FACULTY OF CONSERVATION‚ THE ENVIRONMENT AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT OF RURAL AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT COURSE : SOCIAL ECONOMICS OF RURAL LIVELIHOOD CODE : ERL213 LECTURE : FRANCIS UNGAPEMBE STUDENT : GIFT KAPOTA YEAR : 2 ASSIGNMENT : Seven QUESTION : Discuss the role of government in promoting socio-economics of rural livelihood DUE DATE : 7 September 2013 DATE SUBMITTED: 2 September
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Causes And Effects Essay The Effects Of Noise Pollution Generally‚ Sound is very much important to our daily live‚ but noise is not. Noise is used as an annoying sound. Most of us every time hear the sounds in everyday life‚ likewise the traffic‚ the television‚ ‚ Loud music‚ people talking on their phone and even pets are also shouting in the middle of the night. The whole things of these have come to a part of the culture and hardly annoy us. Moreover‚ noise is made by big trucks‚ household gadgets
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DEFINITION OF RURAL SOCIOLOGY According to A.R. Desai‚ “The prime objective of Rural Sociology should be to make a systematic‚ scientific and comprehensive study of the rural social organisation‚ of its structure function and objective tendencies of development and on the basis of such a study to discover the laws of is development. Since every science social or natural‚ has for its aim the discovery of the hither to hidden laws of development of a domain of nature or society‚ the basic task of Rural Sociology
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Rural Retail Banking in India: 2020 Faculty Contributor : Jayadev M.‚ Associate Professor and Roger Moser‚ Visiting Faculty Student Contributors : Madhulika Kaul and Charvi Tandon Financial inclusion is seen as one of the means for overall economic development of a country. The growth of the rural retail banking industry fosters financial inclusion by providing financial products and services to people in the farthest reaches of the country. In India‚ even now the rural areas lack access to
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Continental drift has helped create the diversity we see present in modern day plants and animals. Through a process of speciation‚ the movement of the continents has had a generous role throughout evolution‚ effecting and distributing flora and fauna. The Earth’s continents were once one‚ a large supercontinent called Pangea that later separated into two smaller ones known as Gondwana and Laurasia. The separation and collision of continents has not only created some of the valleys and mountain ranges
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Environment Programme (UNEP) states that ‘By 2007‚ one-half of the world’s population will live in urban areas compared to little more than one-third in 1972‚ and the period 1950 to 2050 will see a shift from a 65 per cent rural population to 65 per cent urban (United Nations Population Division 2001a). By 2002‚ some 70 per cent of the world’s urban population will be living in Africa‚ Asia or Latin America (UNCHS
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take a deep breath. We know when our actions cause water pollution‚ for we can see for ourselves the quality of the water worsening. Similarly noise‚ light‚ visual pollution can all be monitored‚ because we can all see or sense these kinds of pollution. However‚ land pollution is a hard one to get since we do not understand and we cannot comprehend which of our actions cause destruction of land. What is Land Pollution? When the anthropogenic effects of development adversely affect land (especially
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Who is the scientist who did much of the early work on continental drift? In the early 20th century‚ German scientist Alfred Wegener published a book explaining his theory that the continental landmasses‚ far from being immovable‚ were drifting across the Earth. What evidence did this scientist have to support his idea of continental drift? Wegener noticed that the continents seemed to fit together‚ not at the continuously changing shoreline‚ but at the edge to their continental shelves
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RURAL MARKETING An Overview Trends indicate that the rural markets are coming up in a big way and growing twice as fast as the urban as many ’middle income and above’ households in the rural areas as there are in the urbanareas.The share of FMCG products in rural markets is 53%‚ durables boasts of 59% market share. The number of middle and high income households in rural India is expected to grow from 80 million to 111 million by 2008. In urban India‚ the same is expected to grow from 46 million
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WHISTLING WOODS TOURS AND TRAVELS ‘RURAL INDIA…Pure. Natural. Unspoiled. The way life should be…’ About Rural Tourism Villages are abundant in refreshing greenery‚ openness‚ fresh natural airs‚ pastoral beauty‚ and touching and winsome rustic simplicity. Far away from the hustle and bustle of congested cities’ life‚ and polluted air & ambience‚ villages offer fresh comforting breezes‚ lavish openness‚ and pleasant & soothing solitude. Thus‚ the village tourism is an expedient means of spending
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