Basic Development Plan For The Calcutta Metropolitan District 1966 1986
Download Basic Development Plan For The Calcutta Metropolitan District 1966 1986 full books in PDF, epub, and Kindle. Read online free Basic Development Plan For The Calcutta Metropolitan District 1966 1986 ebook anywhere anytime directly on your device. Fast Download speed and no annoying ads. We cannot guarantee that every ebooks is available!
Environment, Population, and Development
Author | : Prithvish Nag |
Publisher | : Concept Publishing Company |
Total Pages | : 414 |
Release | : 2001 |
Genre | : Economic development |
ISBN | : 9788170228899 |
In the Indian context; contributed articles.
Calcutta
Author | : Geoffrey Moorhouse |
Publisher | : Penguin Books India |
Total Pages | : 412 |
Release | : 1983 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 9780140095579 |
The book is organized out of a profound understanding of the true issues and is brilliantly executed. Geoffrey Moorhouse, like another Zola, plunges into this hell. Dissecting it, almost lovingly, he discovers aspects of the human spirit, both Indian universal, out of which the reader may trace some sort of pattern in the chaos.
Kolkata — The Colonial City in Transition
Author | : Sumana Bandyopadhyay |
Publisher | : Taylor & Francis |
Total Pages | : 395 |
Release | : 2022-12-20 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : 1000603717 |
This book explores the spatial characteristics of the city of Kolkata in India in terms of the physical, economic, social, political, and environmental aspects of urban geography, and focuses upon the inherent processes that impact its transformation. It discusses different facets of urban geography and highlights the contemporary challenges of a major primate city in South Asia, which represents the conflicts between the traditional and the modern, the rich and the poor, the skyscrapers and the shanties. With its detailed empirical research and mapping exercises based on real-time remote sensing data, the book offers an understanding of a range of contemporary urban issues. It examines the spatial consequences of urban sprawl, land-use changes, ecological crisis, climate change, critical disasters, dynamics of the peri-urban interface, neighborhood restructuring, debates around heritage conservation, housing poverty, gray spaces, governance and the political landscape of the city. This book will be useful to students, teachers, and researchers of geography, especially human geography and urban geography, urban studies, urban development and planning, regional planning, social geography, governance, ecology, economics, and South Asian studies. It will also benefit urban planners, development professionals, and those interested in the study of the city of Kolkata and its transformations.
City Requiem, Calcutta
Author | : Ananya Roy |
Publisher | : U of Minnesota Press |
Total Pages | : 308 |
Release | : 2003 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 9780816639335 |
Housing developments emerge amid the paddy fields on the fringes of Calcutta; overflowing trains carry peasant women to informal urban labor markets in a daily commute against hunger; land is settled and claimed in a complex choreography of squatting and evictions: such, Ananya Roy contends, are the distinctive spaces of a communism for the new millennium -- where, at a moment of liberalization, the hegemony of poverty is quietly reproduced. An ethnography of urban development in Calcutta, Roy's book explores the dynamics of class and gender in the persistence of poverty. City Requiem, Calcutta emphasizes how gender itself is spatialized, and how gender relations are negotiated within the geopolitics of modernity and through the everyday practices of territory. Thus Roy shows how urban developmentalism, in its populist guise, reproduces the relations of masculinist patronage, and, in its entrepreneurial guise, seeks to reclaim a bourgeois Calcutta, gentlemanly in its nostalgias. In doing so, her work expands the field of poverty studies by showing how a politics of poverty is also a poverty of knowledge, a construction and management of social and spatial categories.
Bulletin of the Institution of Engineers (India).
Author | : Institution of Engineers (India) |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 620 |
Release | : 1970 |
Genre | : Engineering |
ISBN | : |
Architecture and Urbanism in a Contact Zone
Author | : Mark Mukherjee Campbell |
Publisher | : Taylor & Francis |
Total Pages | : 248 |
Release | : 2023-08-09 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : 0429829213 |
This book explores how histories of migration, cultural encounter and transculturation have shaped formations of urban space, domestic architecture and cultural modernity in Kolkata from the early colonial period to the beginning of the era of India’s economic liberalization. It charts how these themes were manifest in what was an important ‘contact zone’ in the history of globalization and the modern city. Drawing on a wide range of resources and representations, from urban plans and architectural drawings to European travel journals and Bengali literature and cinema, the book investigates the history of Kolkata through an examination of key urban and architectural spaces across the colonial and postcolonial epochs. Through illustrated chapters, it sheds new light on questions of difference and segregation, cultural hybridity, migration, and entanglements of tradition and modernity in the city, analyzing spaces inhabited by a diverse range of cultures, including several neglected in previous studies. Architecture and Urbanism in a Contact Zone offers an instructive contribution to the fields of global architectural history and theory, urban studies and postcolonial cultural studies for scholars, researchers and students alike.
West Bengal under the Left
Author | : Rakhahari Chatterji |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 260 |
Release | : 2019-06-26 |
Genre | : Political Science |
ISBN | : 1000586898 |
This book makes a critical analysis of West Bengal's Left Front regime (1977-2011) and explores the causes of its collapse under three sgments; inquiry into issues of political management; evaluation of various policy initiatives; and examination of development in civil society. Please note: Taylor & Francis does not sell or distribute the Hardback in South Asia.
Untamed Urbanisms
Author | : Adriana Allen |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 337 |
Release | : 2015-07-30 |
Genre | : Business & Economics |
ISBN | : 1317599101 |
An electronic version of this book is available Open Access at www.tandfebooks.com. It has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 3.0 license. One of the major challenges of urban development has been reconciling the way cities develop with the mounting evidence of resource depletion and the negative environmental impacts of predominantly urban-based modes of production and consumption. This book aims to re-politicise the relationship between urban development, sustainability and justice, and to explore the tensions emerging under real circumstances, as well as their potential for transformative change. For some, cities are the root of all that is unsustainable, while for others cities provide unique opportunities for sustainability-oriented innovations that address equity and ecological challenges. This book is rooted in the latter category, but recognises that if cities continue to evolve along current trajectories they will be where the large bulk of the most unsustainable and inequitable human activities are concentrated. By drawing on a range of case studies from both the global South and global North, this book is unique in its aim to develop an integrated social-ecological perspective on the challenge of sustainable urban development. Through the interdisciplinary and original research of a new generation of urban researchers across the global South and North, this book addresses old debates in new ways and raises new questions about sustainable urban development. .