Headcount

Headcount
Author: Ashish Bose
Publisher: Penguin Books India
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2010
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0670083518

The acronym 'BIMARU states' was widely used in the mid-1980s to refer to the population issues of India's four largest states-Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. Ashish Bose, the man who coined this much-discussed term, is the pioneer of demographic studies in the country. In Headcount, the demographer sets the record straight on BIMARU, and in the process, presents his unique view of modern India. In his inimitable engaging style, Bose, who was born in 1930, paints a vivid portrait of a life well-lived-from his childhood in Kolhapur, then a princely state, to his encounters with three generations of the Nehru-Gandhi family and his recollections of the darkest days of Indian democracy: the Emergency. Filled with little known facts and insights into the people and events that have shaped independent India, this is a deeply compassionate and readable memoir by one of the most important social scientists of modern India.

Current Catalog

Current Catalog
Author: National Library of Medicine (U.S.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1712
Release:
Genre: Medicine
ISBN:

First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.

Perspectives on Development and Population Growth in the Third World

Perspectives on Development and Population Growth in the Third World
Author: O.G. Simmons
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1468455141

Until the early to mid-1970s, social scientists in the fields of population and development were largely going their own ways. Demographers relied almost exclusively on demographic transition theory as their para digm for understanding the role of development in population change and fertility decline. Conversely, most development economists and other specialists were certainly aware of the constraints placed upon development objectives by population growth. However, the main de velopment theories paid little attention to population and the implica tions of population growth for development. Indeed it was not until after the World Population Conference in Bucharest in 1974 that the interaction of population and development became a serious and pur posive theme for social scientific study. Accordingly, since about the mid-1970s, an extensive literature in the field of population and develop ment has been generated. And in 1975, under the auspices of The Popu lation Council, the journal Population and Development Review was found ed, a journal which in the past decade has developed into the premier publication in the world for work in this area. But our understanding of development as it refers to change in Third World countries remained fragmented. Moreover, our understanding of the linkages and interac tions between population and development was very limited. It is in this regard that Ozzie Simmons's Perspectives on Development and Population Growth in the Third World will certainly have an impact.

Creating a New Consensus on Population

Creating a New Consensus on Population
Author: Jyoti Shankar Singh
Publisher: Earthscan
Total Pages: 236
Release: 1998
Genre: International Conference on Population and Development
ISBN: 9781853835650

Discusses the process and outcome of the International Conference on Population and Development which was held in 1994 in Cairo, Egypt.