Papers presented at the International Conference on "South-East-East Asia and India: Historical Interconnections in Art, Architecture and Culture of Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam" held during 18-29 January 2012 at BPS Women University, Khanpur Kalan, organized by Centre for Indic-Asian Studies
Not Available ; Credit is considered as one of the most important and basic input in agricultural production process. The prime source of agricultural credit in India has drastically shifted from non-institutional (money lenders) to institutional source in the last five decades due to various policy initiatives of Government of India. Grass root level analysis of the dynamic helps in further policy framework. Hence in this study based on district wise average outstanding agricultural credit by scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) for the TE ending 2017-18, three districts from each state indicating high, medium and low exposure categories is selected using clustering technique. For these study districts outstanding agricultural credit by SCBs was extracted (1976-2017) and analysed. From the Bai-Perron test years viz., 1983, 1990, 1997, 2004 and 2011 are identified to be most common structural breaks in the time series data of each district owing to various policy reforms in the field of agricultural finance. Based on these breaks the time series further subdivided into six phases viz., phase-I (1976-1982), phase-II (1983-1989), phase-III (1990-1996), phase-IV (1997-2003), phase-V (2004-2010) and phase-VI (2011-2017). Phase-wise CAGR was calculated for all the districts and Garrett ranking technique is employed for further ranking of phases across six regions of the country. Phase-I is identified as the phase with high rate of growth in agricultural advances in selected districts across all regions except southern where it is ranked second. The policy initiatives of that period i.e. setting of priority sector lending targets and establishment of Regional Rural Banks have played crucial role in this growth phenomenon of agricultural advances. Further recent policies like doubling agricultural package and ground level credit policies have also played crucial role in the growth of agricultural advances at grass root level in all regions except eastern and north-eastern regions. Whereas in the eastern and north-eastern ...
section-1. Social status of Indian Muslims -- section-2. Economic status of Indian Muslims -- section-3. Health status of Indian Muslims -- section-4. Psychology of Indian Muslims -- section-5. Status of Indian Muslim women -- section-6. Participation of Muslim in politics -- section-7. Status of Indian Muslims in art and culture -- section-8. Historical perspective of Indian Muslims -- section-9. Inter-relation between Hindu and Muslim culture -- section-10. Role of Muslims in national integration
Tribal folklore and oral tradition / Mahendra Kumar Mishra -- Oral literature of the Kondhs : certain aspects / B. Ramakrishna Reddy -- The world of the Birhor : continuity, change and loss / S. Imtiaz Hasnain, Farooq Ahmad Mir and Sangita Sarkar -- Orality and civility : explorations from an Adivasi perspective / Pradip Prabhu -- What shall we do with our 'unwritten endangered' languages? / Ramakant Agnihotri / A Bhuta named Babana / B.N. Patnaik -- Manifesto of the unwritten world : the curse of dialects / Udaya Narayana Singh -- Issues and challenges in the search of effective orthography for unwritten languages of North-East India / Umarani Pappuswamy -- Challenges of scripting Raji : an endangered language / Kavita Rastogi -- Bhili Bhasha ke Anuvad men Badha aur Bandhan (in Hindi) / Vasant Nirgune -- Least written languages of Manipur / Ch. Yashawanta Singh