30 Days of Rainfall, Compared and Management of Water
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TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTION I - GENERAL 1 DEFINITIONS AND ABBREVIATIONS ............................................................................................................ 1 OVERSEAS SHAREHOLDERS .......................................................................................................................... 6 CURRENCY OF PRESENTATION AND FINANCIAL DATA ........................................................................ 7 FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS ............................................................................................................. 8 SECTION II - RISK FACTORS 9 SECTION III - INTRODUCTION 29 THE ISSUE .......................................................................................................................................................... 29 SELECTED FINANCIAL INFORMATION ...................................................................................................... 30 GENERAL INFORMATION .............................................................................................................................. 33 CAPITAL STRUCTURE ..................................................................................................................................... 36 OBJECTS OF THE ISSUE .................................................................................................................................. 41 STATEMENT OF TAX BENEFITS ................................................................................................................... 43 SECTION -
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 ....................................... -
Efficacy of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) in Enhancing Assertiveness and Social Maturity in College Students 1 R
International Peer Reviewed & Refereed Journal Journal of Indian Health Psychology VOL. 13, NO. 1, September, 2018 Editors Prof. Rajbir Singh Prof. NovRattan Sharma Owned, Printed & Published by Dr. N.K. Singh, F-4, ‘Hari Sadan’, 20, Ansari Road, Daryaganj, New Delhi-110002 Printed at: R.K. Offset, Naveen Shahdara, Delhi-110032. Journal of Indian Health Psychology Journal of Indian Health Psychology is a biannual Journal devoted to interdisciplinary research publication with the objective of furthering an understanding of scientific relationships between behavioural principles on one hand and health issues on the other. This journal shall provide a forum to integrate the theoretical, empirical and application based knowledge in this area. The distinctive feature of the journal will be to include a special section of the articles based on Indian perspectives of health psychology and behaviour. Dissemination of the knowledge among the professionals and upcoming researchers will go a long way in benefiting the masses at large. Research carried out at individual, group and community level are welcome. To enter your subscription for outstanding biannual research journal Journal of Indian Health Psychology Please fill out and return the Order Form below (or a copy there of) SUBSCRIPTION ORDER FORM Please enter my subscription to Journal of Indian Health Psychology Volume.............................................................................................. No. ................................................................................................... Year................................................................................................... SUBSCRIPTION RATES Print Price Online Price Online + Print Price Rs. $(US) • Rs. $(US) • Rs. $(US) • Annual 3000 150 100 4500 225 100 6000 300 200 Two Years 6000 300 200 9000 450 300 12000 600 400 Five Years 16000 800 450 24000 1200 500 32000 8000 1000 I enclosed a cheque/DD/MO/of Rs./$/• ..............cheque/DD No....................... -
Jain Irrigation
15 November 2016 2QFY17 Results Update | Sector: Others Jain Irrigation BSE SENSEX S&P CNX CMP: INR86 TP: INR99(+15%) BUY 26,305 8,108 Bloomberg JI IN Inline results; Outlook remain healthy for 2HFY17; Retain Buy Equity Shares (m) 443.1 Revenue & EBITDA inline, PAT beat estimates: JI reported overall revenue of M.Cap.(INRb)/(USDb) 29.3 / 0.4 INR14.4b (est INR14.34b) as against INR13.17b in 2QFY16 marking a YoY 52-Week Range (INR) 109 / 47 1, 6, 12 Rel. Per (%) -4/27/27 growth of 9.3%. EBITDA stood at INR1.91b (est INR1.86b) in 2QFY17 with Avg Val, INRm/ Vol m 401 EBITDA margins at 13.3% (est 13%), expanding 160bp YoY. Interest cost Free float (%) 69.3 increased to INR1.2b in 2QFY17 vs INR1.1b in 1QFY17 due to increase in debt in this quarter. Adjusted PAT for the quarter stood at a INR280m (est. INR135m) Financials & Valuations (INR b) as against loss of INR54m in 2QFY16. PAT beat our estimates due to tax Y/E Mar 2016 2017E 2018E reversal of INR174m vs our estimates tax outgo of INR35m. Net Sales 62.9 72.3 83.4 EBITDA 8.2 9.9 11.7 Healthy growth outlook for 2HFY17: On consolidated basis, overall Micro PAT 1.0 2.5 4.1 Irrigation Systems (MIS) grew by 13.6% yoy with healthy growth in key markets EPS (INR) 2.2 5.4 8.2 like Maharashtra, AP, Karnataka and Gujarat. Plastic division recorded a 1.3% Gr. (%) 17.7 146.1 52.9 growth YoY due to lower off-take of PE & PVC pipe. -
11 Tamil Nadu Economy
www.tntextbooks.in CHAPTER 11 Tamil Nadu Economy “If the nature of the work is properly appreciated and applied, it will stand in the same relation to the higher faculties as food is to the physical body” –J.C.Kumarappa LEARNI NG OBJ ECTI VES To understand the resource position of Tamil Nadu 1 economy To analyse the performance of Tamil Nadu economy in relation to other 2 states. 11.1 of contribution to GDP, third highest in terms of per capita income, investment, I ntroduction Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and industrial output. It has been ranked as The economic and social development the most economically free state by the of states in India are not uniform. Wide Economic Freedom. regional disparities exist. The western region and southern regions are better off than the In the social and health sector also Tamil other regions. Tamil Nadu is geographically Nadu’s performance is better than many eleventh largest and population wise third other states and better than national largest. Tamil Nadu fares well with many average in terms of health, higher achievements. It stands to second in terms education, IMR and MMR. Tamil Nadu Economy 225 www.tntextbooks.in Tamil Nadu Economy 226 www.tntextbooks.in 11.2 11.3 Highlights of Tamil Nadu Performance of Tamil Nadu Economy Economy ��Growth of SGDP in Tamil Nadu has Some of the States like Gujarat and been among the fastest in India since Maharashtra seem to perform well in some 2005. of the economic indicators. Kerala tops in ��Poverty reduction in Tamil Nadu has literacy, IMR and MMR. -
THE KARUR VYSYA BANK LIMITED the Bank Was Incorporated on June 22, 1916 Under the Companies Act, 1913 with the Registrar of Companies, Trichinopoly
DRAFT LETTER OF OFFER November 12, 2010 For the Equity Shareholders of the Bank Only THE KARUR VYSYA BANK LIMITED The Bank was incorporated on June 22, 1916 under the Companies Act, 1913 with the Registrar of Companies, Trichinopoly. The Bank now comes under the jurisdiction the Registrar of Companies, Chennai. (For further details, please see “History and Other Corporate Matters” on page 55) Registered and Central Office: Post Box No. 21, Erode Road, Karur – 639 002, Tamil Nadu, India Tel: +91 4324 226520; +91 4324 225521-25; Fax: +91 4324 225700 Contact Person: Mr. R. Kannan, Company Secretary and Compliance Officer Email: [email protected]; Website: www.kvb.co.in FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION TO THE EQUITY SHAREHOLDERS OF THE BANK ONLY DRAFT LETTER OF OFFER ISSUE OF 30,502,976 EQUITY SHARES WITH A FACE VALUE OF ` 10/- EACH ("RIGHTS EQUITY SHARES") FOR CASH AT A PRICE OF ` 150/- INCLUDING A PREMIUM OF ` 140/- AGGREGATING UPTO ` 457.54 CRORES TO THE EXISTING EQUITY SHAREHOLDERS OF THE KARUR VYSYA BANK LIMITED (“THE BANK” OR “THE ISSUER”) ON RIGHTS BASIS IN THE RATIO OF TWO (2) RIGHTS EQUITY SHARES FOR EVERY FIVE (5) EQUITY SHARES HELD ON THE RECORD DATE I.E. [•] ("RIGHTS ISSUE/ THE ISSUE"). THE ISSUE PRICE FOR THE EQUITY SHARES IS 15 TIMES OF THE FACE VALUE OF THE EQUITY SHARES. Payment Method* Amount Payable per equity share Applicable to all categories of shareholders (in `) Face Value Premium Total On Application 6 54 60 First call 2 43 45 Second and final call 2 43 45 Total 10 140 150 * Please see risk factor no. -
Periyar and the Intermediate Castes
Is This a Sudra Critique? Periyar and the Intermediate Castes Karthick Ram Manoharan* Introduction When Kancha Ilaiah published his controversial book Why I Am Not a Hindu (1996), he subtitled it A Sudra Critique of Hindutva Philosophy, Culture and Political Economy. Ilaiah’s output in contributing to this “critique” has been quite prolific, the most recent being the co-edited volume, The Shudras: Visions for a New Path (Ilaiah and Karuppusamy 2021). But why use a Sudra critique when Ilaiah himself identifies that the concept of “Sudra” is derogatory in the Brahminical vocabulary and that “It does not communicate a feeling of self-respect and political assertion” (Ilaiah 1996:vii)? For political purposes, Ilaiah prefers the term “Dalitbahujan”—building on the concept introduced by Kanshi Ram, the founder of the Bahujan Samaj Party—and defines it as “people and castes who form the exploited and suppressed majority” (Ilaiah 1996:ix). The “Sudra” concept, thus, is used as a critique of Brahminical ideals so as to arrive at a Dalitbahujan politics. The Sudras—“the numerous productive castes which have historically built the material basis of our civilization, yet have been marginalized in terms of the power and knowledge-sharing-arrangement in the Brahminical order” (Ilaiah 2021:n.p.)—, however, were limited in their conceptual under- standing as their political action was restricted to securing repre- sentation and they did not have adequate self-consciousness of the caste system and the need for Dalitbahujan unity. Ilaiah frequently cites Jotirao Phule and B. R. Ambedkar as being crucial to the development of his Sudra critique. -
Promoting Micro Irrigation in India
[This is a draft paper for discussion. Please do not quote.] IWMI-Tata Water Policy Program Annual Partners’ Meet 2004 Promoting Micro Irrigation in India: A Review of Evidence and Recent Developments* Shilp Verma The research covered by this paper was carried out with generous support from Sir Ratan Tata Trust, Mumbai under the IWMI-Tata Water Policy Program. This is a pre-publication paper prepared for the IWMI-Tata Annual Partners’ Meet, 2004. This is not a peer reviewed paper; views contained in it are those of the author(s) and not of the International Water Management Institute or Sir Ratan Tata Trust. * Based on Research by IWMI-Tata Core Team Visit: http://www.iwmi.org/iwmi-tata ABSTRACT In the classical model of irrigation efficiency, all water applied to the crop is treated as consumed or lost while the integrated basin view of irrigation efficiency views only the effective evapo-transpiration as the consumptive use in irrigation. In either case, increased water efficiency at farm/individual level would not lead to water saving at the system (basin) level unless these higher farm efficiencies are achieved system-wide! Thus, unless the adoption of micro-irrigation is scaled up, it would not make any significant contribution to alleviating the problem of groundwater depletion and in resolving various related issues. Even after more than three decades of promotion by various government and non-government agencies, the spread of micro-irrigation in India is miniscule. The limited growth of micro-irrigation technologies in India can, to a large extent, be explained by the apparent gap between what has been marketed and where the demand lies. -
Marginal Farmers Cover
SYNTHESIS OF IMPORTANT DICUSSIONS ON MICROFINANCE AND LIVELIHOOD SUPPORT TO SMALL AND MARGINAL FARMERS SPECIAL THANKS We are grateful to the following members of Solution Exchange for their responses to the discussions related to small and marginal farmers – Abhinandan L. B. Prakash Rakesh Das Abhishek Mendiratta L. P. Semwal Rakesh Kumar Gupta Anupama Sharma M L Sukhdeve Ramakrishna Nallathiga Arun Jindal M. Vijaybhasker Srinivas Ravinder Yadav Ashok Kumar Sinha, Mahendra Parida Resham Singh Avishek Gupta Mangesh Patankar Ritesh Dwivedi Bharathi Bhupal Manoj Singh Ruturaj Pattanaik Bhupal Neog Maroti Upare Sachin Kumar Bibhuti B. Pradhan N. Jeyaseelan Sanjay Kumar Gupta D. S. K. Rao N. Srinivasan Sanjay Verma G. K. Agrawal Navin Anand Sanjeev Kumar G. V. Krishnagopal Neelesh Kumar Singh Sarat Kumar Patnaik G. V. Ramanjaneyulu Neelkanth Mishra Satish Kumar Anand George Thomas Neeraj Verma Saurabh Vikas Girija Srinivasan Nidhi Sadana Sabharwal Shailja Kishore Gurusamy Gandhi Nitin Bembalkar Shivani Bhardwaj Harish Chotani P. Purushotham Suman K. A Hemantha Kumar Pamarthy P. S. M. Rao Sunil Kumar Indu Chandra Ram P. Uday Shankar Susanta Kumar Nayak Jalpa Sukhanandi Prakash Kumar Trilochan Sastry Jay Prakash Lall PSM Rao Umesh Chandra Gaur Jaya Patel Puran Singh Yadav Veerashekharappa Kalika Mohapatra R. K. Swarnkar Vineet Rai Kedareswar Choudhury R. V. Kotnala Vineet Sinha Krishan Khanna Rajesh K. Verma The Consolidated Responses in this document are the outcome of the expertise and skills of Resource Persons and Research Associates. We profusely thank Gopi Ghosh, Monika Khanna, Raj Ganguly, T. N. Anuradha, Nitya Jacob and Sunetra Lala. We acknowledge their valuable contributions in preparing some of the consolidate replies incorporated in this document. -
Arrear List for :Dec-2016 18-01-2017 01:04:38 Page 1 of 170 Bill Group: PRIVATE (Electricity & Water Bill)
Arrear List for :Dec-2016 18-01-2017 01:04:38 Page 1 of 170 Bill Group: PRIVATE (Electricity & Water Bill) AS ON 30/12/2016 (in `) Sno Name Address E/W Arrear Lpsc Total Arrear KRISHAN DUTT 1 LAT NO 9-10 E BLOCK CON PLACE, NEW DELHI - 110001 W 4256971. 3936313. 8193284.81 35 46 PRADHAN 2 NDMC DHOBI GHAT NO 15 S AVENUE, NEW DELHI - 110001 W 4588382. 2975288. 7563670.39 07 32 PRADHAN 3 DHOBI GHAT RAJA BAZAR, NEW DELHI - 110001 W 123144.0 135430.5 258574.62 4 8 4 BILL AT SQ 28 GURUDWARA RAKABGANJ, BILL AT SQ 28 GURUDWARA W 1870537. 1277448. 3147985.41 RAKABGANJ, NEW DELHI - 110001 09 32 5 NDMC DHOBI GHAT NO 5 NM AVENUE, PT PANT MARG, NEW DELHI - W 1561247. 1061218. 2622465.95 110001 93 02 SARDAR EXHIBITORS P LTD 6 74-75 SCINDIA HOUSE, NEW DELHI - 110001 E -5194.79 5857183. 5851988.21 00 PRADHAN 7 NDMC DHOBI GHAT NO 16 NEAR HESTING LANE, NEW DELHI - 110021 W 1807752. 1165676. 2973428.87 73 14 KHALSA TENT HOUSE 8 SHOP NO 27 H C PLACE, NEW DELHI - 110001 E 2567859. 382654.3 2950513.47 11 6 J N SINGH 9 M/S BANGALI MAL & CO C PLACE, NEW DELHI - 110001 W 831272.5 1825625. 2656898.43 3 90 PRADHAN 10 H. NO-56,DHOBI GHAT DEVI PD,HEILY LANE, NEW DELHI - 110001 E 3448.07 43.18 3491.25 11 DHOBI GHAT DEVI P D SADAN, HEILY LANE, NEW DELHI - 110001 W 1522154. 1123000. 2645155.10 75 35 SECURITY WHITE HOUSE APPTT, OWNER 12 WELFARE ASSO. -
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. -
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