Abstract = {Any contemporary education policy will need to address the democratic and economic aspirations of the younger citizenry and must declare those concrete steps that would endure the realisation of those aims. But that has not been the case with the National Policy on Education 2016. The new education policy, as proposed, chooses not to address the fundamental issues plaguing the education system but instead, it propagates a corporate, neo-liberal, neo-cultural, a Sanskritised, global and market-oriented education system which is governed by a wholly separate and centralised bureaucracy, where state government power and oversight is minimal.
},
Publisher = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Type = {Journal}
}
@article{NREGA_Ankita_Aggarwal.,
Author = {Ankita Aggarwal},
Date-Added = {2016-06-10 05:29:11 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-06-10 05:30:27 +0000},
Title = {The MGNREGA Crisis Insights from Jharkhand},
Year = {2015}
}
@article{Navarro2001481,
title = {The political context of social inequalities and
health },
@ -2584,6 +2606,24 @@
Labor Statistics.}
}
@article{Nss_70th_round_farming_report,
Author = {NSSO},
Date-Added = {2016-06-10 05:33:43 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-06-10 05:34:27 +0000},
Title = {Some Aspects of Farming in India},
Year = {(January-- December 2013)}
}
@techreport{Nss_70th_round_farming_report.,
Author = {Government of India},
Date-Added = {2016-06-09 22:28:43 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-06-09 22:30:53 +0000},
Keywords = {nss_70th},
Read = {1},
Title = {Some Aspects of Farming in India},
Year = {(January-- December 2013)}
}
@Article{Ntata2010,
title = {Bridging the Hunger Gap with Cash Transfers:
Title = {Right to Education Act 2009: Critical Gaps and Challenges},
Author = {Praveen Jha and Pooja Parvati},
Journal = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Year = {2010},
Month = {Mar},
Number = {13},
Volume = {45},
Abstract = {After the many rounds of drafting and redrafting that went into the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act of 2009, it was hoped that the Act would be an effective instrument for any child to demand her basic entitlement. Yet, a close look at the provisions reveals disconcerting features.
Author = {Ministry of Tribal Affairs Government of India},
Date-Added = {2016-06-09 21:07:00 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-06-09 21:08:24 +0000},
Month = {May},
Read = {1},
Title = {REPORT OF THE HIGH LEVEL COMMITTEE ON SOCIO- ECONOMIC, HEALTH AND EDUCATIONAL STATUS OF TRIBAL COMMUNITIES OF INDIA},
Year = {2014}
}
@article{Tullu2010,
Author = {Tullu, A and Banniza, S and Tar'an, B and Warkentin, T and Vandenberg, A},
Date = {2010},
@ -8013,6 +8077,11 @@
Date-modified = {2014-02-12 14:47:18 +0000}
}
@article{cite-key,
Date-Added = {2016-06-14 02:29:06 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-06-14 02:29:06 +0000}
}
@Article{clayton1974note,
Title = {Note on Farm Mechanisation and Employment in
Developing Countries, A},
@ -8118,6 +8187,14 @@
Title = {Dietary protein quality evaluation in human nutrition: Report of an FAO expert consultation}
}
@book{contract_farming,
Author = {Sukhpal Singh},
Date-Added = {2017-01-29},
Publisher = {International Institute for Environment and Development},
Title = {Contract Farming in India: Impacts on Women and Child Workers},
Year = 2003
}
@Article{coombes2010toiling,
Title = {TOILING FOR TOILETS},
Author = {Coombes, Rebecca},
@ -9856,6 +9933,103 @@
Volume = 86
}
@article{epw_labourreview_andhra,
Title = {'No to Child Labour, Yes to Education'},
Author = {Rekha Wazir},
Journal = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Year = {2002},
Month = {Dec},
Number = {52},
Volume = {37},
Abstract = {labour review issue: Children of landless labourers in Andhra Pradesh's Ranga Reddy district now attend school instead of employing their labour to augment a meagre family income. The impetus has come from their parents who have been active participants in the process. This paper looks at the initiatives of an NGO seeking to eradicate child labour and attempts to explain why this endeavour differed from other attempts to universalise education and eradicate child labour.
},
Publisher = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Type = {Journal}
}
@article{epw_labourreview_beedi,
Title = {Women's Employment and Reduction of Child Labour},
Author = {Velayudham Saravanan},
Journal = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Year = {2002},
Month = {Dec},
Number = {52},
Volume = {37},
Abstract = {Labour review issue:This article attempts to study the linkages between empowerment of women and reduction of child labour in the beedi indutry in rural Tamil adu. It also analyses the socio-economic conditions of women and the nature and extent of child workers' participation in beedimaking. The ar ticle argues that the initiatives taken to empower women in the beedi industry have not helped reduce child labour, due to lacunae in the exis ting legal provisions and social security measures.},
Publisher = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Type = {Journal}
}
@article{epw_labourreview_lieten,
Title = {Child Labour in India},
Author = {G K Lieten},
Journal = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Year = {2002},
Month = {Dec},
Number = {52},
Volume = {37},
Abstract = {In the drive for universal education all children not in school have been subsumed as working children. Such a development is ill-advised. This article analyses this changing definition in the context of the Labour Commission Report 2001. With a redefinition of child labour, the number of working children is set at more than, 10 times the official figures available from Census and NSS reports. Such a development only aggravates the problem.
},
Publisher = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Type = {Journal}
}
@article{epw_labourreview_piush_antony,
Title = {Child Labour: A Perspective of Locale and Context},
Author = {Piush Antony},
Journal = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Year = {2002},
Month = {Dec},
Number = {52},
Volume = {37},
Abstract = {The occasional spurts of attention that child labour has gained in the recent past following the debates on globalisation and its impact have often raised only a cacophonic noise instead of a coherent understanding of the issues. What are the divergences in the perspectives on child labour? This article attempts to locate the issues in the large context of child rights by reviewing policies and attempts to detail the construct of childhood in India mapping the ambiguities regarding children's work and education.
},
Publisher = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Type = {Journal}
}
@article{epw_labourreview_ranjan,
Title = {Simultaneous Analysis of Child Labour and Child Schooling},
Author = {Ranjan Ray},
Journal = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Year = {2002},
Month = {Dec},
Number = {52},
Volume = {37},
Abstract = {This study investigates the key determinants of child labour hours and child schooling experience, paying special attention to the interaction between the two. A significant methodogical feature that distinguishes the present study from previous investigations is that this analysis recognises the joint endogeneity of child labour, child schooling and child poverty. The study is conducted on Nepalese and Pakistani data, and the results are compared. A key empirical finding, with significant policy implications, is the sharp trade-off between child labour and child schooling. Another common feature of both countries is the gender bias in favour of boys' schooling, though the bias is much larger in case of Pakistan.
},
Publisher = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Type = {Journal}
}
@article{epw_labourreview_schooling,
Title = {Private Schools for Less Privileged},
Author = {Anuradha De},
Journal = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Year = { 2002},
Month = {Dec},
Number = {52},
Volume = {37},
Abstract = {The 1990s saw a surge in parental demand for education which prompted a new phenomenon, the growth of small fee-charging private schools for the less privileged. While this development has been welcomed by education bureaucrats, there has been little research on these schools, which often because they remained 'unrecognised' even missed statistical surveys. This paper reports a small field study of these schools in one district each in Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan.
},
Publisher = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Type = {Journal}
}
@article{epw_labourreview_social_labelling,
Title = {Impact of Social Labelling on Child Labour in Carpet Industry},
Author = {Alakh N Sharma},
Journal = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Year = {2002},
Month = {Dec},
Number = {52},
Volume = {37},
Abstract = {Social labelling is an initiative introduced in the nineties with a view to eliminating the exploitation of child labour in carpet production in India. The four labelling programmes, viz, RUGMARK, Kaleen, STEP and Care and Fair are analysed in terms of their mechanisms, approaches, objectives and their effectiveness over 35 villages spread over nine districts in three states in India.
},
Publisher = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Type = {Journal}
}
@Article{epwland2008,
Title = {Ownership Holdings of Land in Rural {{I}ndia}:
Title = {Future needs of mechanization of horticultural crops
in {I}ndia},
@ -55276,6 +55511,12 @@
Date-modified = {2014-02-15 21:28:56 +0000}
}
@techreport{ncpcr_47555531,
Author = {National Commission for the Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR)},
Institution = {PLANNING COMMISSION, INDIA},
Title = {ABOLITION OF CHILD LABOUR IN INDIA:Strategies for the Eleventh Five Year Plan }
}
@PhdThesis{neeladrithesis1985,
Title = {Agrarian change in Punjab 1880-1940},
Author = {Bhattacharya, Neeladri},
@ -55291,6 +55532,20 @@
Url = {http://172.16.21.5:8000/theses/TH2010.pdf}
}
@article{neera-burra-crusading,
Title = {Crusading for Children in India's Informal Economy},
Author = {Neera Burra},
Journal = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Year = {2005},
Month = {Dec},
Number = {49},
Volume = {40},
Abstract = {For the last decade or two, an interesting debate has been in progress over the definition of child labour and child work and the contribution of children's work in the informal economy. Those who have argued for a narrow definition have been motivated in part by the desire to reduce the size of the problem and thus make it more manageable. But this conceptual sleight-of-hand flies in the face of common sense and results in making the work of millions of children invisible to public policy and public action. This paper argues that the distinction at the conceptual level between child labour and child work is essentially flawed. It revisits some of the empirical questions around this distinction and concludes that such a distinction be abandoned both at the level of theory and practice.
},
Publisher = {Economic and Political Weekly},
Type = {Journal}
}
@Article{neethaepw2014,
Title = {Crisis in Female Employment},
Author = {N. Neetha},
@ -55440,6 +55695,13 @@
Date-modified = {2014-10-27 00:23:54 +0000}
}
@book{nowherechild,
Author = {Chaudhari, D.P.},
Publisher = {International Labour Organization},
Title = {A Dynamic Profile of Child Labour in India 1951-91,},
Year = {1996}
}
@Article{nsdras2013,
Title = {On Days of Employment of Rural Labour Households},
Author = {{Niladri Sekhar} Dhar},
@ -56674,6 +56936,15 @@
populations.}
}
@article{piece_rate_dreze,
Author = {Jean-Marie Baland, Jean Dreze, Luc Leruth},
Journal = {Journal of Development Economics},
Pages = {445-461},
Title = {Daily wages and piece rates in agrarian economies},
Volume = {59},
Year = {1999}
}
@TechReport{pineiro2010,
title = {Food Security Policies in Latin America},
author = {Pi{\~n}eiro, Martin and Bianchi, Eduardo Dante and