Policies, Programmes, and Strategies for Tribal Development

Policies, Programmes, and Strategies for Tribal Development

Author: Nishakar Panda

Publisher: Gyan Publishing House

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 314

ISBN-13: 9788178354910

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A plethora of literature is available and various studies have been undertaken on different aspects of tribal development. But very few on the analysis of tribal problems vis-à-vis programmes/policies for their development has remained more or less unexplored. The present study has attempted to plug this critical gap. In this book the author has delved deeper into the genesis of tribal problems, critically examined the programmes for their development in the past and present and offered some valuable insights for lifting them out of the morass of poverty and stagnation. It has traced successive shifts in tribal development policies and strategies at different points of time. A thumbnail picture has been presented on impact of the programmes on the stakeholders through case studies conducted in a remote district of a poverty ridden state. The results of the field study tend to conceptualise that despite input in terms of money and material and the so called coveted efforts and endeavours of public servants, there is an abysmal mismatch between the objectives and achievement. We are still far away from the point of their conscientisation. The study will be of immense academic and practical worth. The comprehensive analysis and critical review presented in this book on an important aspect of tribal development and finally the policy prescriptions suggested make it imperative reading for economists, anthropologists, planners, policy makers, administrators and members of the academic and research organizations.


Bathudi and Sounti Tribes

Bathudi and Sounti Tribes

Author: Swaran Singh

Publisher: Gyan Books

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13:

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A pioneering exercise in the bio-anthropological study on the two lesser known scheduled tribes of Orissa, rich with empirical data generated from 59 different villages and compared with the similar earlier studies of various tribal populations of neighbouring states.