List of Awardees for ICAR Awards-2019
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
ICAR Citations Booklet 2020
CITATIONS ICAR AWARD CEREMONY 16 JULY 2021 Indian Council of Agricultural Research New Delhi www.icar.org.in CITATIONS ICAR AWARD CEREMONY 16 JULY 2021 Indian Council of Agricultural Research New Delhi www.icar.org.in ujsUæ flag rksej Ñf"k ,oa fdlku dY;k.k] ICAR AWARD 2020 xzkeh.k fodkl vkSj iapk;rh jkt ea=h ICAR AWARD 2020 CITATIONS CITATIONS NARENDRA SINGH TOMAR Hkkjr ljdkj Ñf"k Hkou] ubZ fnYyh MINISTER OF AGRICULTURE & FARMERS WELFARE, RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND PANCHAYATI RAJ GOVERNMENT OF INDIA KRISHI BHAWAN, NEW DELHI lans'k g"kZ dk fo"k; gS fd Hkkjrh; —f"k vuqla/kku ifj"kn oSKkfudksa] fdlkuksa] laLFkkuksasa dkss muds mYys[kuh; ;ksxnku ds fy, ekU;rk çnku djus gsrq fofHkUu iqjLdkj çnku djrk gSA Hkkjrh; —f"k vuqla/kku ifj"kn ds bl 93 osa LFkkiuk fnol ds volj ij 16 fofHkUu Jsf.k;ksa ds 59 iqjLdkj çkIrdrkZvksa ds ç;klksa dks ekU;rk çnku dh tk jgh gS] ftles 4 laLFkku] 1 ,vkbZlhvkjih] 4 —f"k foKku dsUæ ¼dsohds½] 39 oSKkfud ,oa 11 fdlku] lfEefyr gSaA eq>s bl ckr ds fy, Hkh çlUurk gS fd ifj"kn iqjLdkj çkIrdrkZvksa ds mYys[kuh; ;ksxnku ij ,d iqfLrdk Hkh çdkf'kr dj jgh gSA vkt ds lanHkZ esa —f"k {ks= esa ubZ vkSj csgrj çkS|ksfxfd;ksa dk rsth ls fodkl vkSj —f"k {ks= esa vuqla/kku] f'k{k.k vkSj foLrkj dh uoksUes"kh vo/kkj.kkvksa dk vaxhdj.k lokZf/kd egRoiw.kZ gks x;k gS D;ksafd ges ubZ vkSj vis{kk—r cM+h pqukSfr;ka dk fujarj lkeuk djuk iM+ jgk gSA e>q s fo'okl g S fd gekj s lHkh —f"k oKS kfud] vulq /a kkudrk]Z v/;kid] foLrkj inkf/kdkjh] fdlku vkjS vU; lHkh fgr/kkjd bl rF; l s Hkyh&Hkkfa r voxr gkxas s vkjS bl volj dk ykHk mBk,xa s rFkk bu leL;kvk -
Indian History
Indian History Ancient History 1.Which of the following ancient Indian Kings had appointed Dhamma Mahamattas? [A] Asoka [B] Chandragupta Maurya [C] Kanishka [D] Chandragupta-II Correct Answer: A [Asoka] Notes: Dhamma Mahamattas were special officers appointed by Ashoka to spread the message of Dhamma or his Dharma. The Dhamma Mahamattas were required to look after the welfare of the people of different religions and to enforce the rules regarding the sanctity of animal life. 2.Who was the first Saka king in India? [A] Moga [B] Rudradaman [C] Azes [D] Ghatotkacha Correct Answer: A [ Moga ] Notes: An Indo-Scythian king, Moga (or Maues) was the first Saka king in India who established Saka power in Gandhara and extended supremacy over north-western India. 3.Who was ‘Kanthaka’ in the context of Gautam Buddha? [A] Charioteer [B] Body-guard [C] Cousin [D] Horse Correct Answer: D [ Horse ] Notes: Kanthaka was the royal horse of Gautama Buddha. 4.What symbol represents birth of Gautama Buddha? [A] Bodh tree [B] Lotus [C] Horse [D] Wheel Correct Answer: B [ Lotus ] Notes: Lotus and bull resembles the symbol of birth of Gautama Buddha. 5.What symbol represents nirvana of Gautama Buddha? [A] Lotus [B] Wheel [C] Horse [D] Bodhi Tree Correct Answer: D [ Bodhi Tree ] Notes: Bodhi Tree is the symbol of nirvana of Gautama Buddha. On the other hand, Stupa represents the symbol of death of Gautama Buddha. Further, The symbol ‘Horse’ signifies the renunciation of Buddha’s life. 6.During whose reign was the Fourth Buddhist Council held? [A] Ashoka [B] Kalasoka [C] Ajatsatru [D] Kanishka Correct Answer: D [ Kanishka ] Notes: The Fourth Buddhist Council was held at Kundalvana, Kashmir in 72 AD during the reign of Kushan king Kanishka. -
The Nehru Years in Indian Politics
Edinburgh Papers In South Asian Studies Number 16 (2001) ________________________________________________________________________ The Nehru Years in Indian Politics Suranjan Das Department of History University of Calcutta For further information about the Centre and its activities, please contact the Convenor Centre for South Asian Studies, School of Social & Political Studies, University of Edinburgh, 55 George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9LL. e-mail: [email protected] web page: www.ed.ac.uk/sas/ ISBN: 1 900 795 16 7 Paper Price: £2 inc. postage and packing 2 THE NEHRU YEARS IN INDIAN POLTICS: FROM A HISTORICAL HINDSIGHT Suranjan Das Professor, Department of History University of Calcutta and Director, Netaji Institute For Asian Studies, Calcutta The premise Not surprisingly, Jawaharlal Nehru’s years (1947-1964) as the first Prime Minister of the world’s largest democracy have attracted the attention of historians and other social scientists. Most of the works on Jawaharlal have, however, tended to be biographical in nature, and sympathetic in content. The best example of this trend is S. Gopal’s three-volume masterpiece. Amongst other historical biographies on Nehru, one should mention B.R. Nanda’s The Nehrus, R. Zakaria’s edited A Study of Nehru, Michael Brecher’s Nehru, a political biography, Norman Dorothy’s, Nehru: The First Sixty Years and Frank Moraes’ Jawaharlal Nehru: a biography. The latest in the biographical series comes from Judith Brown, and is simply entitled Nehru. Amongst the books celebrating Nehruvian ideals it also possible to include the earlier works of Rajni Kothari, particularly his Politics In India (1970) where he discussed the Congress system developed under Nehru. -
Chap 2 PF.Indd
Credit: Shankar I ts chptr… The challenge of nation-building, covered in the last chapter, was This famous sketch accompanied by the challenge of instituting democratic politics. Thus, by Shankar appeared electoral competition among political parties began immediately after on the cover of his collection Don’t Spare Independence. In this chapter, we look at the first decade of electoral Me, Shankar. The politics in order to understand original sketch was • the establishment of a system of free and fair elections; drawn in the context of India’s China policy. But • the domination of the Congress party in the years immediately this cartoon captures after Independence; and the dual role of the Congress during the era • the emergence of opposition parties and their policies. of one-party dominance. 2021–22 chapter 2 era of one-party dominance Challenge of building democracy You now have an idea of the difficult circumstances in which independent India was born. You have read about the serious challenge of nation-building that confronted the country right in the beginning. Faced with such serious challenges, leaders in many other countries of the world decided that their country could not afford to have democracy. They said that national unity was their first priority and that democracy will introduce differences and conflicts. In India,…. Therefore many of the countries that gained freedom from colonialism …hero-worship, plays a part “ experienced non-democratic rule. It took various forms: nominal in its politics unequalled democracy but effective control by one leader, one party rule or direct in magnitude by the part army rule. -
Kerala and the Constitution
Price 25 Naye Paise Incorporating the cFree Economic Ret'iew' AN lNDEPE..lWENT JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC AND PuBLIC AFFAIRS WE STAND FOR FREE ECONO:\IY AND LffiERTARIAN DEl\IOCRACY MAKE ENGLISH THE LINGUA FRANCA OF INDIA Vol. VII No. 13 IN TIDS ISSUE August 1, 1959 PAGE PAG£ EDITORIAL 1 Communist China's Foreign Policies by T. L. Kantam 11 4 Behind The Aews DELHI LETTER 14 The President's Letter to the Prime Minister NEWS DIGEST 17 by M. A. Venkata Rao 6 HUMOUR 21 ECONOMIC NOTES 22 Swatantra Party's Opportunity by M. N. Tholal 9 LETTER TO THE EDITOR 23 EDITORIAL It is all intelligible from the standpoint of fear and TIBET national self-interest narrowly interpreted but sadly contradictory to the far-seeing, idealistic viewpoint to whic? Indian representatives lay claim when advising T HE Tibetan problem so far as India is concerned Russia and USA to cease from cold war attitudes. remains unsolved. Further developments after the Dalai Lama's residence in Mussoorie as India's The alternatives before India are 1. to recognise guest ~ignify a retreat on the part of India as champion the truly ruthless character of Red Imperialism in of Tibetan freedom. Dalai Lama's cautious assertion Ch~na reinorced by her alliance with the totalitarianism that the Tibetans recognise the Government of Tibet of Russia and resolve to defend herself with the help wherever his Ministers and himself reside in contact of Western democratic States like the USA and Britain with each other has drawn a demurrer from the or 2: to throw herself at the mercy of China and be Government of India that they do not recognise any come her satellite and agree with her doings however exile Government of Tibet on Indian soil or anywhere outrageous they may be such as the rape of Tibet and outside Tibet. -
Name : GYAN PRAKASH SHARMA Date of Birth: 26 June 1952
Name : GYAN PRAKASH SHARMA Date of Birth: 26 June 1952 Qualifications: MA (Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi) M Phil (Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi) PhD (Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi) Official Address: Department of History and Culture Faculty of Humanities and Languages Jamia Millia Islamia New Delhi 110025 Ph: 91(11) 26981717-2818(O) Mob: 9810873263 Current Address Official Address Dean Faculty of Humanities and Languages Jamia Millia Islamia Ph: 26983578, 26981717-2801,2802 Residential Address: 57, Uttaranchal Apartments 5, I.P. Extension Delhi 110092 Ph: 91(11) 22721502 e-mail address: [email protected] Specialisation : Modern Indian History (social and political history) Current Administrative Positions: 1. Dean, Faculty of Humanities and Languages, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi 2. Honorary Director, Munshi Premchand Archives and Literary Centre, Jamia Millia Islamia 3. Hony. Advisor, Centres of Higher Learning, Jamia Millia Islamia Administrative Positions Held Earlier: 1. Head, Department of History, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi (2007-2010) 2. Coordinator, Special Assistance Programme (SAP) UGC (2002-2007) 3. Coordinator, Transfer of Credits Programme Highlights of Important Contributions: Courses Framed: Communalism and the Right Wing Movements History of Municipal Institutions in India Health, Medicine and Society in Colonial India Agrarian Movements and Peasant Uprisings in Colonial India Research Projects Undertaken: Survey of Bonded Labour in North Bihar sponsored by the National Labour Institute, Government of India, 1975-76 Compilation of Village Notes of Patna District 1984-85 Any Other Innovative Activity: Involved course structuring of and preparation of study material on Indian National Movement for MA Classes of IGNOU Academic Engagements Since 2009 Lectures delivered: 1. -
Agrarian Movements in Bihar During the British Colonial Rule: a Case Study of Champaran Movement
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Research International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Research ISSN: 2455-2070; Impact Factor: RJIF 5.22 Received: 06-09-2020; Accepted: 17-09-2020; Published: 07-10-2020 www.socialsciencejournal.in Volume 6; Issue 5; 2020; Page No. 82-85 Agrarian movements in Bihar during the British colonial rule: A case study of Champaran movement Roma Rupam Department of History, Tilka Manjhi Bhagalpur University, Bhagalpur, Bihar, India Abstract British colonial rule in India brought about transformation in every area of Indian social, political and economic life. The impact of British colonial rule on agrarian society was decisive. The policy of colonial rule had changed the agrarian structure in India. The colonial rule had also developed new mechanisms to interact with peasants. Both new agrarian structure and new mechanisms to interact with peasants divided the agrarian society into the proprietors, working peasants and labourers. The roots of exploitation and misery of majority of people in agrarian society can be traced in the land tenure systems. The land relations were feudal in the permanent settlement areas. In the areas of Mahalwari and Ryotwari areas, the land had passed to absentee moneylenders, Sahukars and businessman due to large scale peasants’ indebtedness. This paper will give an overview of some of the major agrarian movements and their impact on the agrarian society. The peasants had been the worst sufferers of British Raj in colonial India. Because of the nature of land revenue system and its impact on agrarian society, the agrarian movements emerged in many parts of India. -
National Institutional Ranking Framework
National Institutional Ranking Framework Ministry of Human Resource Development Government of India Welcome to Data Capturing System: OVERALL Submitted Institute Data for NIRF'2020' Institute Name: ACADEMY OF SCIENTIFIC & INNOVATIVE RESEARCH [IR-O-U-0713] Sanctioned (Approved) Intake Academic Year 2018-19 2017-18 2016-17 2015-16 2014-15 2013-14 PG [1 Year Program(s)] 17 - - - - - PG [2 Year Program(s)] 136 65 - - - - Total Actual Student Strength (Program(s) Offered by Your Institution) (All programs No. of Male No. of Female Total Students Within State Outside State Outside Economically Socially No. of students No. of students No. of students No. of students of all years) Students Students (Including male (Including male Country Backward Challenged receiving full receiving full receiving full who are not & female) & female) (Including male (Including male (SC+ST+OBC tuition fee tuition fee tuition fee receiving full & female) & female) Including male reimbursement reimbursement reimbursement tuition fee & female) from the State from Institution from the Private reimbursement and Central Funds Bodies Government PG [1 Year 6 3 9 2 7 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 Program(s)] PG [2 Year 53 56 109 48 61 0 1 42 1 1 0 41 Program(s)] Placement & Higher Studies PG [1 Years Program(s)]: Placement & higher studies for previous 3 years Academic Year No. of first year No. of first year Academic Year No. of students graduating in minimum No. of students Median salary of No. of students students intake in the students admitted in stipulated time placed placed selected for Higher year the year graduates(Amount in Studies Rs.) 2016-17 20 20 2016-17 17 5 319000(Rupees Three 9 Lakhs Nineteen Thousand Only) 2017-18 16 16 2017-18 16 10 330000(Rupees Three 2 Lakhs Thirty Thousand Only) 2018-19 17 9 2018-19 9 2 325000(Rupees Three 4 Lakhs Twenty Five Thousand Only) PG [2 Years Program(s)]: Placement & higher studies for previous 3 years Academic Year No. -
To Study the Congress Policy Towards the Improvement of the Peasants
International Journal of Research in Economics and Social Sciences(IJRESS) Available online at: http://euroasiapub.org Vol. 7 Issue 11, November- 2017 ISSN(o): 2249-7382 | Impact Factor: 6.939| TO STUDY THE CONGRESS POLICY TOWARDS THE IMPROVEMENT OF THE PEASANTS Basudev Yadav Research Scholar Kalinga University Supervisor Name: Dr. Deepak Tomar Assistant Professor Department Of History ABSTRACTS Congress had to work in favour of peasants because they were compelled to work accordance to the manifesto of peasants programme passed in 1937 before elections and to consider the peasant’s problems two committees were formed.In this connection first committee had to enquire into the land rights and revenue; and was asked to advise on necessary amendments; while second committee was formed to look into the matters of rural indebtness.01And District Magistrates were asked not to take enhanced revenue; to avoid the hearings of the peasant disputes over taxes. In addition, an increasing number of U.P. congress representatives in the latter half of 1931. On the agrarian problem, begin to adopt a more combative and redical line than before. They spoke of the need for urgent action, especially in Oudh, to alleviate the distress of tenants. They were forced to abolish intermediaries between the farmers and the states. In 1934, a group of intellectuals founded the Congress Socialist Party (C.S.P.) to radicalise the Indian National Congress and were determined to initiate a process that would eventually lead to the development of a socialist society. Yet it never actually left Congress. INTRODUCTION They rightly believed that at that point especially when Jawahar Lal Nehru had emerged as the foremost radical within the Congress, the Indian National Congress was in a position to usher in a social revolution. -
Zamindari System & All India Kisan Sabha
UPSC Civil Services Examination Subject – UPSC GS-II Topic – Zamindari System & All India Kisan Sabha The Zamindari System in British India was a land revenue management system under the Permanent Settlement of Bengal. The settlement was between the landlords of Bengal known as zamindars and the British East India Company. The system recognised the zamindars as landowners who then let out their lands to tenant farmers in return of a share of the produce. The zamindar, in turn, had to pay a fixed sum to the British Government. This led to a lot of exploitation of the peasants. In this article, we will discuss the impact of the various groups opposed to the zamindari system on the freedom movement. It is an important topic for the History syllabus of UPSC prelims. Aspirants can check their preparation by subscribing to UPSC Prelims Test Series 2020 now!! To complement your preparation for the upcoming exam, check the following links: o UPSC Previous Year Question Papers o Current Affairs o UPSC Notes PDF o IAS Mock Tests o NCERT Notes PDF Zamindari System - Major Events Issues related to peasants were an important part of the freedom movement from the first decade of the twentieth century. One of the issues that the national movement focussed on after 1915 was the condition of the peasantry and their upliftment. As a result, the abolition of intermediaries and by extension the zamindari system increased in importance. Here are a few important events related to reforming the land revenue system during the early twentieth century: The first movement spearheaded by Mahatma Gandhi in India was related to peasants, which was the Champaran Satyagraha (1917) against forced indigo cultivation. -
2008 Gandhi, Marx and Charan Singh. Article by Gould, Harold a .Pdf
Speaking of Peasants Essays o n In d ia n H istory a n d Po l itic s in H o n o r o f W alter H auser MANOHAR Edited: by W illiam R. Pin c h * 1 % The present volume springs out of a festschrift conference to honor the career of M Wal,er Hauser, Mm professor emeritus of Mm history at the 5 Um University of Virginia and pioneer scholar in the study of Indian peasant movements. Because Hauser’s work focuses on Bihar and the peasant tedder, Swami Sah^anand Saraswati, some of the authors, such as the late Arvind Narayan Das, Christopher Hill, and Sho Kuwajima, are concerned directly with peasant politics in Bihar. Other authors, such as Harry Blair, Majid Siddiqi, Harold Gould, and the late James R. Hagen, contrast agrarian history and politic® in Bihar to other parts of India. A third group,including Stuart Corbridge, Ron Herring, and Ruhi Grover, investigate related questions in agrarian history and politics from regions formally outside of Bihar. A fourth group of authors, including Peter Robb, Ajay Skaria. and William R. Pinch, examine culture, religion, and meaning that inform (and are informed by) peasant politics. A fifth set of authors, Frederick H. Damon, Peter Gottschaik, and Mathew Schmalz, provide ethnographic context. Damon takes readers from Bihar to Melanesia and many points in between, with a focus on ethno-botany over three millennia; Gottschaik and Schmalz provide a closely detailed examination of a Bihari village, focusing in particular on the problem of religion. {Contd. on back flap Rs. -
Anecdotes About Jawaharlal Nehru
1 Anecdotes about Jawaharlal Nehru Anil K Rajvanshi Phaltan, Maharashtra, India [email protected] This is the 125th birth anniversary year of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru our first Prime Minister and one of the main architects of Independent India. Lots of articles are being written about Pandit ji and hence I thought of writing about what I heard about him from some of his close associates. Too often people do not write anecdotes about these great people and the interesting tidbits are lost forever when a person dies. The people I am going to describe never wrote about their association with Nehru and hence I thought of putting them on record. I have been lucky to have known them and felt that those interesting stories they told me about Nehru need to be told. I saw Pandit Nehru only two times in my life and had no personal interaction with him. Hence all these anecdotes are from the people who knew him closely. The first time I saw Jawahar Lal Nehru was sometime in 1961. Nehru had come to Lucknow for some meeting either at the Central Drug Research Institute (CDRI) or Lucknow University and he was supposed to pass through Hazratganj the main thorough fare of Lucknow. Since my father who was in the Congress Party talked a lot about Nehru, I had expressed a desire to see him. He knew Nehru’s program that day so decided to take me with him so we could stand in front of the Mayfair cinema building in Hazratganj from where his cavalcade would pass.