Emerging Leadership Pattern in Rural India


Book Description

The book in the existing context empirically examines the institutional leaders under the three tier system of Panchayati-Raj institutions (PRIs). It deals with the socio-economic roots of the rural bodies at all the three tiers, as a backdrop to their emergence: the awareness and knowlegeability of the rural leaders relating to various problems and their socio-economic values.







Rural Leadership in a Welfare Society


Book Description

Study in the context of Agra Division, which consists of five districts namely Agra, Aligarh, Etah, Mainpuri, and Mathura, in Uttar Pradesh.




Rise of Anthropology in India


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Village Panchayats in India


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India's Changing Villages


Book Description

Published in 1998, India's Changing Villages is a valuable contribution to the field of Sociology & Social Policy.




Structure and Change in Indian Society


Book Description

Recent theoretical and methodological innovations in the anthropological analysis of South Asian societies have introduced distinctive modifications in the study of Indian social structure and social change. This book, reporting on twenty empirical studies of Indian society conducted by outstanding scholars, reflects these trends not only with reference to Indian society itself, but also in terms of the relevance of such trends to an understanding of social change more generally.The contributors demonstrate the adaptive changes experienced by the studied groups in particular villages, towns, cities, and regions. The authors view the basic social units of joint family, caste, and village not as structural isolates, but as intimately connected with one another and with other social units through social and cultural networks of various kinds that incorporate the social units into the complex structure of Indian civilization. Within this broadened conception of social structure, these studies trace the changing relations of politics, economics, law, and language to the caste system.Showing that the caste system is dynamic, with upward and downward mobility characterizing it from pre-British times to the present, the studies suggest that the modernizing forces which entered the system since independence--parliamentary democracy, universal suffrage, land reforms, modern education, urbanization, and industrial technology--provided new opportunities and paths to upward mobility, but did not radically alter the system. The chapters in this book show that the study of Indian society reveals novel forms of social structure change. They introduce methods and theories that may well encourage social scientists to extend the study of change in Indian society to the study of change in other areas.