Academic literature on the topic 'Local administration in india'

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Journal articles on the topic "Local administration in india"

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Shtatina, Marina. "Administrative Reforms in India." Proceedings of the Institute of State and Law of the RAS 14, no. 1 (March 14, 2019): 166–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.35427/2073-4522-2019-14-1-shtatina.

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Unlike other developing countries, India abandoned the concept of catching-up development, and all its administrative reforms supported the ideology of Indian identity by introducing the most promising scientific achievements in the field of public administration. We identify three stages of administrative reforming in India: 1) the stage of formation of the national public administration; 2) the stage of the state interventional development of the public administration; 3) the stage of liberalization and informatization of the public administration. Since India had received independence, the new state used of the achievements of the colonial civil service and maintained institutions guaranteeing the unity of the state. The Indian government has succeeded in establishing a "living democracy" as the inherent part of Indian culture which supports the traditions of pluralism and is based on the application of rule by consensus and accommodation. Established in 1966, the First Administrative Reforms Commission ensured the leading role of the state in economic development. It improved the organizational foundations of public administration, including the mechanisms of socio-economic planning. The Commission’s reports prepared the base for constitutional recognition of India as a socialist republic. The most important instrument of the Union public administration was the licensing system, which extended to all spheres of economic activity and spawned the creation of numerous inspections with broad jurisdictional powers. The economic crisis and the inability of the Union to solve the social problems by interventionist methods — these were the reasons of the liberal reforms of the 1990s — 2000s. The rejection of the license system, the transition to the methods of soft administrative and legal regulation, the empowerment of decentralized bodies have changed the main areas of activity of the Indian public administration. The National Institute for Transforming India has provided the solutions to the problems in 80 areas of the country’s socio-economic development, acting through the mediation of all stakeholders — central, state and local government officials, public organizations and citizens. Liberal reforms are also aimed at democratizing governance and forming a citizen-oriented administration. They are focused on the implementation of innovative e-technologies in business and public administration.
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Chakraborty, Arnab. "Negotiating medical services in the Madras Presidency: the subordinate perspectives (1882–1935)." Medical History 65, no. 3 (June 1, 2021): 247–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/mdh.2021.15.

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AbstractThe historiography of western medicine in colonial India has predominantly been analysed from the perspectives of the elite services – the Indian Medical Service (IMS) and their recruits. Unfortunately, perceiving colonial medical practices through the lens of the IMS has remained inadequate to provide a nuanced understanding of the role played by Indians in the semi-urban and rural areas of colonial India. This article examines the contributions of local administration and the role played by the recruits of the Subordinate Medical Service. This article uses the Madras Presidency as its case study and focusses on the medical subordinates who were pivotal in establishing a western medical tradition in the region. This will shift the urban-centric focus and examine mostly the rural parts of the presidency, in particular, the district hospitals and dispensaries located in the districts, taluks and villages. The article analyses the transformation in the Madras medical administration from the late nineteenth century until 1935 to argue how subordinates were the ones controlling the local medical services, and thus pulling the strings of health administration in the presidency. This will also demonstrate the uniqueness of Madras and how it disseminated western medical care with an active participation and involvement of the local residents.
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Do Vale, Helder. "Local Government Reforms in Federal Brazil, India and South Africa: A Comparative Overview." Lex localis - Journal of Local Self-Government 11, no. 3 (July 1, 2013): 453–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.4335/11.3.453-470(2013).

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This article examines the changes at the local level of government that have been taking place in Brazil, India and South Africa for the past thirty years as a result of complex federal decision-making processes. I summarize the most important federal traits of these countries and identify the role of key institutions behind the fiscal, political and administrative changes in local governments. The article draws on the institutional processes to dissect the anatomy of local government reforms in these countries and concludes that although the changes in local government structures and powers have been taken against the background of transition to democracy and/or democratic deepening, the scope of change in local government varied.
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Gilley, Bruce. "Local Governance Pathways to Decarbonization in China and India." China Quarterly 231 (September 2017): 728–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741017000893.

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AbstractReducing greenhouse gas emissions in the world's two largest countries requires feasible governance pathways that integrate politics, policy and administration. Using examples of successful mitigation at the local level in China (Guangzhou) and India (Gujarat), this article identifies integrated governance solutions that work in both cases through different types of linkages. In China, it is mainly intra-governmental linkages, while in India it is mainly state–society linkages. In neither case do international negotiations concerning emissions targets have significant effects, while national frameworks have only marginal effects. Approaching the problem in this comparative manner helps to clarify how greenhouse gas governance operates in each country, the lessons for central–local environmental relations, and the implications for international assistance.
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GIULIANI, ERIN M. "Strangers in the Village? Colonial policing in rural Bengal, 1861 to 1892." Modern Asian Studies 49, no. 5 (February 17, 2015): 1378–404. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x14000262.

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AbstractThe chief concern of this article is the organization and administration of rural policing in colonial Bengal during the last 40 years of the nineteenth century. It connects its design and implementation with the consolidation of India's colonial police force, while highlighting the ongoing negotiations made by the Bengal police in a wider colonial model. The article argues that the police administration of rural Bengal was shaped initially by the ordinary constraints of the colonial state which underpinned the design of the Indian police—namely its frugality and preference for collaborating with local intermediaries, a manifestation of salutary neglect. Yet, it highlights the role of Bengal's largely British police executive in renegotiating customs of governance and, ultimately, as an established model of policing in India. The article focuses, therefore, on ongoing and at times informal police reforms which were based upon notions contradictory to an official discourse about policing in India. This article thus contextualizes the development of rural police administration in Bengal in a strong tradition of police-led reform in the province. In so doing, the article redresses a traditional historiographical focus on the political origins and coercive function of the police, and problematizes current research which situates Indian policing within customs of British governance in the subcontinent.
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Mukherjee, Falguni, and Rina Ghose. "GIS for E-Planning in India." International Journal of E-Planning Research 2, no. 2 (April 2013): 24–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijepr.2013040102.

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With increasing globalization and the integration of various economies, public finance and fiscal policy have acquired a new dimension in countries around the world, including India. This new era has witnessed a massive proliferation of various information and communication technologies (ICTs) the world over opening novel prospects for information storage, retrieval and analysis. Such novel prospects are not only being used for decision making by private sector industries but also more interest has been demonstrated in investing in technologies for public administration purposes. In the Indian context, the driving force behind an increasing use of ICTs for public administration include such objectives as improving and simplifying governance, instilling transparency and eliminating corruption and bureaucracy. The massive proliferation of ICTs in India has led to a transformation from traditional governance to e-governance. Several planning projects have been launched under the rubric of e-governance and have witnessed novel use of various information technologies, GIS being one of them. This study focuses on the Nirmala Nagara project (NNP), a programme launched by the Government of Karnataka to address issues of urban development using GIS with municipal e-governance being one of its key agendas. This is one of the most ambitious Municipal e-Governance projects in the country encompassing 213 urban local bodies. This article is an initial effort towards a larger project that will focus on the process of GIS spatial knowledge production situated in contemporary India.
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NADRI, GHULAM A. "Sailors,Zielverkopers, and the Dutch East India Company: The maritime labour market in eighteenth-century Surat." Modern Asian Studies 49, no. 2 (September 9, 2014): 336–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x13000449.

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AbstractIn the second half of the eighteenth century, the Dutch East India Company (VOC) employed hundreds of Indian sailors in Surat in western India to man its ships plying the Asian waters. TheMoorse zeevarenden(Muslim sailors) performed a variety of tasks on board ships and in the port of Batavia, and made it possible for the Company to carry out its commercial ventures across the Indian Ocean. The relationship between the two, however, was rather complex and even contentious. Based on Dutch sources, this article investigates the political-economic contexts of this relationship, examines the structure and organization of the maritime labour market in Surat, and illuminates the role and significance ofzielverkopers(labour contractors) and of the local administration. The analysis of the social, economic, and familial aspects of the market and labour relations in Surat sheds light on pre-capitalist forms of labour recruitment and the institutional dynamics of the Indian labour market.
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Patil, M., and D. Patil. "Ethnoveterinary herbal medicines of Nasik district, Maharashtra (India)." Journal of Non-Timber Forest Products 8, no. 1/2 (June 1, 2001): 19–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.54207/bsmps2000-2001-4itifx.

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During ethnobotanical surveys in Nasik District, Maharashtra, 31 species useful in veterinary medicines were recorded. The phytomedicine consists of a sole drug or a principal drug with few other aids. The local name/s, ethnomedicinal preparation, mode of administration, dosage and any belief associated with them, etc., have been noted with due care and gathered from medicine men and other experienced informants among the ethnic tribes of the district.
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SUTTON, DEBORAH. "Devotion, Antiquity, and Colonial Custody of the Hindu Temple in British India." Modern Asian Studies 47, no. 1 (October 30, 2012): 135–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x11000655.

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AbstractIn 1904, the British Indian government passed the Ancient Monuments Protection Act and, in doing so, radically enlarged the state's bureaucratic claim to structures defined, for the purposes of the Act, as monuments. The project of conserving the Hindu temple was beset by disagreements. The claims of the colonial state and local Hindu devotees were separated by different precepts about religiosity and alternate orders of aesthetics, time, and history. However, it is clear that there were also confluences: legislative authority could masquerade as custody of the antiquarian and, in practice, the secular veneration of material antiquity blurred with Hindu divinity. This paper combines an exploration of the principles of archaeological conservation, as they were formed in the European bourgeois imagination, and then traces their transfer, though imperial administration, to case-studies of specific temples. Of particular interest is the deployment of the Act by local administrations and the counter-challenges, appropriations, and manipulations of the same legislation. How were the aesthetic codes of conservation—and the legislation that sought to order and enforce their introduction—compromised by religious claims and practices?
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Malabadi, Ravindra B., Kiran P. Kolkar, Raju K. Chalannavar, Lavanya L, and Gholamreza Abdi. "Medical Cannabis sativa (Marijuana or drug type): Psychoactive molecule, Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC)." International Journal of Research and Innovation in Applied Science VIII, no. IV (2023): 236–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.51584/ijrias.2023.8428.

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This review paper highlights about Medical Cannabis sativa (Marijuana or drug type) containing psychoactive molecule, Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC) as a part of educational awareness programme in India. Cannabis sativa and Cannabis indica were originally a native of India growing as a wild notorious noxious weed in the Indian Himalayan region. Marijuana (Charas, Ganja and Bhang in India) is a mind-altering (psychoactive) drug, produced by the Cannabis sativa plant. Marijuana (Charas, Ganja or Bhang drink in India) is an illicit drug containing very high levels (25-35%) of narcotic psychoactive molecule, Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC) is banned and prohibited in India. Import, export, local sales and cultivation of Cannabis are illegal and prohibited in India. Phytocannabinoids (Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol-Δ9-THC, and Cannabidiol- CBD) have attained a global attention recently due to the therapeutic potentials in Parkinson’s disease, Schizophrenia, cancers, pain, anxiety, depression other neurological disorders as well as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of Epidiolex for Dravet syndrome and Lennox-Gauss Syndrome. Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC) is known as the substance that makes a person feel a “high,” while Cannabidiol (CBD) often promotes a feeling of relaxation. However, the adverse effects of Marijuana (medicinal cannabis) comes from studies of recreational users of marijuana led to the impaired short-term memory; impaired motor coordination; altered judgment; and paranoia or psychosis at high doses. The quality control of Cannabis products, contamination and adulteration of Cannabis products in Cannabis industry is another major issue. Therefore, a detailed study with clinical trials is warranted and this knowledge should be shared and explained to the customers.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Local administration in india"

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Wilson, Jon E. "Governing property, making law : land, local society and colonial discourse in Agrarian Bengal, c.1785-1830." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.368131.

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Zamora, Mario D. "The Panchayat tradition : a North Indian village council in transition, 1947-1962 /." New Dehli : Reliance publishing house, 1992. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb410017881.

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Novosad, Paul. "Essays on Local Economic Growth in India." Thesis, Harvard University, 2013. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:11100.

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Datta, Sumana. "REDD+ and local forest management in India." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2012. https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/redd-and-local-forest-management-in-india(0d38bd0f-d72f-4d0b-8c09-d3e052fb7ebb).html.

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Reducing deforestation and degradation (REDD+) under the rubric of payment for ecosystem services (PES) is being promoted as the most cost-effective mechanism for reducing global greenhouse gas emissions. This process of commodifying forest services will redefine the rhetoric of decentralised forest governance that has evolved in developing countries over the last two decades. This thesis uses ethnographic case studies in two forest villages in West Bengal state in India, along with 294 household surveys and 76 interviews, to examine the impending changes in socio-economic and political arenas with the adoption of a market mechanism like REDD+. I undertook a pilot study for one month in October 2009, which was followed by my main field work in two phases: February to July 2010 and November 2010 to February 2011. First, the analysis of livelihood dependence of forests dwellers shows unequal extraction of forest products by various wealth classes under the current socio-economic and political structures of village societies. Rich and medium class families with their higher assets were higher net users of forests, while poor households had a critical dependence on forests for their daily survival. Second, I examine the impact of livelihood dependence on forests. A majority of key informants did not see the current extraction of forest products, for example, for meeting local subsistence and commercial needs as major detriments to forest and carbon conservation. However, I argue that a number of legal provisions and official guidelines could potentially impose restrictions on the ongoing forest use pattern as a result of REDD+. Third, by comparing the functioning of the village council (with a special focus on the implementation of India’s National Employment Guarantee Scheme) with forest protection committees, I reflect upon the limitations in the decentralised forest management that emerge from the institutional design of the programme. I show that the decentralised forest governance suffers from lack of accountability and transparency over the control of forests by the Forest Department. Finally, this thesis suggests that the institutional design for REDD+ at the national level needs to be based on the democratic partnership of local institutions and the state.
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Fall, Pontus. "Politiskt deltagande hos Kanistammen i Kerala : en fallstudie /." Thesis, Huddinge : Södertörn University College. School of Social Sciences, 2008. http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:15742/FULLTEXT01.

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Asher, Samuel Edward. "Three Essays on Local Economic Development in India." Thesis, Harvard University, 2013. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10996.

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This dissertation examines the determinants of local economic and political development in India. In the first chapter, I study the impact that agricultural income shocks have on the local nonfarm economy. I find that positive rainfall shocks induce significant employment growth, not in the rural areas where agricultural production takes place but in the nearby towns. Manufacturing firms in particular respond to changes in agricultural production. Further investigation suggests that the most likely mechanism is a capital channel by which local agricultural surplus funds investments in urban manufacturing. In the second chapter, I examine the relationship between natural resource wealth and political outcomes. The interaction of mineral deposit locations and global price changes provide exogenous variation in the value of mineral wealth of state legislative assembly constituencies in India. I find that margins of victory, incumbency advantages and politician criminality are increasing in local mineral wealth. I test three channels for the criminality effect: (i) greater criminality in office; (ii) adverse selection of politicians into the political system; and (iii) greater success of criminal candidates in elections, finding the strongest evidence for the third effect. Finally, in the third chapter, I evaluate the importance of transportation costs to rural economic development. I take advantage of the allocation rules of a large-scale road construction program in India to estimate the impact of village roads on nonfarm economic activity. I find that new paved roads lead to large increases in village employment. Roads lead to an increase in firm size, suggesting that firms are inefficiently small when transport costs are high. Further, I find evidence that roads are most effective in the presence of electricity, suggesting complementarities between infrastructural investments.
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Book, Jonathan, and Jesper Lindahl. "Enabling and using local communication channels in rural India." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Institutionen för marknadsföring (MF), 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-26780.

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The global population can, based on income per capita be divided into three socioeconomic segments of a pyramid where the bottom segment is labeled: base/bottom of the pyramid (BOP). The BOP market has a collective buying power estimated to five trillion dollar per year. The BOP-segment may seem lucrative but it is however risky and challenging to enter a market characterized by poverty. One of the risks that are pointed out in research is minimal local marketing expertise. A key to succeed in a BOP-market is finding innovative ways of building awareness for a product. Earlier research have pointed at local partners as important for creating that awareness. This study aimed to find how companies have enabled and used non-traditional partners as a communication channel. The findings of the study indicate that companies have used enabling efforts and that CSR approaches and NGO partnerships had been important for enabling the communication channel as well as important for delivering a trustworthy message for all investigated cases
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Grist, Nicola. "Local politics in the Suru valley of northern India." Thesis, Goldsmiths College (University of London), 1998. http://research.gold.ac.uk/11450/.

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This thesis addresses the politics of the yokma-pa, a Shi'ite faction in the Suru valley in the Ladakh district of Jammu and Kashmir state, in Northern India. I use the term factions as this is one of two Shi'ite religious groups in the area that between them contain the majority of the population, and are normally opposed to each other. Recently, the yokma-pa have apparently undergone a major political shift from the 1 960s, when they had a millenarian ideology and were primarily concerned with their own local religious agenda. In the 1990s, they have taken on the role of an interest group in the context of electoral politics and the local administration. Education is a major contemporary issue in the area, and through opening their own English medium private school in Suru, they are addressing the stereotype held by the administration and in popular discourse in the area that Shi'ahs in Suru are backward and irrational. The thesis demonstrates the continuity between these two phases. It also shows that the yokma-pa constitutes a legitimate political organisation, at the same time as being a religious organisation and a faction. This thesis makes an important contribution to the anthropology of Ladakh, since there is now a large amount of detailed ethnography on Buddhists, but very little on Muslims, who also remain relatively neglected in the ethnography of India more generally. It may also contribute to academic debates on political forms in India in the context of the current political crisis, especially the rise of Hindu communalism, since there is a dearth of contemporary studies of local politics.
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Shaw, Barbara Ann Carleton University Dissertation Geography. "Ecodevelopment and local action: feminist participatory research in Goa, India." Ottawa, 1992.

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Scheepers, Louis Adrian. "Professionalisation of local public administration management." University of the Western Cape, 2004. http://etd.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=etd&amp.

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Local government is the sphere of government that is most directly involved in rendering services to communities and individuals. It is also at this sphere of government where the basic needs of people are addressed. Services like water, sanitation, waste removal and electricity have a direct influence on the quality of life that people live. In order for the occupation of local public administration to contribute meaningfully towards rendering services of a high level, both in quantity and quality, it is important to lay down a number of preconditions. In this research report it was argued that for local public administration management to become a profession in the full sense, it will be necessary: to draw well-qualified graduates from tertiary institutions
to develop practitioners in the occupation on a continual basis
to develop minimum performance standards and requisite competencies
to develop standards of ethical conduct acceptable to the community at large, and the occupation as a whole
and to continuously develop knowledge in the science of public administration as it is found in the local sphere of government.
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Books on the topic "Local administration in india"

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Edwin, Eames, and Saran Parmatma 1943-, eds. District administration in India. New Delhi: Vikas Pub. House, 1988.

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Sachdeva, Pardeep. Urban local government and administration in India. Allahabad: Kitab Mahal, 1993.

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1937-, Sharma R. D., ed. District administration in India: Problems and prospects. [New Delhi]: H.K. Publishers and Distributors, 1990.

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Chhetri, P. K. Financial administration in India: A study of West Bengal. New Delhi: Uppal Pub. House, 1995.

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1955-, Chahar S. S., ed. District administration in India: In the era of globalization. New Delhi: Concept Pub. Co., 2009.

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S, Chahar S., ed. District administration in India: In the era of globalization. New Delhi: Concept Pub. Co., 2009.

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Sinha, Chandan. Public sector reforms in India: New role of the district officer. New Delhi: Sage Publications, 2007.

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Sinha, Chandan. Public sector reforms in India: New role of the district officer. New Delhi: Sage Publications, 2007.

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Sole, Nagendra Ambedkar. Public policy and governance in India: Essays in honour of Professor P.C. Mathur. Edited by Mīnā Janaka Siṃha editor and Mathur, P. C. (Prakash Chand), 1940- honouree. Jaipur: ABD Publishers, 2016.

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1959-, Kapur Devesh, and Mehta Pratap Bhanu 1967-, eds. Public institutions in India: Performance and design. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Local administration in india"

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Wasnik, Jitendra G. "The Local Administrative System in India." In Civil Service Management and Administrative Systems in South Asia, 261–80. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-90191-6_12.

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Sivanna, N., and N. Veeresha. "Rural local governance and administrative decentralisation." In Handbook of Decentralised Governance and Development in India, 62–77. London: Routledge India, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429321887-7.

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Borkotoky, Dhiraj Kumar. "The Coming of the British and Its Impact on the Local Administration in the Khasi Hills." In Tribe-British Relations in India, 335–43. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-3424-6_21.

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Inpin, Wanwalee. "Local Transformation in Chiang Rai: The Roles of Administrative Organisation in Management and Preparedness for Earthquake." In Social Transformations in India, Myanmar, and Thailand: Volume I, 185–94. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-9616-2_12.

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Leach, Michael. "Local administration." In Transformations in Independent Timor-Leste, 210–28. Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2017. |: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315535012-12.

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Smith, Haig Z. "The East India Company (1661–1698): Territorial Acquisition and the ‘Amsterdam of Liberty’." In Religion and Governance in England’s Emerging Colonial Empire, 1601–1698, 207–48. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-70131-4_6.

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AbstractThe final chapter highlights the differences in global corporate governance, providing a case study of how differing governing models could ensure corporate success rather than failure. It continues the story of the EIC’s evolving religious governance in the second half of the century. It investigates how, following the acquisition of Bombay in the 1660s, company leaders such as Strenysham Master, Gerald Aungier and Josiah Child, developed the company’s religious governance to deal with administrating over a variety of peoples and faiths. Following 1662, in the post-Braganza era of the EIC, the flexibility of the corporate form was accentuated because of its adoption of an ecumenically broad form of governance, which allowed it to establish government over not only English Protestants but also Catholics, Armenians, Hindus, Muslims and Jews. The chapter also investigates the role of passive evangelism in the EIC’s religious governance as a way to encourage conversion. In doing so, the company hoped to bring local Indians not only into the Protestant faith, but under the English government.
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McCallum, R. Steve, and Bruce A. Bracken. "Local Normflng." In UTAGS Administration Manual, 59–71. New York: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003419310-7.

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Dollery, Brian, Harry Kitchen, Melville McMillan, and Anwar Shah. "Local Tax Administration." In Local Public, Fiscal and Financial Governance, 17–38. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-36725-1_2.

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Weik, Martin H. "local address administration." In Computer Science and Communications Dictionary, 915. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-0613-6_10450.

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Ridley, F., and J. Blondel. "Local Government." In Public Administration in France, 85–122. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003478546-5.

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Conference papers on the topic "Local administration in india"

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Сабитова, Л. Р. "THE PROBLEM OF BRITISH INDIAN POSSESSIONS’ SECURITY AT THE TURN OF THE XVIII–XIXth CENTURIES." In Конференция памяти профессора С.Б. Семёнова ИССЛЕДОВАНИЯ ЗАРУБЕЖНОЙ ИСТОРИИ. Crossref, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.55000/mcu.2021.86.97.014.

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В статье предпринята попытка осмысления британской политики по обеспечению безопас-ности владений в Индии в период вторжения Наполеона Бонапарта в османские Египет и Сирию. Обозначены исторические истоки «индийской тревоги», проанализированы позиции основных от-ветственных структур (министерства иностранных дел, Контрольного совета по делам Индии, ме-стной администрации) и выявлены противоречия между ними, определившие отсутствие четкой стратегии. The article attempts to explain British policy of providing Indian possessions’ security during the period of Napoleon Bonaparte’s invasion in Ottoman Egypt and Syria. The historical sources of “Indian anxiety” are defined. The positions of the main responsible structures (Foreign Office, Board of Control for India, local administration) are analyzed and contradictions between them, which led to the absence of definite strategy, are eliminated.
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Ramesh, Ananya, and Nirupama M. Vidyarthi. "Decentralisation and devolution in growing megacities. Case of Bangalore, India." In 55th ISOCARP World Planning Congress, Beyond Metropolis, Jakarta-Bogor, Indonesia. ISOCARP, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/mpmv6643.

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Through the 73rd and 74th Amendment Act of 1992, India sought to empower urban and rural local bodies. On the contrary, parallel modes of governance have undermined them. In the case of megacity Bangalore, two such modes i.e Electronic City and Smart City are studied to unpack the status of decentralisation. Key person interviews serve as primary data. Following the enquiry of decentralisation and devolution, elements of disconnectedness emerge. Disconnectedness can be seen between parts-affecting the whole, embodied as intents as well as outcomes through tools of planning, administrative, legal, political and economic choices. This leads us to enquire how we can retain decision-making power within the democratic realm and strengthen the role of local bodies in megacities. Unpacking the dynamics of decentralized governance is critical across megacities globally, as cities continue to seek autonomy not just in functioning but identity and influence, in the network of global flows.
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Khan, Saima, and Moinul Zaber. "Assessing the State of E-governance Responsiveness at Local Level: A Case Study of 1st Level Administrative Units of India, Nepal and Bhutan." In ICEGOV 2022: 15th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3560107.3560166.

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Jumiati, Jumiati, and Boni Saputra. "Indigeneous Public Administration: Public Administration Viewed from Local Wisdom Perspective." In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Social Knowledge Sciences and Education (ICSKSE 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icskse-18.2019.3.

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Landum, Manuel, M. M. M. Moura, and Leonilde Reis. "EVALUATING GREEN IT IN LOCAL ADMINISTRATION." In Fourth International Scientific Conference ITEMA Recent Advances in Information Technology, Tourism, Economics, Management and Agriculture. Association of Economists and Managers of the Balkans, Belgrade, Serbia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31410/itema.2020.1.

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This work is prompted by the massive use of Information and Communication Technologies, the need for alignment with the business, the concern for integrated management and the need to protect natural resources and the environment. This article aims to present a framework, multidimensional and multidisciplinary, from the perspective of sustainability, in the treatment of Green IT, involving environmental issues and social responsibility, Governance of Information Technologies and Financial Management, in the context of Public Administration, more specifically in local administration. The methodology used is based on the literature review, in the field of thematic, and on a case study in development in local government, in order to analyze the feasibility and suitability with the validation of the framework. The main results obtained in the case study focus on the use of technology allied to Green IT, with theoretical reflexes for environmental quality and with possible cost reduction.
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Tomaszewicz, Agnieszka Agata. "The model of local e-administration development." In 2018 Federated Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems. IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.15439/2018f164.

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Wang, Zhihui. "Decentralisation and Local Governance." In Public Administration in The Time of Regional Change. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icpm.2013.32.

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As'ad, Muhammad Uhaib, and Herman Murdiansyah. "Mining Policy, Local Actors, And Local Election (Empirical Evidence From South Kalimantan Province, Indonesia)." In 2018 Annual Conference of Asian Association for Public Administration: "Reinventing Public Administration in a Globalized World: A Non-Western Perspective" (AAPA 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/aapa-18.2018.25.

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Pal, Joyojeet, Yeswanth Gogineni, Kunjan Sanghavi, Vrutti Vyas, Kiran Bartakke, Ted McCarthy, Anjali Vartak, Avinash Vutukuri, and Vivek Veeraiah. "Local-language digital information in India." In the Fifth International Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2160673.2160712.

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Apatova, Natalya. "LOCAL IDENTITY MULTINATIONAL REGION." In MODERN CITY: POWER, GOVERNMENT, ECONOMY. Digital Transformation State and Municipal Administration. Perm National Research Polytechnic University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.15593/65.049-66/2021.26.

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The problems of regional identity of the multinational population of the Re-public of Crimea analyzed. First, the results of the implementation of the State Pro-gram on the development of the territory of national accord in Crimea. Second, the existence of a stable concept of "Crimean-citizen". Third, the directions of formation of the Crimean territorial identity. Forth, media coverage of the culture of the peoples of Crimea discussed. Conclusions drawn about the existing problems of determining the local identity of a multinational region, which is Crimea, which include the heterogeneity of funding for the deported and other peoples of Crimea, the lack of propaganda of Russian culture, saturation of government bodies and key organizations with federal officials.
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Reports on the topic "Local administration in india"

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Ghani, Ejaz, William Kerr, and Stephen O'Connell. Local Industrial Structures and Female Entrepreneurship in India. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, November 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w17596.

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Naguib, Costanza, Martino Pelli, David Poirier, and Jeanne Tschopp. The Impact of Cyclones on Local Economic Growth: Evidence from Local Projections. CIRANO, August 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54932/xvof3031.

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We shed new light on the short-term dynamic effects of cyclones on local economic growth in India. We proxy local GDP growth with night-time light intensity data and construct a cyclone index that varies across months and districts depending on windspeed exposures. Using local projections on highly granular data for the period 1993M1-2011M12, we find that yearly estimations hide large short-term differential impacts and that the negative impact of cyclones is the largest between 4 and 8 months after the event.
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Sun, Pu. Reproduction of 'Home Price Subsidies Increase Local-Level Political Participation in Urban India'. Social Science Reproduction Platform, May 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.48152/ssrp-jtyg-hg93.

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Fishback, Price, Jessamyn Schaller, and Evan Taylor. Local Administration and Racial Inequality in Federal Program Access: Insights from New Deal Work Relief. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, July 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w32681.

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Mitra, Sudeshna, Amlanjyoti Goswami, Deepika Jha, Sahil Sasidharan, Kaye Lushington, and Tsomo Wangchuk. Land Records Modernisation in India: Himachal Pradesh. Indian Institute for Human Settlements, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24943/9788195648504.

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This work provides an institutional, legal and policy review of crucial aspects of land records modernisation systems in Himachal Pradesh. A state characterised by hilly terrain, high forest cover and low urbanisation, Himachal Pradesh provides useful lessons to understand the robustness and diversity of land record administration systems. The property regimes that have historically developed in the state include customary rights, common property resources, jointly held rights, and multiple other use and possession arrangements. There is a restriction on who can transact properties in the state, aimed at preventing alienation of land. Settlement operations are conducted every 40 years, and often take a long time to complete, but have led to relatively more up-to-date records than some other states. There are also concerns regarding the accuracy of spatial records, and data mismatches between textual and spatial components of the existing record versus the new technology led survey data if often is a cause of disputes.
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Goswami, Amlanjyoti, Deepika Jha, Kaye Lushington, Mukesh Yadav, Sahil Sasidharan, Sudeshna Mitra, and Tsomo Wangchuk. Land Records Modernisation in India – I. Indian Institute for Human Settlements, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24943/9788195489398.

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During 2014–2015, a team of researchers conducted a series of primary and secondary studies on land record modernisation initiatives across Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Bihar and Gujarat, which were published as part of a five-volume set on Land Records Modernisation in India. The second edition of these volumes incorporates new initiatives, technological updates and legislative amendments in each of these states, as well as the changes in the national level policy and programmes. Based on extensive on-ground research, this set of volumes presents a review of the land records management processes and the status of current efforts to modernise land records, against a larger historical background of land and revenue relations in each state. The volumes on the respective states are accompanied by an institutional, legal and policy review at the national level, which provides a summary of various crucial aspects of land records modernisation in India. It also appraises the impact of the Digital India Land Records Modernization Programme, its gains and limitations, as well as possible steps forward. Combining detailed state-level analysis with a national review, this is a much needed intervention in the study of land records administration and modernisation in India. This set of volumes would be a vital resource for researchers and practitioners alike, as well as for policymakers at both the state and central level.
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Bhadbhade, Neha, Larissa Stiem-Bhatia, J. K. Joy, Abraham Samuel, and Dipankar Aich. Harnessing Digitalisation for Water Governance. Key insights from India. TMG Research gGmbH, January 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.35435/2.2024.1.

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This policy brief offers insights into how digitalization can bolster local water governance in India's agricultural sector. Drawing from field research conducted in four Indian states, it provides recommendations for policymakers, researchers, and practitioners.
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Ohemeng, Frank, and Fariya Mohiuddin. The Enigma of the Central–Local Government Relationship and Its Impact on Property Tax Administration in Developing Countries: The Ghanaian Perspective. Institute of Development Studies, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ictd.2022.018.

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Property tax administration is the bedrock for effective revenue mobilisation, development, and good local governance for local governments. Yet administering property taxation continues to be a major problem, especially for many developing countries. Scholarly explanations for this poor state of affairs have focused on limited capacity, poor quality local cadastres, corruption, and local political resistance to effective property tax administration, among others. This paper moves away from these explanations to focus on a less trodden area: the relationship between central and local government and how this relationship affects property tax administration. Property tax administration involves some collaboration and overlap between different levels of government, and thus depends very much on a good and functional relationship between both levels of government, especially when local governments derive their authorities from the largesse of central governments. This relationship may have powerful implications for the ability of local governments to effectively undertake property tax administration due to the central government’s policies and politics. Using Ghana as a case study, the paper illustrates how a dysfunctional relationship between central and local governments has undermined, and continues to undermine, effective property tax administration in the country, which should serve as a lesson for other developing countries.
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Ward, Patrick S., Muzna Fatima Alvi, Simrin Makhija, and David J. Spielman. Cooperation and the management of local common resources in remote rural communities: Evidence from Odisha, India. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133790.

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Gopalan, Sundararajan Srinivasa, Rajesh Bhatia, Sonalini Khetrapal, and Sungsup Ra. Addressing Nutrition Security in Urban India through Multisectoral Action. Asian Development Bank, February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.22617/wps220057-2.

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It describes malnutrition’s impact on health and nonhealth sectors, identifies key determinants, and offers specific solutions according to the local contexts in various urban areas. The recommendations go beyond examining the health sector and take into account water supply, sanitation, sociocultural factors, food supply, and other issues affecting urban nutrition in India.
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