Spelling suggestions: "subject:"india"" "subject:"índia""
651 |
Las estrofas del Sāmkhya de Ishvarakrishna Presentación y traducción por José León HerreraLeón Herrera, José 09 April 2018 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
|
652 |
The coping resources and subjective well-being of dual-career Hindu mothersPrag, Hanita T January 2007 (has links)
With the increasing number of women entering the labour force internationally, the role of women is changing. Consequently, researchers are pressed to investigate how females of all cultures balance their work and family responsibilities. Amongst Hindu couples, this issue can either be a source of tension or positive support. An overview of literature indicates that the psychological aspects of dual-career Hindu women have received little attention in South Africa. The current study aimed to explore and describe coping resources and the subjective well-being of full-time employed Hindu mothers. The study took the form of a non-experimental exploratory-descriptive design. Participants were selected through nonprobability convenience sampling. The sample of the study consisted of sixty full-time employed Hindu mothers between the ages of 25 and 45 years of age who had at least one dependent primary school child aged between 7 to 12 years. Various questionnaires were used to collect data for this study. These included a Biographical Questionnaire, The Coping Resources Inventory (CRI), The Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS), and The Affectometer 2 (AFM2). Data was analysed by means of descriptive statistics. Cronbach’s coefficient alphas were utilised to calculate the reliability of the scores of each questionnaire. A multivariate technique was used to determine the amount of clusters formed. A non-hierarchical partitioning technique known as K-means cluster analysis was utilised in this study. An analysis of variance (ANOVA) was utilised in order to compare the mean scores of the various clusters. A post-hoc analysis using the Scheffé test was computed to test for significant differences. Cohen’s d statistics was subsequently used to determine the practical significance of the differences found between the cluster means on each of the measures. The cluster analysis indicated three clusters that differed significantly from one another on all three measures. The results of the CRI indicated that the participants used cognitive and spiritual resources to assist them to cope with the transition from traditional to modern contemporary roles. It was also found that the participants with low coping resources had inferior subjective well-being compared to those who had average and high CRI scores. The findings indicated that the participants were generally satisfied with their lives and experienced high levels of positive affect and low levels of negative affect. However, as a group there was a trend for the participants to have experienced slightly lower levels of global happiness or slightly negative affect. The results of this study broadens the knowledge base of positive psychology with respect to the diverse cultures and gender roles within South Africa. Overall, this study highlighted the value and the need for South African research on the coping resources and subjective well-being of dual-career Hindu mothers.
|
653 |
Desakota in Kerala: Space and political economy in Southwest IndiaCasinader, Rex A 11 1900 (has links)
McGee in his recent writings on Asian urbanization highlights extended metropolitan
regions and proximate non-urban settlement systems with an intense mixture of agricultural
and non-agricultural activities. The latter McGee terms as desakota, a neologism coined in
Bahasa Indonesian, to signify the fusion of desa (rural) and kota (urban).
Some of the ecological preconditions for desakota are high rural population densities;
labour intensive rice cultivation with agricultural labourers in need of non-farm work in the off
seasons and/or labour shedding by green revolution effects. McGee however recognizes that
desakota can also occur in other ecologically dense habitat of non-rice crops with high
population densities. Kerala State in India is one such region with a mix of rice and non-rice
crops.
This study examines the urban-rural fusion that is observed in Kerala and provides an
empirically informed assessment of the McGee desakota hypothesis. While basically affirming
the desakota hypothesis, the study at the same time raises some caveats. First, desakota in
Kerala is not dependent on any central urban system and intra-desakota dynamics are
significant. While M c G e e has recognized that such desakota do occur, his writings tend to
neglect this type of desakota. Second, McGee's writings on extended metropolitan regions
and desakota are increasingly associated with the recent rapid e c o n o m i c growth occurring in
some of the Asian countries. Desakota in Kerala blurs this characteristic as it appears to have
occurred beginning in the late colonial p e r i o d of the British Raj. Third, a unique mix of factors
in Kerala make the political economy central to making desakota in Kerala intelligible.
Undoubtedly in the specificity of the Kerala context the political economy is important.
Nonetheless this study raises a critique of the underemphasis of the political economy in
McGee's work on extended metropolitan regions and desakota.
The research on desakota in Kerala involved the examination of the regional
geography of Kerala. Kerala with its radical politics and remarkable social development in a
context of low economic growth, attracted the attention of social scientists. But in these
studies the spatial dimensions were largely ignored. This study emphasizes that geography
matters in understanding Kerala, and that there is an important nexus between the space and
political economy of Kerala. / Arts, Faculty of / Geography, Department of / Graduate
|
654 |
Anglo-Mughal relations in western India and the development of Bombay, 1662-1690Refai, Gulammohammed Zainulaeedin January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
|
655 |
Political bargaining and the Punjab crisis : the Punjab Accord of 1985Rodríguez, Alvaro Joseph January 1988 (has links)
Since the early 1980's, the Punjab state of India has been in turmoil as a result of a separatist movement that developed among elements of the Sikh community. Political tensions not only characterized the relationship between the Punjab and New Delhi/ but also between Sikhs and Hindus and among different segments within the Sikh community itself. The most important attempt to end the conflict in the state has been the Rajiv Gandhi-Sant Longowal Accord signed on July 24, 1985. However, the Accord failed and by mid-1987 the Punjab was once again racked by political violence. This thesis focuses on the events that led to the signing of the Accord and the forces that caused its demise. Bargaining theory provides the general theoretical framework against which the data are analyzed.
This thesis highlights the fact that political bargains in Third World weakly-institutionalized states are often the result of particular configurations of political power which are short lived.
The corollary of this is that once the configuration of political forces changes, the chances of success for the previously reached political bargain are weakened. In the particular case of the Punjab Accord, there was a change, beginning in late 1985, in the relative political power of the participants in the bargain. Also, the terms of the bargained Accord unleashed forces on both sides which undermined its implementation. Third World leaders should draw two major lessons from this. First, they should be careful not to have exaggerated perceptions of their power since this may be counterproductive in the future if they cannot deliver what they have promised. Second, these leaders should attempt to consult all interests with a stake in the bargained settlement as a way to prevent opposition to it. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
|
656 |
A bibliographical introduction to modern Islamic development in India and PakistanAhmad Khan, Muin-ud-din January 1955 (has links)
Note:
|
657 |
Traditional food consumption and nutritional status of Dalit mothers and young children in rural Andhra Pradesh, South IndiaSchmid, Martina A. January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
|
658 |
National development and the changing status of women in India : a state by state analysisLalonde, Gloria Marjorie Lucy. January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
|
659 |
The agrarian question in India : a case study of politics and agrarian reform in KeralaEgan, Robert Brian January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
|
660 |
Les femmes et le système juridique en Inde : entre l'idéologie et les faits: analyse anthropologique de la conception des droits à travers les transactions économiques au moment du mariageBates, Karine January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.0362 seconds