Livelihood diversities in mountain economy/ (Record no. 176542)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 00428nam a2200145Ia 4500
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9788180698361
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Transcribing agency CUS
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 307.1412095451
Item number AWA/L
245 #0 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Livelihood diversities in mountain economy/
Sub title constraints and opportunities
Statement of responsibility, etc. Awasthi.I.C.
250 ## - EDITION STATEMENT
Edition statement 1st.ed.
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc. New Delhi:
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. Concept Pub. Co,
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 2012.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent xxvi, 481 p
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note 1. Features and Development Issues in<br/>Mountain Economies<br/>I. Introduction<br/>II. Development Trajectory of Mountain<br/>Economies<br/>III. Commonalities and Complementarities<br/>1. Mountain Specificities<br/>' 2. " Subsistence Agriculture and Food Deficits<br/>3. Persistent Human Poverty<br/>4. Exploitative Terms of Trade and<br/>Exploitative Linkage Relation<br/>5. Gender Inequity and Drudgery<br/>6. Environmental Degradation<br/>IV. Conclusion<br/>2. Issues and Diversity of Development<br/>Experience of Indian Hill Economies<br/>I. Problems of Hill Economies<br/>II. Diversity and Development Problems<br/>1. Demographic Profile<br/>2. Social Development<br/>3. Poverty Levels<br/>4. Human Development Indicators<br/>5. Consumption Expenditure<br/>6. Growth Rates<br/>7. Labour Force Participation Rates<br/>8. Distribution of Main Workers<br/>9. Growth of Employment<br/>10. Incidence of Unemployment<br/>11. Sectoral Composition of Plan Expenditure<br/>12. Credit-Deposit Ratio<br/>13. Diversity in Development Patterns<br/>III. Conclusion<br/>3. Rural Employment in the Context of<br/>the Hill Economy : The Theoretical<br/>Framework and Empirical Evidences<br/>I. Theoretical Foundations and Empirical Evidences<br/>1. Labour Transfer Model<br/>2. Trade-Induced Development Argument<br/>3. Industrialisation Strategy<br/>4. Regional Growth Theory Argument<br/>5. Agricultural Strategy<br/>6. Rural Non-Farm Sector<br/>(i) Agriculture growth linkage hypothesis<br/>(ii) Prime movers outside agriculture<br/>hypothesis<br/>(iii) Residual hypothesis<br/>(iv) Limitations of existing literature in<br/>the context of hill economy<br/>II. Economic Characteristics of Uttarakhand<br/>III. Rural Non-farm Employment in Uttarakhand<br/>1. Typology of Rural Non-farm Activities<br/>(i) Enterprise based activities<br/>(a) Natural resource-based enterprises<br/>(b) Livestock-based enterprises<br/>(c) Traditional skill-based enterprises<br/>(d) Tourism and amenities-based<br/>enterprises<br/>2. Nature of Linkages<br/>IV. Need for the Study<br/>V. Objectives<br/>VI. Hypotheses<br/>VII. Methodology<br/>(i) Sampling<br/>(ii) Survey tools<br/>(iii) Analytical tools<br/>(iv) Models<br/>4. Rural Non-Farm Sector<br/>Employment in Uttarakhand : Trends<br/>and Patterns<br/>I. Overview<br/>II. Pattern of Rural Employment in Uttarakhand<br/>1. Labour Force Participation Rates<br/>2. Work Participation Rates<br/>(i) National Sample Survey<br/>(ii) Workforce Participation Rate by<br/>Population Census<br/>(iii) NSS Evidences<br/>3. Intensity of Subsidiary Employment<br/>4. Growth in Employment<br/>Broad Sectoral Analysis<br/>6. Trends in Employment Status<br/>7. Unemployment Trends<br/>III. The Rural Non-farm Sector<br/>1. Size of Rural Non-farm Employment<br/>in Uttarakhand<br/>2. Growth of Non-farm Employment<br/>3. Sectoral Composition of RNFE<br/>4. The Growing Sub-sectors<br/>5. Non-farm Informal Sector<br/>6. The Rural Unorganised Manufacturing<br/>IV. Productivity and Income<br/>1. Sectoral Composition of Income<br/>2. Sectoral Pattern of Productivity<br/>3. Wages<br/>V. Factors Determining Rural Non-farm Employment<br/>1. Education and Skills<br/>2. Land Size Classes and Rural Non-farm<br/>Employment (RNFE) Employment<br/>3. Gender and Social Group<br/>4. Institutional Support<br/>5. Infrastructure<br/>VI. Conclusion<br/>5. Socio-economic and Demographic<br/>Characteristics of Sample Households<br/>I. Introduction<br/>II. Social Features of the Sample Households<br/>(i) Principal occupation of heads of the<br/>household<br/>(ii) Women headed households<br/>(iii) Casual labour households<br/>(iv) Literacy rates<br/>III. Demographic Characteristics<br/>(i) Average size of households<br/>(ii) Working age population<br/>(iii) Aged population<br/>' (iv) Migrants<br/>(v) Sex ratio<br/>(vi) Age structure of population<br/>(vii) Marital status<br/>IV. Economic Characteristics<br/>(i) Assets holding<br/>(ii) Other assets<br/>(iii) Average annual household and per<br/>capita income<br/>V. Conclusion<br/>6. Employment and Livelihood Diversities<br/>I. Introduction<br/>II. Activity Status of Population<br/>(i) Labour force characteristics among sample<br/>population<br/>(ii) Labour force characteristics among<br/>non-migrants<br/>(iii) Labour force characteristics across<br/>spatial units and household levels<br/>(iv) Employment status of workers<br/>III. Structure of Employment at Disaggregated<br/>Levels and by Household Groups<br/>(i) Structure of employment<br/>(ii) Employment structure at spatial levels<br/>(iii) Employment structure by social class<br/>(iv) Employment structure by land size class<br/>(v) Educational status of workers<br/>(vi) Employment pattern among youth workers<br/>IV. Occupational Structure of Workforce<br/>(i) Occupational structure of migrant and<br/>non-migrant workers<br/>(ii) Occupational structure of non- migrant<br/>workers<br/>(iii) Occupational structure and household<br/>features<br/>(iv) Occupation and industrial distribution<br/>of workforce<br/>V. Employment Status of Workers<br/>VI. Multiplicity of Employment<br/>VII. Extent of Employment and Unemployment<br/>(i) Average days of employment<br/>(ii) Extent of unemployment<br/>VIII. Income and Earnings<br/>(i) Household income<br/>(ii) Wages<br/>IX. Conclusion<br/>Pattern of Non-Farm Employment and<br/>Rural Enterprise.s<br/>I. Non-Iarni Employment and Incomes :<br/>The Size and Share<br/>II. Pattern of Non-farm Employment<br/>III. Sectoral Composition of Non-farm<br/>Employment by Industry<br/>(i) Non-farm employment by social category<br/>IV. Non-farm Employment by Occupation<br/>V. Non-farm Employment by Household Features<br/>VI. Non-farm Employment by Educational Levels<br/>VII. Determinants of Non-farm Employment<br/>(i) The Logit model<br/>VIII. Sources of Income<br/>(i) Sources of income by social category<br/>and status of blocks<br/>(ii) Determinants of household income<br/>IX. The Heterogeneity in the Non-farm sector<br/>(i) Casual wage workers<br/>(ii) Regular wage/salaried workers<br/>X. Rural Enterprises<br/>(i) Composition of enterprises °<br/>(ii) Nature of operation<br/>(iii) Location of enterprises<br/>/ (iv) Employment<br/>(v) Education and skill levels<br/>(vi) Access to credit<br/>(vii) Linkages<br/>(a) Input linkages<br/>(b) Output linkages<br/>(viii) Capital use<br/>XI. What Ails these Enterprises?<br/>(i) Structural constraints<br/>(ii) Supply side related constraints<br/>(iii) Demand side related constraints<br/>XII. Conclusion<br/>8. Migration Patterns and Linkages<br/>1. Introduction<br/>II. Typology of Migration<br/>III. Migrating Households and Household<br/>Features<br/>IV. Magnitude of Out-Migration<br/>(i) The Lx>git model<br/>V. Characteristics of Migrant Workers<br/>(i) Age-profile<br/>(ii) Educational status<br/>(iii) Present activity status of migrants<br/>(iv) Status of employment and occupation<br/>of migrants<br/>(v) Mean earnings<br/>(vi) Remittance<br/>(vii) Frequency of remittance<br/>(viii) Contribution to household income<br/>(ix) Year of migration<br/>(x) Frequency of visit<br/>VI. Reasons of Migration<br/>VII. Uses of Remittances<br/>VIII.Linkag es<br/>(i) Labour market links<br/>'(ii) Remittance links<br/>(iii) Communication links<br/>IX. Conclusion<br/>9. Summary and Conclusions and Policy<br/>Imperatives<br/>I. Diversity in Mountain Economies<br/>II. Uttarakhand Hill Region—Case of<br/>Underdeveloped Region<br/>(i) Employment, labour market features<br/>and economy<br/>(ii) Household characteristics—field enquiry<br/>(iii) Employment, unemployment and earnings<br/>(iv) Non-farm employment and rural enterprise;<br/>(v) Migration patterns and linkages<br/>III. Policy Implications<br/>(i) Diversification strategy<br/>(ii) Migration- a livelihood option<br/>(iii) Development of appropriate<br/>educational and skill structure<br/>(iv) Micro-enterprises and its linkages
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        Central Library, Sikkim University Central Library, Sikkim University General Book Section 29/08/2016 307.1412095451 AWA/L P31542 05/12/2019 05/12/2019 General Books
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