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Criteria - Iii
CRITERIA - III RESEARCH, CONSULTANCY AND EXTENSION RESEARCH, CONSULTANCY AND EXTENSION 3.1 Promotion of Research 3.1.1 Does the institution have recognized research centers of the affiliating University or any other agency/ organization? The institution does not have a research centre of the affiliating university or any other agency/organization. 3.1.2 Does the institution have a research committee to monitor and address the issues of research? If so, what is its composition? Mention a few recommendations made by the committee for the implementation and their impact. Research cell addresses the concerns related to faculty research and makes suitable recommendations It consists of Principal as the Chairperson, Vice Principals of all faculties, coordinators of the post graduate departments, librarian, and other senior staff members having research experience. The activities of the cell are as follows: Organizing seminars and workshops Motivating teaching staff to take up research activity like writing research or review papers, etc. Orienting staff members towards making good research proposals. Table 3.1: Recommendations made by Research Cell Recommendations Impact Frame guidelines for Faculty has become aware about the concessions time concessions available, which has enabled them to schedule their activities accordingly. Conduct workshop Three minor, one major and one post-doctoral on writing research research proposals are submitted to UGC. Out of proposals which two minor and one major research projects have been approved. Arrange workshop in Awareness created regarding applications of SPSS SPSS package in statistical analysis. Apply for ISSN for We received ISSN 2278-4268 in the year 2012- Research Journal 2013 and subsequently ‘Research Imprints’ is and also to make it being published as a refereed multidisciplinary refereed research journal, Create a corpus of ` 25 lakhs for An amount of ` 6 lakhs have been collected as supporting research donation so far. -
The Challenge of Gender Inequality
Econ Polit https://doi.org/10.1007/s40888-018-0095-5 CORRESPONDENCE Correspondence for 1/2018 Alberto Quadrio Curzio1,2 Ó Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature 2018 As Editor-in-Chief of this Journal it is a pleasure to write this editorial on the speech of Professor Bina Agarwal, who is also a distinguished member of the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei founded in 1603—the world’s oldest Academy! I thank Professor Bina Agarwal for sharing with us the speech she delivered at the Balzan Prizewinners’ Interdisciplinary Forum held in Berne on 16 November 2017. I also thank the International Balzan Prize Foundation for giving us permission to publish the speech. As background, I share with our readers the citation highlighting the reasons given by the Foundation for awarding her the 2017 International Balzan Prize for Gender Studies: For challenging established premises in economics and the social sciences by using an innovative gender perspective; for enhancing the visibility and empowerment of rural women in the Global South; for opening new intellectual and political pathways in key areas of gender and development. This thoughtful and concise statement, and the bibliography published on Balzan’s website (http://www.balzan.org/en/prizewinners/bina-agarwal), highlights the originality and excellence of Bina Agarwal’s life time research, and her remarkably effective engagement with policy and legal change. I believe her contributions offer to economists a new paradigm on the economics of human and sustainable development, and institutional analysis. Let me stress some points which I find especially striking. Bina Agarwal has done sustained pioneering research not just in one field of economics but in several major fields, from a political economy and gender & Alberto Quadrio Curzio [email protected] 1 Universita` Cattolica, Milano, Italy 2 Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Roma, Italy 123 Econ Polit perspective. -
Women-Empowerment a Bibliography
Women’s Studies Resources; 5 Women-Empowerment A Bibliography Complied by Meena Usmani & Akhlaq Ahmed March 2015 CENTRE FOR WOMEN’S DEVELOPMENT STUDIES 25, Bhai Vir Singh Marg (Gole Market) New Delhi-110 001 Ph. 91-11-32226930, 322266931 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.cwds.ac.in/library/library.htm 1 PREFACE The “Women’s Studies Resources Series” is an attempt to highlight the various aspect of our specialized library collection relating to women and development studies. The documents available in the library are in the forms of books and monographs, reports, reprints, conferences Papers/ proceedings, journals/ newsletters and newspaper clippings. The present bibliography on "Women-Empowerment ” especially focuses on women’s political, social or economic aspects. It covers the documents which have empowerment in the title. To highlight these aspects, terms have been categorically given in the Subject Keywords Index. The bibliography covers the documents upto 2014 and contains a total of 1541 entries. It is divided into two parts. The first part contains 800 entries from books, analytics (chapters from the edited books), reports and institutional papers while second part contains over 741 entries from periodicals and newspapers articles. The list of periodicals both Indian and foreign is given as Appendix I. The entries are arranged alphabetically under personal author, corporate body and title as the case may be. For easy and quick retrieval three indexes viz. Author Index containing personal and institutional names, Subject Keywords Index and Geographical Area Index have been provided at the end. We would like to acknowledge the support of our colleagues at Library. -
Bibliography
161 Bibliography Acosta, Pablo, and others (2007). What is the impact of international remit- tances on poverty and inequality in Latin America? World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, No. 4249 (June). Washington, D.C.: World Bank. Adams, Richard H., Alfredo Cuecuecha and John M. Page (2008). The impact of remittances on poverty and inequality in Ghana. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, No. 4732 (September). Washington, D.C.: World Bank. Adato, Michelle, and Lawrence Haddad (2001). Targeting poverty through community-based public works programs: a cross-disciplinary assessment of recent experience in South Africa. Food Consumption and Nutrition Division Discussion Paper, No. 121. Washington, D.C.: International Food Policy Research Institute. Addison, Tony (2009). Chronic poverty in the global economy. European Jour- nal of Development Research, vol. 21, No. 2, pp. 174-178. Aizenman, Joshua (2005). Financial liberalization: how well has it worked for developing countries? FRBSF Economic Letter (Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco), No. 2005-06 (8 April), pp. 1-3. Akroyd, Stephen, and Lawrence Smith (2007). Review of public spending to agriculture: a joint DFID/World Bank study. London: United Kingdom Department for International Development; Washington, D.C.: World Bank. Alam, Asad, and others (2005). Growth, Poverty, and Inequality: Eastern Eu- rope and the Former Soviet Union. Washington, D.C.: World Bank. Alderman, Harold, and Victor Lavy (1996). Household responses to public health services: cost and quality trade-offs.World Bank Research Observer, vol. 11, No. 1, pp. 3-22. Amsden, Alice H. (1989). Asia’s Next Giant: South Korea and Late Industriali- zation. New York: Oxford University Press. -
AFRICAN LITERATURE and the ENVIRONMENT: a STUDY in POSTCOLONIAL ECOCRITICISM By
AFRICAN LITERATURE AND THE ENVIRONMENT: A STUDY IN POSTCOLONIAL ECOCRITICISM By Cajetan N. Iheka A DISSERTATION Submitted to Michigan State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of English – Doctor of Philosophy 2015 ABSTRACT AFRICAN LITERATURE AND THE ENVIRONMENT: A STUDY IN POSTCOLONIAL ECOCRITICISM By Cajetan N. Iheka African Literature and the Environment: A Study in Postcolonial Ecocriticism , examines how African literary texts document, critique, and offer alternative visions on ecological crises such as the Niger-Delta oil pollution and the dumping of toxic wastes in African waters. The study challenges the anthropocentricism dominating African environmental literary scholarship and addresses a gap in mainstream ecocriticism which typically occludes Africa’s environmental problems. While African literary criticism often focuses on impacts of environmental problems on humans, my dissertation, in contrast, explores the entanglements of humans and nonhumans. The study contributes to globalizing ecocriticism, expands the bourgeoning corpus of ecological investigations in African literary criticism, and participates in efforts to foster interdisciplinary connections between the humanities and the sciences. Following the lead of postcolonial ecocritics, like Rob Nixon, who have pressed the need for dialogue between ecocriticism and postcolonialism, Chapter One interprets Frantz Fanon’s Wretched of the Earth , Homi Bhabha’s Location of Culture, and Gayatri Spivak’s A Critique of Postcolonial Reason as an -
The India Cements Limited
THE INDIA CEMENTS LIMITED UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND FOR THE YEAR 2010-11 TO BE TRANSFERRED TO INVESTOR EDUCATION AND PROTECTION FUND AS REQUIRED UNDER SECTION 124 OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2013 READ WITH THE INVESTOR EDUCATION AND PROTECTION FUND AUTHORITY (ACCOUNTING, AUDIT, TRANSFER AND REFUND) RULES, 2016, AS AMENDED FOLIO / DPID_CLID NAME CITY PINCODE 1201040000010433 KUMAR KRISHNA LADE BHILAI 490006 1201060000057278 Bhausaheb Trimbak Pagar Nasik 422005 1201060000138625 Rakesh Dutt Panvel 410206 1201060000175241 JAI KISHAN MOHATA RAIPUR 492001 1201060000288167 G. VINOD KUMAR JAIN MANDYA 571401 1201060000297034 MALLAPPA LAGAMANNA METRI BELGAUM 591317 1201060000309971 VIDYACHAND RAMNARAYAN GILDA LATUR 413512 1201060000326174 LEELA K S UDUPI 576103 1201060000368107 RANA RIZVI MUZAFFARPUR 842001 1201060000372052 S KAILASH JAIN BELLARY 583102 1201060000405315 LAKHAN HIRALAL AGRAWAL JALNA 431203 1201060000437643 SHAKTI SHARAN SHUKLA BHADOHI 221401 1201060000449205 HARENDRASINH LALUBHA RANA LATHI 365430 1201060000460605 PARASHURAMAPPA A SHIMOGA 577201 1201060000466932 SHASHI KAPOOR BHAGALPUR 812001 1201060000472832 SHARAD GANESH KENI RATNAGIRI 415612 1201060000507881 NAYNA KESHAVLAL DAVE NALLASOPARA (E) 401209 1201060000549512 SANDEEP OMPRAKASH NEVATIA MAHAD 402301 1201060000555617 SYED QUAMBER HUSSAIN MUZAFFARPUR 842001 Page 1 of 301 FOLIO / DPID_CLID NAME CITY PINCODE 1201060000567221 PRASHANT RAMRAO KONDEBETTU BELGAUM 591201 1201060000599735 VANDANA MISHRA ALLAHABAD 211016 1201060000630654 SANGITA AGARWAL CUTTACK 753004 1201060000646546 SUBODH T -
1 of 77 1 1 L NARAYANAN CHETTIAR SREE VISALAKSHI MILLS PVT
1 of 77 ANX. TO FORM 1 INV TANFAC INDUSTRIES LIMITED DETAILS OF UNCLAIMED/UNPAID DIVIDEND FOR THE YEAR 2003-2004 FOLIO/ CLIENT ID PINCOD NO. OF AMOUNT S.NO. NO. NAME ADD1 ADD2 ADD3 CITY E SHARES WAR.NO. 1 1 L NARAYANAN CHETTIAR SREE VISALAKSHI MILLS PVT LTD 0 VISALAKSHI NAGAR MADURAI 625401 115 103.50 2420069 2 2 SARASWATHI NARAYANAN C/O L NARAYANAN CHETTIAR SREE VISALAKSHI MILLS PVT LTD S 0 VISALAKSHI NAGAR 625401 101 90.90 2420070 3 4 T N KRISHNA MOORTHI 50 MAHAL 6TH STREET 0 0 MADURAI 625001 11 9.90 2419937 4 9 K R GANESAN SREE VISALAKSHI MILLS PVT LTD 0 0 VISALAKSHI NAGAR 625401 1 0.90 2420071 5 10 S S MITRA SREE VISALAKSHI MILLS PVT LTD 0 0 VISALAKSHI NAGAR 625401 1 0.90 2420072 6 11 S M THIRUNAVUKARASU SREE VISALAKSHI MILLS PVT LTD 0 0 VISALAKSHI NAGAR 625401 1 0.90 2420073 7 27 K N SUBRAMANIAN SREE VISALAKSHI MILLS PVT LTD 0 0 VISALAKSHI NAGAR 625401 1 0.90 2420074 8 29 C T RAMANATHAN SREE VISALAKSHI MILLS PVT LTD 0 0 VISALAKSHI NAGAR 625401 1 0.90 2420075 9 112 BACHUBHAI BHATT 19-B PANCHSHIL SOCIETY USMANPURA 0 AHMEDABAD 380013 50 45.00 2403272 10 200 YOGESH BHAVSAR F 12 VARDHMAN NAGAR FLATS OPP C P NAGAR GHATLODIA AHMEDABAD 0 50 45.00 2421325 11 224 DWARKADAS GOVINDDAS PARIKH RADHIKA CAMP ROAD SHAHIBAUG 0 0 AHMEDABAD 380004 50 45.00 2402913 12 232 PADMAKANT DALVADI C/2 SUTIRTH APPARTMENT NEAR PRERNA APPARTMENT B/H SUNRISE PARK VASTRAPUR ROAD AHMEDABAD 380015 50 45.00 2403368 13 298 P B SHARMA FLAT NO.4 ADINATH APARTMENT NEAR DUTTATRAY TEMPLE BEHIND D K V COLLEGE JAM NAGAR 361008 50 45.00 2422102 14 429 GOPALKRISHNA HALIYAL AT -
Varsha Adalja Tr. Satyanarayan Swami Pp.280, Edition: 2019 ISBN
HINDI NOVEL Aadikatha(Katha Bharti Series) Rajkamal Chaudhuri Abhiyatri(Assameese novel - A.W) Tr. by Pratibha NirupamaBargohain, Pp. 66, First Edition : 2010 Tr. Dinkar Kumar ISBN 978-81-260-2988-4 Rs. 30 Pp. 124, Edition : 2012 ISBN 978-81-260-2992-1 Rs. 50 Ab Na BasoIh Gaon (Punjabi) Writer & Tr.Kartarsingh Duggal Ab Mujhe Sone Do (A/w Malayalam) Pp. 420, Edition : 1996 P. K. Balkrishnan ISBN: 81-260-0123-2 Rs.200 Tr. by G. Gopinathan Aabhas Pp.180, Rs.140 Edition : 2016 (Award-winning Gujarati Novel ‘Ansar’) ISBN: 978-81-260-5071-0, Varsha Adalja Tr. Satyanarayan Swami Alp jivi(A/w Telugu) Pp.280, Edition: 2019 Rachkond Vishwanath Shastri ISBN: 978-93-89195-00-2 Rs.300 Tr.Balshauri Reddy Pp 138 Adamkhor(Punjabi) Edition: 1983, Reprint: 2015 Nanak Singh Rs.100 Tr. Krishan Kumar Joshi Pp. 344, Edition : 2010 Amrit Santan(A/W Odia) ISBN: 81-7201-0932-2 Gopinath Mohanti (out of stock) Tr. YugjeetNavalpuri Pp. 820, Edition : 2007 Ashirvad ka Rang ISBN: 81-260-2153-5 Rs.250 (Assameese novel - A.W) Arun Sharma, Tr. Neeta Banerjee Pp. 272, Edition : 2012 Angliyat(A/W Gujrati) ISBN 978-81-260-2997-6 Rs. 140 by Josef Mekwan Tr. Madan Mohan Sharma Aagantuk(Gujarati novel - A.W) Pp. 184, Edition : 2005, 2017 Dhiruben Patel, ISBN: 81-260-1903-4 Rs.150 Tr. Kamlesh Singh Anubhav (Bengali - A.W.) Ankh kikirkari DibyenduPalit (Bengali Novel Chokher Bali) Tr. by Sushil Gupta Rabindranath Tagorc Pp. 124, Edition : 2017 Tr. Hans Kumar Tiwari ISBN 978-81-260-1030-1 Rs. -
1FH E WORILD BA NIK RJESEARCHI IPROGRAM Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized
\ oo5 Public Disclosure Authorized 1FH E WORILD BA NIK RJESEARCHI IPROGRAM Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized ABSTRACTS1 O CURRENT STUIES THE WORLD BANK RESEARCH PROGRAM 1996 Abstracts of Current Studies The World Bank Washington, DC Objectives and Definition of World Bank Research The World Bank's research program has four basic objectives: * To support all aspects of Bank operations, including the assessment of development progress in member countries * To broaden understanding of the development process * To improve the Bank's capacity to give policy advice to its members * To help develop indigenous research capacity in member countries. Research at the Bank encompasses analytical work designed to produce results with wide applica- bility across countries or sectors. Bank research, in contrast to academic research, is directed toward recognized and emerging policy issues and is focused on yielding better policy advice. Although motivated by policy problems, Bank research addresses longer-term concerns rather than the imme- diate needs of a particular Bank lending operation or of a particular country or sector report. Activities classified as research at the Bank do not, therefore, include the economic and sector work and policy analysis carried out by Bank staff to support operations in particular countries. Economic and sector work and policy studies take the product of research and adapt it to specific projects or country settings, whereas Bank research contributes to the intellectual foundations of future lending opera- tions and policy advice. Both activities-research and economic and sector work-are critical to the design of successful projects and effective policy. -
ATTENDEES LIST | 28Th IAFFE Annual Conference Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, Scotland | 27-29 June 2019
ATTENDEES LIST | 28th IAFFE Annual Conference Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, Scotland | 27-29 June 2019 Kristina Abbotts, Taylor & Francis Group (UK) Otgo Banzragch, National University of Mongolia (Mongolia) Tindara Addabbo, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia (Italy) Hannah Bargawi, SOAS, University of London (UK) Olanrewaju Adediran, University of the Witwatersrand Freyja Barkardottir, City of reykjavík (Iceland) (South Africa) Yady Barrero Amortegui, Universidad de Antioquia Jumoke Adeyeye, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife (Colombia) (Nigeria) Kripa Basnyat, London School of Economics and Political Bina Agarwal, University of Manchester (India) Science (UK) Ozgun AKDURAN, Political Science Faculty (Turkey) Kathryn Beek, Stellebosch University (South Africa) A Akram-Lodhi, Trent University (Canada) Lourdes Beneria, Cornell University (Spain) SAJA AL ZOUBI, University of Oxford (UK) Gabriella Berloffa, University of Trento (Italy) Randy Albelda, University of Massachusetts-Boston (USA) BERTHONNET, CNRS UNIVERSITE PARIS 7 (France) Chloe Alexander, University of Birmingham (UK) Francesca Bettio, Universita di Siena-Piazza (Italy) Erica Aloe', Università di Roma Sapienza (Italy) Rosemary Boeglin, London School of Economics (UK) Olga Alonso-Villar, University of Vigo (Spain) Myagmarsuren.B, National University of Mongolia (Mongolia) Muzna Alvi, International Food Policy Research Institute (Ifpri) (India) Brenda Boonabaana, Makerere University (Uganda) ALLISON ANDERSON, University of Washington (USA) Sophie Boote, University -
Giving and Fund Raising in India
investing in ourselves GIVING AND FUND RAISING IN INDIA INVESTING IN OURSELVES GIVING AND FUND RAISING IN INDIA investing in ourselves GIVING AND FUND RAISING IN INDIA s ampr adaan INDIAN CENTRE FOR PHILANTHROPY WITH SUPPORT FROM Asian Development Bank The Asia Foundation Nippon Foundation United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Investing in Ourselves: Giving and Fund Raising in India Philippine copyright © 2002 by Asian Development Bank All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording or by an informational or retrieval system without the permission of the publisher. This book/paper was prepared by consultants of the Asian Development Bank. The analyses and assessments contained herein do not necessarily reflect the views of the Asian Development Bank, or its Board of Directors or the governments they represent. The Asian Development Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this book/paper and accepts no responsibility for any consequences of their use. The term “country” does not imply any judgment by the Asian Development Bank as to the legal or other status of any territorial entity. Please address inquiries to: Mr. Robert Dobias Head, NGO Center Asian Development Bank 6 ADB Avenue, Mandaluyong City Metro Manila 0401 Philippines e-mail [email protected] ISBN 971-561-448-5 Publication Stock No. 040702 book production and design East Axis Creative Inc. Printed in the Philippines. s ampr adaan INDIAN CENTRE FOR PHILANTHROPY INDIA’S DEVELOPMENT NEEDS are vast; the resources to meet them are not. -
Good Pitch India 2018 Catalogue
1 Goals of Good Pitch Good Pitch 3 Good Pitch India India GOALS OF GOOD PITCH ROCKET FUELS Magic CONNECTS Fuels the very best independent Connects changemakers with powerful films documentary filmmaking in the world. they can deploy in their work. puzzle-piece FORGES Cogs BUILDS Forges new partnerships between filmmakers Builds a global ‘good’ network of filmmakers and changemakers from across civil society. and changemakers. power-off UNLOCKS CHILD ENRICHES Unlocks new investment and new audiences Enriches the lives of individuals, transforms for documentary films. communities and improves societies. 4 Hello & Good Pitch Good Pitch 5 Welcome India India WELCOME TO GOOD PITCH, HELLO & A.K.A. THE RADICAL COLLABORATION CLUB! Welcome to Good Pitch India, a forum We couldn’t have put together an We would also like to thank our friends that uses powerful documentaries to event of this global standard without and allies - Samhita, Pocket Films, create meaningful social change. In its the generosity and shared passion of Whistling Woods and Luminosity who second edition, it features four remark- our supporter, Tata Trusts. The support whole heartedly supported our able stories from the states of Madhya received from Tata Trusts for this outreach efforts. We wish we could WELCOME Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra one year program has motivated us invite everyone who expressed and West Bengal. For the uninitiated, to deliver to the highest standards interest in Good Pitch India. we promise this is going to be a bit of of commitment and excellence. a ride! Good Pitch is a radical collab- Our gratitude to our well-wishers, who oration club.