THE ETERNAL TRUTH ABOUT LEADERSHIP "Nations are made or marred by the calibre and moral character of their leaders. Here is a timely book, which tells the world how to re-establish leadership inspired by idealism." – V.K. Narasimhan, Former Chief Editor, Indian Express "The author's uncomplicated directness and crisp examples capture the imagination and curiosity of the most seasoned executives as well as young sceptics. The book delivers a passion for leadership through the lens of conceptual clarity. Excellent reading for leaders and those who want to be." – Wayne L. Strom, Ph.D., Professor of Behavioral Science, School of Business And Management, Pepperdine University, California "Corporate planners, government policy makers and those who want to contribute to society and the world in any way can derive immense insight, intuition and imagination from this book." – Bala. V. Balachandran, Ph.D., J. L. Kellogg Distinguished Professor, J. L. Kellogg Graduate School Of Management, Northwestern University, Chicago "This book can help to integrate and revitalise the American society for its world leadership role." – Dr. William M. Harvey – USA "On behalf of the Director-General of UNESCO, I acknowledge receipt of Mahavakya on Leadership. We appreciate the book as a useful resource material which will inspire UNESCO's activities on education for peace, human rights, democracy, international understanding." – Andri Isaksson, 29th November, 1995
Kashmiri Pandits have a five thousand-year old history which is horrible, horrific and horrendous, but these people are wonderful, in the sense that they have maintained themselves in body and soul, have preserved their cultural identity to a large extent and mostly guarded their rituals and customs. This book highlights the atrocities inflicted on Kashmiri Pandits, the original inhabitants of the valley. No drama can rival the grandeur of their sufferings of the last seven centuries. The mass exodus of 1990 has left Kashmiri Pandits refugees in their own country for the last 30 years.
In democracy, the responsibility for delivering good government rests on the performance of the executive, yet the bureaucracy plays a significant part in its success. Though the bureaucracy is required to function under political direction, but their knowledge and erudition certainly facilitate success in administrators of India, contains the profiles of ten successfully administrators who made a niche in different fields of their endeavours. They are not biographical essays in the conventional sense. The emphasis is on highlighting the contributions of personalities chosen. Of these: " V.P. Menon successfully brought the unification of 565 princely states in the Union of India. " K.M. Panikkar had been an eminent writer in Malayalam and English, a successful administrator, diplomat and educationist. " C.D. Deshmukh, the first Indian to be appointed Governor of the Reserve Bank of India by the British Raj, was an economist. " P.N. Haksar was one of the key policy makers who contributed greatly in the successful prime ministership of Indira Gandhi. " Nagendra Singh was a many-splendoured personality a prince, who was a jurist, civil servant, author, international diplomat, and defender of human rights. " I.G. Patel had been an economist, technocrat, civil servant, university administrator, and fourteenth Governor of the Reserve Bank of India. " M.S. Swaminathan is the Father of Green Revolutions in Asia. " GVG Krishnamurthy, the former Election Commissioner of India, is a unique, enigmatic and versatile successful administrator. " Verghese Kurien is known as Milkman of India who has ushered in White Revolution. " E. Sreedharan is known for meticulous planning and execution of Delhi Metro system.
The Papers In This Volume Focus On The Theoretical Background Of Values In The Framework Of Education. It Goes Further To Provide A Thorough Description Of How Nine Distinguished Educational Institutions In India Are Working In This Sphere. Also, The Value Education In Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan, Methods Of Value Education Implimentation In Schools And The Rotary System Make Part Of The Discussion.
This Is Virtually A Handbook Of Information For All Political Parties And A Useful Book For Political Scientists, Scholars, Teachers And Students Of Political Science As Well As Modern Indian History.
Lord Buddha, in his profound wisdom, said that for extinction of human suffering, complete annihilation of desire is the only way. This is the sacred truth of suffering. Ācārya Cārvāka, equally profound in his thinking, said that life is a continuous celebration of desire. Kāma (desire) and artha (wealth) are the only true goals of life. Beg, steal or borrow, but live life like a king. Enjoy life full as long as one is alive. Who is correct? Lord Buddha or Ācārya Cārvāka? What is desire really meant to Indian society, religion and culture through ages? The book tries to address these and similar questions objectively and diligently.
This is the book, in which the subject matter is dealt from elementary to the advance level in a unique manner. Three outstanding features can be claimed for the book viz. (i) style; the student, while going through the pages would feel as if he is attending a class room. (ii) language: that an average student can follow and (iii) approach: it takes the student from ''known to unknown'' and ''simple to complex.'' The book is reader friendly, thought provoking and stimulating. It helps in clearing cobwebs of the mind. The style is lucid and un-adulterated. Unnecessary mathematics has been avoided. Note: T&F does not sell or distribute the Hardback in India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
Contents: Opening Markets for Agriculture, The Future of Agricultural Trade, The Uruguay Round and Agricultural Reform, WTO Agricultural Negotiations, Export Subsidies, Developing Countries and the WTO Agricultural Negotiations, The Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture, Food First, India s Food Challenge, Food Security, Irrigation Management, Population Growth and Cropland, Population Growth and Grain Production, Population Growth and Meat Production, Watershed Development Programme, Development of Sericulture, Solving Conflicts Over Water Uses, End of Controversy on Large Dams?, Controlling the Global Tobacco Epidemic Towards a Transnational Response, A Breakthrough in the Evolution of Large Dams?, Water Facts and Findings on Large Dams, Trading Towards Peace, Development, A New World Order for Whom?, State Trading Enterprises, Developing Countries and the Uruguay Round, The WTO and the Developing Countries, Rural Poverty in India, Economics and Sustainable Development, Solving the Unemployment Problem by Looking Beyond the Job, Social Summit, Tapping the Market, The Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement and the Developing Countries, What s Driving Migration, Crisis Prevention.
Contents: Promotion of Higher Education in Research, Will Education Go to Market? Corporate Ambitions in Education, Private Education: The Poor s Best Chance?, For a Broader Approach to Education, Wiring up the Ivory Towers, Population Growth and Education, Violence in Schools: A World Wide Affair, Helping Your Child Learn, Beyond Economics, Population Growth and Jobs, Employment and Poverty Alleviation, Solving the Unemployment Problem by Looking Beyond the Job, Technological Entrepreneurship: The New Force for Economic Growth, Challenging Traditional Economic Growth, Can Economic Growth Reduce Poverty, High World Trade Growth Vs. Output: WTO Sees Link to Globalisation, What s Driving Migration, Income Gap Widens, Policy Researchers and Policy Makers: Never the Twain Shall Meet? Crisis Prevention: Can Better Development Planning Lesson the Toll of Civil Emergencies and Natural Disasters? Money Alone is Not Enough: Technology Transfer and Environmental Protection, Population Growth and Income, Taxation System in Developing Countries, Population Growth and Housing, Opening Markets for Agriculture, Is Copyright on the Wrong Track? For a Fair Sharing of Time, Richer or Poorer?
Contents: Fertility Rates: The Decline is Stalling, The Good News about Population Growth, Population Growth Facts and Figures, Population and the Environment: The Global Challenge, Measuring Population s Impact, The Population Challenge, What is Known About Reducing Maternal Mortality? Safe Motherhood is a Human Rights Issue, Ecosystems, Our Unknown Protectors, Forests: The Earth s Lungs, Biodiversity, Living with Diversity, Global Warming: Worrisome Signs, Climate Change, Forests, An Agenda for Change, Ecotourism or Ecocide?, Urbanisation and the Environment, Towards Healthy Cities, Sustainable Cities, Consuming the Future, The Future of Work, Energy and Sustainability, Development: The Third Way, Employment and Promoting Ecology: How a Service Culture Could Put People Back to Work, South Asia Quarrels Over Water, Using Economics to Advantage, A Crucial Encounter, Sustainable Tourism and the Environment, Pro-poor Tourism: Opportunities for Sustainable Local Development, Consumption Bomb, The Persistence of Indian Poverty and its Alleviation, Employment and Poverty Alleviation, Food Production, No Progress without a Secular Society, What s Driving Migration, Major Cyclones in Andhra Pradesh: Some Observations.
Contents: Water: An Educational and Informative Approach, The Coming Water Crisis, Solutions for a Water-Short World, Fresh Water and the Environment, A Rare and Precious Resource, Population Growth and Fresh Water, Solving Conflicts Over Water Uses, Water Problem in South India, South Asia Quarrels Over Water, Water: Will be there Enough?, Strategies for Improved Water Management, A Breakthrough in the Evolution of Large Dams?, Big-Dam Construction is on the Rise, Tapping the Market: Can Private Enterprise Supply Water to the Poor?, Tourism and the Environment, Sustainable Tourism and The Environment, Sustainable Tourism-Illusion or Realistic Alternative?, Pro-poor Tourism: Opportunities for Sustainable Local Development, Sustainable Tourism Development, The Biggest Industry the World has ever Seen: The Future of World Tourism, Ecotourism or Ecocide?, The Tourism Juggernaut, Cheap Transport for India s Millions, Aid Effectiveness as a Multi-level Process, Pollution for Export, The Pollution Challenge, Consuming the Future.
Contents: Population Growth, Population and the Environment, Fertility Rates, An Agenda for Change, Our Crowded World, Population Growth and Women s Role in India, The Good News About Population Growth, Has the Tide Turned? Successes in Family Planning, Safe Motherhood is a Human Rights Issue, Action for Safe Motherhood, Sex and Gender, Towards Healthy Cities, Sustainable Cities, Cities Residents to the Rescue, In Defence of the City Urban Development a Key for Survival, Urbanisation in India and Limitations, City Politics, Cities at the Forefront, Urbanisation and Globalisation, Living with Leviathan, What is Known About Reducing Maternal Mortality?, Forests, Meat Production, Biodiversity, Development: The Third Way, Land Tenure, What s Driving Migration, Resistance to Change, Unemployment in the Poor and Rich Worlds, Third World Debt is Still Growing, The Nature and Causes of Drug, Addiction, Not Yet Fossil Fuel, Climate Change and Human Health, Overcoming the Poverty in India and the Lessons Learned, Food Production, Food Security.
Family farming is the predominant form of agriculture in the food production sectors in both developing and developed countries. It mainly includes all family-based agricultural activities, and it is linked to several areas of rural and social development. It is understood as a means of organizing agricultural, forestry, fisheries, pastoral and aquaculture production which is managed and operated by a family and increasingly reliant on family labour of both men and women. In developing countries like India, a number of factors are key for the successful development of family farming, such as: agro-ecological conditions and territorial characteristics; access to markets; policy environment; access to land and natural resources; access to technology and extension services; access to finance; demographic, economic and socio-cultural conditions; availability of specialized education among a few. The United Nations has designated the year 2014 as the International Year of Family Farming at the 66th session of the United Nations General Assembly recognizing the increasing role of family farming in poverty alleviation and rural development in particular. The content of the book offers a diverse selection of s that address issues of importance to those in the agriculture industry, researchers, faculty, and others.
It has been scarcely 200 years the dawn of the Industrial Revolution-since humans abandoned sole reliance on firewood, other biomass fuels, and direct sunlight to meet daily energy needs. In the past half-century, global demand for energy grew twice as fast as population, as industrial nations burned, coal, oil and natural gas to fuel their economies. Over the next half-century, world energy demands are projected to continue, expanding beyond population growth as developing countries try to catch up with industrial nations.
As the century begins, natural resources are under increasing pressure, threatening public health and development. Water shortages, soil exhaustion, loss of forests, air and water pollution, and degradation of coastlines afflict many areas. As the world s population grows, improving living standards without destroying the environment is a global challenge. Most developed economies currently consume resources much faster than they can regenerate. Most developing countries with rapid population growth face the urgent need to improve living standards. As we humans exploit nature to meet present needs, are we destroying resources needed for the future?
Contents: Crops and Cattle and Fish and & People?, The Developing Science of Genetics, Clowns and Cowboys in the Cloning Circus, The Science and Politics of Stem Cells, Selling Human GE, Gene Therapy Better than Well ?, Gene Doping in Sports, Eugenics: Learning from the Past, Manipulating Public Opinion, Advocates and Enablers: The People Behind Human GE, Preserving Our Common Humanity, Regulation? What Regulation?
Poverty can be overcome, and that the poor can increased their income and production within an appropriate framework. Part of that framework is made up of a flow of resources and local-level institutional development, and their is considerable scope for improvement in both. However, the impact of investment and organization is strictly determined by the nature of the policy environment. While project and programmes can bring some relief to the rural poor, substantial change needs a strong policy commitment. While the poor can overcome poverty, they will not be able to until this becomes a major focus of national policy and action. In the main, this sort of commitment has not been made in the past at the expense of both the poor and overall development in many areas.
This book, primarily designed to cater to the needs of undergraduate and post graduate students of Agricultural Engineering and Agriculture, research scholars, professionals and policy planners associated with dryland farming or rain fed farming covers major topics on land and water resources and their management aspects. Entire content has been divided into 22 chapters with solved examples and case studies. First 4 chapters are devoted mainly in explaining the basic dryland farming, dryland engineering, rainfall and water balance analysis and climate, weather forecasting with solved examples and case studies. 18 chapters on land and water resources management aspects, implements used in different field operations and also on storage, value addition of agricultural products, livelihood security of dryland farmers with communication facilities and resources centre and alternate landuse planning and Watershed Management. A sincere attempt has been made to compile and present the text in quickly understandable form. Well drawn diagrams, understanding the Dryland Technology and livelihood aspects of dryland farmers. This could be a good text book for undergraduate and post graduate students, a reference tool for professional and good teaching material for teachers in the field of land and water resources management under dryland ecosystem, and also for scientists working in the field of rain fed farming.
We are today encountering numerous sustainable health concerns in relation to the existential threats caused by ecological and global changes. This book illustrates the ways in which health is being affected by anthropogenic human impacts on the environment, as well as climate change. It highlights synergistic, interventional approaches towards sustainable healthcare, together with innovative conceptual frameworks and models for facing the changing demands of our health needs under these current epidemiological and health transitions. It also sets out a vision of ecological principles to guide our professional directions with regards to sustainable health developments as legacy-based values across generations.
Contents: Irrigation Management: Facing the Challenge, Strategies for Improved Water Management, Big- Dam Construction is on the Rise, A Breakthrough in the Evolution of Large Dams? End of Controversy on Large Dams? Water Facts and Findings on Large Dams?, Water Facts and Findings on Large Dams?, Population Growth and Cropland, Population Growth and Grain Production, Developing Countries and the WTO Agricultural Negotiations, Food for the Billions, Food First, Biodiversity, Ecosystems, Our Unknown Protectors, Employment and Promoting Ecology, Saving the Planet, Living with Diversity, An Agenda for Change, Forests, Climate Change and Human Health, Economics and Sustainable Development, Population Growth and Climate Change, Sustainable Cities, Heating up Environmental Education and Communication, Urbanisation and the Environment, Fresh Water and the Environment, Forests, Energy and Sustainability, The Environment, The Economy and Public Health, Watershed Development Programme, Population Growth and Natural Recreation Areas, The Dynamics of Rural Poverty in India, The Indian Economy and the Cattle Wealth, Safety First, Genetic Diversity and Food Security, Global Warming, Can Genetically Modified Organisms Feed the World?, Energy.
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