Regional Studies - Theses

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    Mapping Reproductive Loss and Hope: A Study of Infertility in Hyderabad and Kolkata
    (University of Hyderabad, 2021-10-28) Anu Gupta ; Sheela Prasad
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    DEVELOPMENT IN TRIBAL AREAS OF WEST GODAVARI DISTRICT, ANDHRA PRADESH: PERSPECTIVES, PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS
    (University of Hyderabad, 2008) BABU MALLA V ARAPU, RAM ; Murty, M.L.K.
    India bas the second largest concentratIOn of tribal populatIOn, after that of the Afhcan contment Trlbals are the 'autochthonous' people of the land who are beheved to be the earliest settlers m the IndIan perunsuJa (Veona 1990 1·7) They have been neglected In IsolatIOn all th rough the centunes They are generally called as adrvaSIS Implymg 'abongmals' or 'ongmal mhabltants' The trlbals were Included under 'arumlsts', 'forest trtbes', 'hIli tnbes' and 'depressed classes' up to 1921 census reports Later, the indian franchIse committee accorded a separate nomenclature for tnba1 groups m the census reports of 1931 as 'primitIve tribes', III 1941 as 'tribes' and after 1951 census onwards as 'scheduled trIbes' (STs) (Verma 1996 10·14)
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    PUBLIC POLICY ON POPULATION CONTROL IN POST-INDEPENDENCE INDIA: A CRITICAL STUDY
    (University of Hyderabad, 2007-10) SHALEM RAJU, DARSE ; Prasad, Sheela
    India has the second largest population among countries of the world, the first being China, with only 2.4 per cent of the world's geographical area. India's share of world population is 16per cent. India is adding 17 million people every year, roughly the equivalent of the total popUlation of Australia. According to the latest estimates based on fertility rates, in the world today, India ranks second in population numbers (Communist China tops the list with more than 750 million people) and seventh in land area. (Chandrasekhar., 1977: 246). India is expected to overtake China by 2050, when there would be 1,592 billion Indians to 1,392 billion Chinese. "India's popUlation is very large and is growing very fast. This affects adversely the growth of economy and is highly unfavorable for the growth of output." (Agarwal , 1994:77).
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    FEUDAL CHIEFS, SOCIO HISTORICAL RELATIONS AND APPROPRIATION OF POWER IN MEDIEVAL ANDHRA
    (University of Hyderabad, 2006) SWAROOPA RANI, CHALLAPALLI ; Murty, M.L.K. ; Hangloo, R.L
    In the recent past, the reconstruction of history of the medieval Andhra has thrown up various Issues, which need to be addressed In the light of recent developments In historiography The scholars on political history of Andhra mainly concentrated on the major powers In medieval Andhra such as the Kakallyas and the VIJayanagaras The Samantha system, and the feudatory chiefs and the minor prlnclpalilles which also played a prominent role in the political affairs dUring the medieval period In Andhra, did not receive much attention In particular, studies on the SOCIOhlstoncal basis and the antecedent conditions which prOVided opportunilies for the chiefs in medieval Andhra In approprlallng power, are rather meager. In view of the growing interest In recent Indian histOriography on the study of "state formation", an attempt is made here to investigate the role of different chiefs and chieftains and other principalities In the power dynamiCs of medieval Andhra Fortunately, there IS a large body of source materlal,both inscriptional and literary as well as the bulk of Telugu literature that has grown from 11 th century onwards
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    Shifts and trends in procurement policy : a case study of paddy procurement in Orissa
    (University of Hyderabad, 2015-06-01) Tajuddin Mohammed ; Sheela Prasad