOKS AND AUTHORS 12. BANKING AND ECONOMY www.toprankers.com INTERNATIONAL NEWS India-Vietnamese Navy conducts PASSEX-2020 in South China Sea The Indian Navy and Vietnamese Navy undertook the naval passage exercise PASSEX in the South China Sea. The two-day exercise was conducted s part of efforts to boost maritime cooperation between the two countries. The Indian Naval Ship (INS) Kiltan took part in the exercise. INS Kiltan, reached Vietnam’s Nha Rong Port in Ho Chi Minh City, carrying humanitarian assistance to deliver 15 tonnes of relief material for flood-affected people under Mission Sagar-III. This mission of INS Kiltan is part of India’s Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) assistance to Friendly Foreign Countries during the ongoing pandemic. Myanmar commissions submarine gifted by India Myanmar on Saturday inducted into its navy a submarine it received from India, which of late stepped up its maritime security cooperation with its neighbours as well as other nations in the Indo-Pacific region amid growing belligerence of China. The INS Sindhuvir, a Kilo-class submarine of the Indian Navy, has been renamed as the UMS Minye Theinkhathu. It was commissioned by the Myanmar Navy on the occasion of its 73rd anniversary. It is the first submarine to be acquired by the Myanmar Navy. India handed over the INS Sindhuvir to Myanmar three years after China provided two submarines to Bangladesh in 2017.
    [Show full text]
  • Goa Liberation Day
    Goa Liberation Day drishtiias.com/printpdf/goa-liberation-day-1 Why in News The Prime Minister of India greeted the people of Goa on Goa Liberation Day, which falls on 19th December every year. Key Points The day marks the occasion when the Indian armed forces freed Goa in 1961 from 450 years of Portuguese rule. The Portuguese colonised several parts of India in 1510 but by the end of the 19th-century Portuguese colonies in India were limited to Goa, Daman, Diu, Dadra, Nagar Haveli and Anjediva Island (a part of Goa). As India gained independence on 15th August, 1947, it requested the Portuguese to cede their territories but they refused. The Goa liberation movement started off with small scale revolts, but reached its peak between 1940 to 1960. In 1961, after the failure of diplomatic efforts with Portuguese, the Indian Government launched Operation Vijay and annexed Daman and Diu and Goa with the Indian mainland on 19th December. On 30th May 1987, the territory was split and Goa was formed. Daman and Diu remained a Union Territory. Hence, 30th May is celebrated as the Statehood Day of Goa. Goa 1/3 2/3 It is located on the southwestern coast of India within the region known as the Konkan, and geographically separated from the Deccan highlands by the Western Ghats. Capital: Panji. Official Language: Konkani. Konkani is one of the 22 languages from the Eight Schedule. It was added in the list along with Manipuri and Nepali by the 71st Amendment Act of 1992. Borders: It is surrounded by Maharashtra to the north and Karnataka to the east and south, with the Arabian Sea forming its western coast.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Movements Recognized for Grant of Swatantrata Sainik Samman Pension
    LIST OF MOVEMENTS RECOGNIZED FOR GRANT OF SWATANTRATA SAINIK SAMMAN PENSION. 1. Suez Canal Army Revolt in 1943 during Quit-India Movement & Ambala Cantt. Army Revolt in 1943. 2. Jhansi Regiment Case in Army (1940). The Rani of Jhansi Regiment was the Women's Regiment of the Indian National Army, with the aim of overthrowing the British Raj in colonial India. It was one of the all-female combat regiments of the Second World War. Led by Lakshmi Sahgal),the unit was raised in July 1943 with volunteers from the expatriate Indian population in South East Asia.The unit was named the Rani of Jhansi Regiment after Lakshmibai, Rani of Jhansi Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose announced the formation of the Regiment on 12 July 1943.Most of the women were teenage volunteers of Indian descent from Malayan rubber estates; very few had ever been to India.The initial nucleus of the force was established with its training camp in Singaporewith approximately a hundred and seventy cadets. The cadets were given ranks of non-commissioned officer or sepoy (private) according to their education. Later, camps were established inRangoon and Bangkok and by November 1943, the unit had more than three hundred cadets Training in Singapore began on 23 October 1943.The recruits were divided into sections and platoons and were accorded ranks of Non-Commissioned Officers and Sepoys according to their educational qualifications. These cadets underwent military and combat training with drills, route marches as well as weapons training in rifles, hand grenades, and bayonet charges. Later, a number of the cadets were chosen for more advanced training in jungle warfare in Burma.The Regiment had its first passing out parade at the Singapore training camp of five hundred troops on 30 March 1944.
    [Show full text]
  • Kanhoji Angré and the Anglo-Portuguese Expedition of 1721
    ISSN 2603-6096 East India Company Power Projection: Kanhoji Angré and the Anglo-Portuguese Expedition of 1721 (La proyección de la compañía de la India Oriental: Kanhoji Angré y la expedición anglo- portuguesa de 1721) Edward Teggin Trinity College Dublin Recibido: 03/12/2020; Aceptado: 03/03/2021; Abstract This article examines the causes and consequences of the 1721 Anglo-Portuguese expedition through the prism of regional geopolitics, power projection, and the balancing of power. The existing narrative of the expedition, presently very unclear and full of inconsistencies, shall be revised through the use of the private papers of Sir Robert Cowan, governor of Bombay (1729-34). The existing accounts have until now not adequately incorporated the key role played by Cowan. This article is, as such, an important revision in the wider history of European geopolitics on the west coast of India in the early eighteenth century. Keywords Colonial Bombay; Colonial Goa; Kanhoji Angré; Marathas; Power Projection Resumen Este artículo examina las causas y consecuencias de la expedición anglo-portuguesa de 1721 a través del prisma de la geopolítica regional, la proyección de poder y el equilibrio de fuerzas. La narración existente de la expedición, actualmente muy poco clara y llena de incoherencias ha sido revisada a partir de los documentos privados de Sir Robert Cowan, Edward Teggin gobernador de Bombay (1729-34). Hasta ahora, los relatos existentes no han incorporado adecuadamente el papel clave desempeñado por Cowan. Este artículo constituye, por tanto, una importante revisión en la historia más amplia de la geopolítica europea en la costa occidental de la India a principios del siglo XVIII.
    [Show full text]
  • Political Structures in India.Pdf
    mathematics HEALTH ENGINEERING DESIGN MEDIA management GEOGRAPHY EDUCA E MUSIC C PHYSICS law O ART L agriculture O BIOTECHNOLOGY G Y LANGU CHEMISTRY TION history AGE M E C H A N I C S psychology Political Structures In India Subject: POLITICAL STRUCTURE IN INDIA Credits: 4 SYLLABUS Early State Formation Pre-State to State, Territorial States to Empire, Polities from 2nd Century B.C. to 3rd Century A.D., Polities from 3rd Century A.D. to 6th Century A.D State in Early Medieval India Early Medieval Polities in North India, 7th to 12th Centuries A.D., Early Medieval Polities in Peninsular India 6th to 8th Centuries A.D., Early Medieval Polities In Peninsular India 8th To 12 Centuries A.D. Administrative and Institutional Structures Administrative and Institutional Structures in Peninsular India, Administrative and Institutional Systems in North India, Law and Judicial Systems, State Under the Delhi Sultanate, Vijayanagar, Bahmani and other Kingdoms, The Mughal State, 18th Century Successor States Colonization-Part I The Eighteenth Century Polities, Colonial Powers Portuguese, Dutch and French, The British Colonial State, Princely States Colonization Part II Ideologies of the Raj, Activities, Resources, Extent of Colonial Intervention Education and Society, End of the Colonial State-establishment of Democratic Polity. Suggested Reading: 1. Social Change and Political Discourse in India: Structures of Power, Movements of Resistance Volume 4: Class Formation and Political Transformation in Post-Colonial India by T. V. Sathymurthy, T. V. Sathymurthy 2. Political parties and Collusion : Atanu Dey 3. The Indian Political System : Mahendra Prasad Singh, Subhendu Ranjan Raj CHAPTER 1 Early State Formation STRUCTURE Learning objectives Pre-state to state Territorial states to empire Polities from 2nd century BC.
    [Show full text]
  • Bharatiya Manyaprad International Journal of Indian Studies
    Bharatiya Manyaprad International Journal of Indian Studies Vol. 6 Annual April-May 2018 Executive Editor Sanjeev Kumar Sharma FORM-IV 1. Place of Publication : Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Ahmedabad Kendra 2. Periodicity : Annual 3. Printer’s Name : Dr Neerja A Gupta Nationality : Indian Address : II Floor Rituraj Apartment Opp. Rupal Flats, Nr St. Xavier’s Loyola Hall Navrangpura, Ahmedabad 4. Publishers’ Name : Dr Neerja A Gupta Nationality : Indian Address : II Floor Rituraj Apartment Opp. Rupal Flats, Nr St. Xavier’s Loyola Hall Navrangpura, Ahmedabad 5. Editor’s Name : Dr Neerja A Gupta Nationality : Indian Address : II Floor Rituraj Apartment Opp. Rupal Flats, Nr St. Xavier’s Loyola Hall Navrangpura, Ahmedabad 6. Name and Address of the: Nil Individuals who own the Newspaper and partners/ Shareholders holding more than one percent of the Capital I, Neerja A Gupta, hereby declare that the particulars are true to my knowledge and belief. Sd. (Neerja A Gupta) Bharatiya Manyaprad International Journal of Indian Studies Vol. 6 Annual April-May 2018 Contents Editorial v 1. Science in Jain Canonical Literature 7 Ajay Kumar Singh 2. Media, Platform for Self-Expression and Ethnic Identity: Case of Indian Diaspora 13 Wisdom Peter Awuku & Sonal Pandya 3. Migration and Enclaves System: A Study on North Bengal of India 25 Sowmit C. Chanad & Neerja A. Gupta 4. Philosophy Subject vis-s-vis Philosophy Works: Contemporary Need and Relevance 34 Sushim Dubey 5. Satyagraha and Nazism: Two most Contradictory Movements of the Century 45 Apexa Munjal Fitter 6. The Mahabharata: A Glorious Literary Gift to the World from Bharata 65 Virali Patoliya & Vidya Rao 7.
    [Show full text]
  • Operation Vijay-Liberation of Goa
    Operation Vijay-Liberation of Goa December 26, 2020 In news Goa Liberation Day is observed on December 19 every year in India Background The Portuguese colonized several parts of India in 1510 but by the end of the 19th-century Portuguese colonies in India were limited to Goa, Daman, Diu, Dadra, Nagar Haveli and Anjediva Island. On August 15, 1947, when India gained its Independence, Goa was still under the Portuguese rule. The Portuguese refused to give up their hold over Goa and other Indian territories. Following a myriad of unsuccessful negotiations and diplomatic efforts with the Portuguese, the former prime minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, decided that military intervention was the only option. The 36-hour military operation, conducted from December 18, 1961, was code-named ‘Operation Vijay’ meaning ‘Operation Victory,’ and involved attacks by the Indian Navy, Indian Air Force, and Indian Army. Ram Manohar Lohia’s effort In June 1946, Ram Manohar Lohia, an Indian Socialist leader, entered Goa on a visit to his friend, Julião Menezes, a nationalist leader, who had founded the Gomantak Praja Mandal in Bombay and edited the weekly newspaper Gomantak. Ram Manohar Lohia advocated the use of non-violent Gandhian techniques to oppose the government. On 18 June 1946, the Portuguese government disrupted a protest against the suspension of civil liberties in Panajiorganised by Lohia, Cunha and others including Purushottam Kakodkar and Laxmikant Bhembre in defiance of a ban on public gatherings, and arrested them His efforts were followed by diplomatic efforts by Indian government which failed and led to armed action against the Portuguese rule About Operation Vijay: The liberation of Goa Operation Vijay marks the day Indian armed forces(with armed action)freed Goa, Daman & Diu in 1961 following 450 years of Portuguese rule.
    [Show full text]
  • General Population Tables and Primary Census Abstract, Part II-A
    CENSUS OF INDIA 1981 SERIES-29 GOA" DAMAN & DIU PART II-A GENERAL POPULATION TABLES AND PART II-B PRIMARY CENSUS ABSTRACT S.K.GANDHE Of the Indian Economic Service, Director of Census Operations, Goa. Dam'm &: Pi" I I ::J (f) 2 i i -c o <It • iii i i 0.. C oCS > « I I "") o z 2: « <C ::2: <C 1: C 0 .. E "t< a: :.! «2 ..t- o( z 15 0 z ;;; ":> j O~ ;;;) 0« ,: D! 0( z i I " ~ ~ .. I;; I K A N T A K A R «o (!) : z \l: 0', CD W a:: 1981 CENSUS PUBLICATIONS OF GOA, DAMAN & DIU (All the Census Publications of this Union Territory will bear Series No. 29) Central Government Publications Part I Administration Report(for official:useonly) Part LA Administration Report-EnmeHtion. Part I.B A (1 ministration Report-T<I bulation. Part II G-lneral Pdpuation Ta bles Part II.A General Population Tables Part n.B Primary Census Abstract. Pact III General Economic Tables Part III.A B·Sedes Tables of first priority (Table B.t t(1 B.IO). Part III.B B·Series Tables of second priority (Tables B.Il to B.12)· Part IV Social and Cultural Tables Part IV. A C-Series Tables of first priority (1abks ~C-l to C-6) Part IV.B C-Series Tables of second priority (Tables C-7 to C·lO ). Part V Migration Tables Part V.A D·Series Tables of first priority (Tables D·l to D·4) Part V.B D·Series Tables of second priority (Tables D·5 to 0.13).
    [Show full text]