This book is an original and comprehensive study of the development, role and control of national newspapers in Zambia. It deals with the relationship between national newspapers on one hand and the state and people on the other. It traces the press in Zambia from its humble beginnings in 1906 to the ambitious plans 1983 to launch the Sunday Drum
AbstractAs the patron saint of the Indian agate bead industry, Baba Ghor is very important in any reconstruction of its history. The facts about him are quite scanty; we can only hypothetically reassemble them and understand his myth. Abbas, or Habash, a scion of the Malwa Ghors, died in a skirmish near Ratanpur in the early 15th century, probably fighting Ahmed Shah of Gujarat. He was buried on the hill which had long been sacred and was once graced with a fine temple of Makkhan Devi, the Mother Goddess. Her temple was likely destroyed by Ahmed's troops, not those of the Malwa Ghors. Ghor's grave became a place of pilgrimage, first serving the waxing Muslim strength in the area by providing an approved focus of worship. In time it became even more important to the Siddis, who appropriated Ghor as one of their own. He gave the Ratanpur Siddis respectability: in turn they serve his memory. The legends of Baba Ghor and the Ratanpur Rakshisha are not mere fantasy, for they serve the truth as symbols. Ghor represents the coming of Islam, the loss of the old gods, the destruction of the temples, and the forgetting of the old ways. A new dispensation came to Ratanpur and the agate bead industry, and as a result the age-old commerce changed its focus as Cambay replaced Limodra as the lapidary center. Ghor is alive for the Siddis and other Muslims in whose hands the industry is still concentrated. In a very real sense Ghor did encounter the Ratanpur Rakshisha. The Indian agate bead industry has never been the same since, nor can it be understood without taking their battle into account.
As the Administrative functionality has a vital role to play in the higher education system but loopholes lies in everywhere. The study taken up by the scholars reveals the present status of administrative functioning of various departments of D.A.V.V, Indore. Aim The aim of the study was to find out present status of administrative functioning of various departments of D.A.V.V, Indore. Methodology: A self-made questionnaire was constructed in order to find out the administrative functioning of various departments of D.A.V.V, Indore. Subject selection and Statistical Application Total (N) 70 participants have been chosen to get the data for the study. To see the present status of the administrative functioning of the various departments of UTD we have used descriptive Statistics. To find out the statistical result scholars have used Microsoft Excel and presented it graphically. Result and Conclusion On the basis of chosen factors, School of Education M=2.9 which rate the administrative functioning of the department 3 as per the 5 points Likert scale we have taken to analysis this department's rated 2, which can be categorized as an Average.
As the Administrative functionality has a vital role to play in the higher education system but loopholes lies in everywhere. The study taken up by the scholars reveals the present status of administrative functioning of various departments of D.A.V.V, Indore. Aim The aim of the study was to find out present status of administrative functioning of various departments of D.A.V.V, Indore. Methodology: A self-made questionnaire was constructed in order to find out the administrative functioning of various departments of D.A.V.V, Indore. Subject selection and Statistical Application Total (N) 70 participants have been chosen to get the data for the study. To see the present status of the administrative functioning of the various departments of UTD we have used descriptive Statistics. To find out the statistical result scholars have used Microsoft Excel and presented it graphically. Result and Conclusion On the basis of chosen factors, School of Education M=2.9 which rate the administrative functioning of the department 3 as per the 5 points Likert scale we have taken to analysis this department's rated 2, which can be categorized as an Average.
Tthis unique collection, focussing on invisible crimes, social harms and victimisations represents forms a critical perspective on the continuing invisibility of much crime and victimisation in the UK and overseas.and offers new insight into methodologies capable of examining it. Within its pages, The volume explores the various ''spaces'' of invisibility - the body, home, street, environment, state and virtual world -- to develop a framework of typological underpinnings applicable to a range of crimes and harms that tend to remain obscured or hidden through various examples and case studies. It examines the broader reasons for the relative invisibility of some crimes and social harms and how various victims and injustices have become more visible or rendered less so over time and place. This volume revisits and elaborates upon the 'seven features of invisibility' that were introduced in the acclaimed earlier text, Invisible Crimes (1999), and aligns this with current knowledge and research. This fully revised collection, with six new chapters, shapes the lens through which the study and knowledge of criminology and victimology is approached in the twenty-first century. It will be a vital resource for scholars to think critically about research, theory, and policy and practice in relation to the nature and types of invisible crimes at individual and institutional levels.