2017, ISBN: 9788171887194
edizione con copertina flessibile, edizione con copertina rigida
New York: Macmillan, 1964. Second Printing. Hardcover. good/fair. 23 cm, 308 pages, index, DJ worn, soiled, small edge tears, and chips, pencil erasure on half-title. Professor Roche w… Altro …
New York: Macmillan, 1964. Second Printing. Hardcover. good/fair. 23 cm, 308 pages, index, DJ worn, soiled, small edge tears, and chips, pencil erasure on half-title. Professor Roche was a prolific author of books and articles. He was also a syndicated columnist, and once described his politics as "Social Democrat." He was a consultant to John F. Kennedy when Kennedy was a Senator and later when he was President. He was also a special adviser to President Lyndon B. Johnson from 1966 to 1968. In the 1950's he was active in the civil-rights movement. He was a cofounder of Americans for Democratic Action and served as its president from 1962 to 1965. In the 1960's, he also wrote speeches for Hubert H. Humphrey, beginning when Humphrey was a Senator and later Vice President. Professor Roche's governmental positions included service on the Eisenhower Commission on International Radio Broadcasting, the United Nations Subcommittee on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, and, most recently, the President's Advisory Committee on Arms Control and Disarmament. Professor Roche's best known academic work was "The Founding Fathers, a Reform Caucus in Action," which was printed by the American Political Science Review. Among his books were "Courts and Rights" (1961), "The Quest for the Dream: Civil Liberties in Modern America" (1963), "Shadow and Substance: Studies in the Theory and Structure of Politics" (1964), and "Sentenced to Life: Reflections on Politics, Education and Law" (1974). A hopeful report on the significant development of human freedom in the United States over the preceding fifty years. Civil and political rights are a class of rights that protect individuals' freedom from infringement by governments, social organizations, and private individuals. They ensure one's ability to participate in the civil and political life of the society and state without discrimination or repression. Civil rights include the ensuring of peoples' physical and mental integrity, life, and safety; protection from discrimination on grounds such as race, gender, national origin, color, age, political affiliation, ethnicity, religion, or disability; and individual rights such as privacy and the freedoms of thought, speech, religion, press, assembly, and movement.Political rights include natural justice (procedural fairness) in law, such as the rights of the accused, including the right to a fair trial; due process; the right to seek redress or a legal remedy; and rights of participation in civil society and politics such as freedom of association, the right to assemble, the right to petition, the right of self-defense, and the right to vote. Civil and political rights form the original and main part of internationa human rights. They comprise the first portion of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights (with economic, social, and cultural rights comprising the second portion). The theory of three generations of human rights considers this group of rights to be "first-generation rights", and the theory of negative and positive rights considers them to be generally negative rights., Macmillan, 1964, 2.25, Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 2017. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Wraps. Fine. Marco Marchegiani of the U.S. Government Printing. 28 cm, 124, wraps. , color illustrations. Maps. Issue removed from plastic for cataloguing. NDU Press produces Joint Force Quarterly in concert with ongoing education and research at National Defense University in support of the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. JFQ is the Chairman's joint military and security studies journal designed to inform and educate national security professionals on joint and integrated operations; whole of government contributions to national security policy and strategy; homeland security; and developments in training and joint military education to better equip America's military and security apparatus to meet tomorrow's challenges while protecting freedom today. The National Defense University (NDU) is an institution of higher education funded by the United States Department of Defense, intended to facilitate high-level training, education, and the development of national security strategy. It is chartered by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, with Major General Frederick M. Padilla, USMC,[2] as president. It is located on the grounds of Fort Lesley J. McNair in Washington, D.C. The university's mission is to support the joint warfighter[clarification needed] by providing rigorous Joint Professional Military Education to members of the U.S. Armed Forces and select interagency civilians in order to develop leaders that have the ability to operate and creatively think in an unpredictable and complex world. The school's master's program is a one-year intensive study program. Before 1946, the U.S. military relied on specially-created programs to meet specific needs. They also made use of smaller training programs elsewhere. The closer integration of military forces and increasing complexity of strategy and technology necessitated the foundation of The National War College and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces. To better integrate all the education programs, Congress created the National Defense University in 1976. In 1981, the Joint Forces Staff College was created, followed by the Department of Defense Computer Institute (DODCI) in 1982, which later was renamed the Information Resources Management College. In 1984 the university created the Institute for National Strategic Studies to meet the demand for military research. After the Goldwater-Nichols Act and the House Armed Services Committee Skelton Panel Report, the University decided to seek authority to grant master's degrees. In 1993 President Bill Clinton signed into law a bill that allowed NDU to grant the degree of Master of Science in National Resource Strategy upon graduates of the Industrial College of the Armed Forces, and the Master of Science in National Security Strategy upon graduates of the National War College. The university is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools., National Defense University Press, 2017, 5, New York: Harper & Row, 1975. First Edition. First Printing. Hardcover. Good/Fair. 287, illus., appendices, index, slight soiling to fore-edge, DJ soiled and some edge wear. Robert Bernard Considine, known as Bob Considine (November 4, 1906 - September 25, 1975), was an American journalist, author, and commentator. He is best known as the co-author of Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo and The Babe Ruth Story. With the advent of World War II, Considine become a war correspondent with the International News Service, also owned by Hearst. The wire service was a predecessor to United Press International. His column "On the Line" was a well known syndicated feature. Considine had a notable array of admirers in high places; he had correspondence from Truman, Lyndon B. Johnson, Rube Goldberg, Nelson A. Rockefeller, Cardinal Francis Spellman, and General William C. Westmoreland. President Dwight D. Eisenhower in a 1960 letter to William Randolph Hearst, Jr., praised Considine's reporting on the 1960 U-2 incident in which the Soviets downed an American aircraft piloted by Francis Gary Powers and used for intelligence gathering. Armand Hammer (May 21, 1898 - December 10, 1990) was an American business manager and owner, most closely associated with Occidental Petroleum, a company he ran from 1957 until his death, though he was known as well for his art collection, his philanthropy, and for his close ties to the Soviet Union. Hammer's business interests around the world and his "citizen diplomacy" helped him cultivate a wide network of friends and associates. He appeared frequently on television, commenting on international relations or agitating for research into a cure for cancer. As of 2016, he has been the subject of six biographies-in 1975 (Considine, authorized biography), 1985 (Bryson, coffee table book), Weinberg 1989, Blumay 1992, Epstein 1996, and Alef 2009; and two autobiographies (1932 and a best seller in 1987). His art collection and his philanthropic projects were the subject of numerous publications as well. After graduating from medical school, Hammer extended earlier entrepreneurial ventures with a successful business importing many goods from and exporting pharmaceuticals to the newly formed Soviet Union, together with his younger brother Victor. According to Hammer, on his initial trip, he took $60,000 in medical supplies to aid in a typhus epidemic, and made a deal with Lenin for furs and caviars in exchange for a shipment of surplus American wheat. He moved to the USSR in the 1920s to oversee these operations, especially his large business manufacturing and exporting pens and pencils. According to Alexander Barmine, who was assigned by the Central Committee to run the Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga company to compete with Hammer, the stationery concession was actually granted to Dr. Julius Hammer. Barmine states the party spent five million gold rubles on stationery supplies made in factories controlled by Julius Hammer and other concessionaires making them rich. Barmine further contends that the Soviets were eventually able to duplicate certain items such as typewriter parts and pens and end those concessions but were never able to match the quality of Hammer's pencils so that concession became permanent. After returning to the U.S., Hammer entered into a diverse array of business, art, cultural, and humanitarian endeavors, including investing in various U.S. oil production efforts. These oil investments were later parlayed into control of Occidental Petroleum. National Geographic described Occidental chairman Hammer as "a pioneer in the synfuels boom." Hammer was a philanthropist, supporting causes related to education, medicine, and the arts. Among his legacies is the Armand Hammer United World College of the American West (now generally called the UWC-USA, part of the United World Colleges). By the time of his death, Hammer had won the Soviet Union's Order of Friendship of Peoples, the U.S. National Medal of Arts (1987), France's Legion of Honor, Italy's Grand Order of Merit, Sweden's Royal Order of the Polar Star, Austria's Knight Commander's Cross, Pakistan's Hilal-i-Quaid-Azam Peace Award, Israel's Leadership Award, Venezuela's Order of Andrés Bello, Mexico's National Recognition Award, Bulgaria's Jubilee Medal, and Belgium's Order of the Crown. Hammer hungered for a Nobel Peace Prize, and was repeatedly nominated for one, including by Menachem Begin, but never won., Harper & Row, 1975, 2.25, Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436. Delhi: Development ReportPlanning Commission Government of India9788171887194, Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009, 6<
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Delhi: Development Report - edizione con copertina flessibile
2009, ISBN: 9788171887194
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Uni… Altro …
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436. Delhi: Development ReportPlanning Commission Government of India9788171887194, Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009, 6<
Biblio.co.uk |
Delhi: Development Report - edizione con copertina flessibile
2009, ISBN: 9788171887194
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Uni… Altro …
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436., Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009, 6<
Biblio.co.uk |
Delhi: Development Report - edizione con copertina flessibile
2009, ISBN: 9788171887194
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Uni… Altro …
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436., Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009<
Biblio.co.uk |
Delhi: Development Report - edizione con copertina flessibile
2009, ISBN: 9788171887194
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Uni… Altro …
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436., Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009<
Biblio.co.uk |
2017, ISBN: 9788171887194
edizione con copertina flessibile, edizione con copertina rigida
New York: Macmillan, 1964. Second Printing. Hardcover. good/fair. 23 cm, 308 pages, index, DJ worn, soiled, small edge tears, and chips, pencil erasure on half-title. Professor Roche w… Altro …
New York: Macmillan, 1964. Second Printing. Hardcover. good/fair. 23 cm, 308 pages, index, DJ worn, soiled, small edge tears, and chips, pencil erasure on half-title. Professor Roche was a prolific author of books and articles. He was also a syndicated columnist, and once described his politics as "Social Democrat." He was a consultant to John F. Kennedy when Kennedy was a Senator and later when he was President. He was also a special adviser to President Lyndon B. Johnson from 1966 to 1968. In the 1950's he was active in the civil-rights movement. He was a cofounder of Americans for Democratic Action and served as its president from 1962 to 1965. In the 1960's, he also wrote speeches for Hubert H. Humphrey, beginning when Humphrey was a Senator and later Vice President. Professor Roche's governmental positions included service on the Eisenhower Commission on International Radio Broadcasting, the United Nations Subcommittee on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, and, most recently, the President's Advisory Committee on Arms Control and Disarmament. Professor Roche's best known academic work was "The Founding Fathers, a Reform Caucus in Action," which was printed by the American Political Science Review. Among his books were "Courts and Rights" (1961), "The Quest for the Dream: Civil Liberties in Modern America" (1963), "Shadow and Substance: Studies in the Theory and Structure of Politics" (1964), and "Sentenced to Life: Reflections on Politics, Education and Law" (1974). A hopeful report on the significant development of human freedom in the United States over the preceding fifty years. Civil and political rights are a class of rights that protect individuals' freedom from infringement by governments, social organizations, and private individuals. They ensure one's ability to participate in the civil and political life of the society and state without discrimination or repression. Civil rights include the ensuring of peoples' physical and mental integrity, life, and safety; protection from discrimination on grounds such as race, gender, national origin, color, age, political affiliation, ethnicity, religion, or disability; and individual rights such as privacy and the freedoms of thought, speech, religion, press, assembly, and movement.Political rights include natural justice (procedural fairness) in law, such as the rights of the accused, including the right to a fair trial; due process; the right to seek redress or a legal remedy; and rights of participation in civil society and politics such as freedom of association, the right to assemble, the right to petition, the right of self-defense, and the right to vote. Civil and political rights form the original and main part of internationa human rights. They comprise the first portion of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights (with economic, social, and cultural rights comprising the second portion). The theory of three generations of human rights considers this group of rights to be "first-generation rights", and the theory of negative and positive rights considers them to be generally negative rights., Macmillan, 1964, 2.25, Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 2017. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Wraps. Fine. Marco Marchegiani of the U.S. Government Printing. 28 cm, 124, wraps. , color illustrations. Maps. Issue removed from plastic for cataloguing. NDU Press produces Joint Force Quarterly in concert with ongoing education and research at National Defense University in support of the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. JFQ is the Chairman's joint military and security studies journal designed to inform and educate national security professionals on joint and integrated operations; whole of government contributions to national security policy and strategy; homeland security; and developments in training and joint military education to better equip America's military and security apparatus to meet tomorrow's challenges while protecting freedom today. The National Defense University (NDU) is an institution of higher education funded by the United States Department of Defense, intended to facilitate high-level training, education, and the development of national security strategy. It is chartered by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, with Major General Frederick M. Padilla, USMC,[2] as president. It is located on the grounds of Fort Lesley J. McNair in Washington, D.C. The university's mission is to support the joint warfighter[clarification needed] by providing rigorous Joint Professional Military Education to members of the U.S. Armed Forces and select interagency civilians in order to develop leaders that have the ability to operate and creatively think in an unpredictable and complex world. The school's master's program is a one-year intensive study program. Before 1946, the U.S. military relied on specially-created programs to meet specific needs. They also made use of smaller training programs elsewhere. The closer integration of military forces and increasing complexity of strategy and technology necessitated the foundation of The National War College and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces. To better integrate all the education programs, Congress created the National Defense University in 1976. In 1981, the Joint Forces Staff College was created, followed by the Department of Defense Computer Institute (DODCI) in 1982, which later was renamed the Information Resources Management College. In 1984 the university created the Institute for National Strategic Studies to meet the demand for military research. After the Goldwater-Nichols Act and the House Armed Services Committee Skelton Panel Report, the University decided to seek authority to grant master's degrees. In 1993 President Bill Clinton signed into law a bill that allowed NDU to grant the degree of Master of Science in National Resource Strategy upon graduates of the Industrial College of the Armed Forces, and the Master of Science in National Security Strategy upon graduates of the National War College. The university is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools., National Defense University Press, 2017, 5, New York: Harper & Row, 1975. First Edition. First Printing. Hardcover. Good/Fair. 287, illus., appendices, index, slight soiling to fore-edge, DJ soiled and some edge wear. Robert Bernard Considine, known as Bob Considine (November 4, 1906 - September 25, 1975), was an American journalist, author, and commentator. He is best known as the co-author of Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo and The Babe Ruth Story. With the advent of World War II, Considine become a war correspondent with the International News Service, also owned by Hearst. The wire service was a predecessor to United Press International. His column "On the Line" was a well known syndicated feature. Considine had a notable array of admirers in high places; he had correspondence from Truman, Lyndon B. Johnson, Rube Goldberg, Nelson A. Rockefeller, Cardinal Francis Spellman, and General William C. Westmoreland. President Dwight D. Eisenhower in a 1960 letter to William Randolph Hearst, Jr., praised Considine's reporting on the 1960 U-2 incident in which the Soviets downed an American aircraft piloted by Francis Gary Powers and used for intelligence gathering. Armand Hammer (May 21, 1898 - December 10, 1990) was an American business manager and owner, most closely associated with Occidental Petroleum, a company he ran from 1957 until his death, though he was known as well for his art collection, his philanthropy, and for his close ties to the Soviet Union. Hammer's business interests around the world and his "citizen diplomacy" helped him cultivate a wide network of friends and associates. He appeared frequently on television, commenting on international relations or agitating for research into a cure for cancer. As of 2016, he has been the subject of six biographies-in 1975 (Considine, authorized biography), 1985 (Bryson, coffee table book), Weinberg 1989, Blumay 1992, Epstein 1996, and Alef 2009; and two autobiographies (1932 and a best seller in 1987). His art collection and his philanthropic projects were the subject of numerous publications as well. After graduating from medical school, Hammer extended earlier entrepreneurial ventures with a successful business importing many goods from and exporting pharmaceuticals to the newly formed Soviet Union, together with his younger brother Victor. According to Hammer, on his initial trip, he took $60,000 in medical supplies to aid in a typhus epidemic, and made a deal with Lenin for furs and caviars in exchange for a shipment of surplus American wheat. He moved to the USSR in the 1920s to oversee these operations, especially his large business manufacturing and exporting pens and pencils. According to Alexander Barmine, who was assigned by the Central Committee to run the Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga company to compete with Hammer, the stationery concession was actually granted to Dr. Julius Hammer. Barmine states the party spent five million gold rubles on stationery supplies made in factories controlled by Julius Hammer and other concessionaires making them rich. Barmine further contends that the Soviets were eventually able to duplicate certain items such as typewriter parts and pens and end those concessions but were never able to match the quality of Hammer's pencils so that concession became permanent. After returning to the U.S., Hammer entered into a diverse array of business, art, cultural, and humanitarian endeavors, including investing in various U.S. oil production efforts. These oil investments were later parlayed into control of Occidental Petroleum. National Geographic described Occidental chairman Hammer as "a pioneer in the synfuels boom." Hammer was a philanthropist, supporting causes related to education, medicine, and the arts. Among his legacies is the Armand Hammer United World College of the American West (now generally called the UWC-USA, part of the United World Colleges). By the time of his death, Hammer had won the Soviet Union's Order of Friendship of Peoples, the U.S. National Medal of Arts (1987), France's Legion of Honor, Italy's Grand Order of Merit, Sweden's Royal Order of the Polar Star, Austria's Knight Commander's Cross, Pakistan's Hilal-i-Quaid-Azam Peace Award, Israel's Leadership Award, Venezuela's Order of Andrés Bello, Mexico's National Recognition Award, Bulgaria's Jubilee Medal, and Belgium's Order of the Crown. Hammer hungered for a Nobel Peace Prize, and was repeatedly nominated for one, including by Menachem Begin, but never won., Harper & Row, 1975, 2.25, Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436. Delhi: Development ReportPlanning Commission Government of India9788171887194, Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009, 6<
Planning Commission Government of India:
Delhi: Development Report - edizione con copertina flessibile2009, ISBN: 9788171887194
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Uni… Altro …
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436. Delhi: Development ReportPlanning Commission Government of India9788171887194, Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009, 6<
Delhi: Development Report - edizione con copertina flessibile
2009
ISBN: 9788171887194
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Uni… Altro …
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436., Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009, 6<
Delhi: Development Report - edizione con copertina flessibile
2009, ISBN: 9788171887194
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Uni… Altro …
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436., Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009<
Delhi: Development Report - edizione con copertina flessibile
2009, ISBN: 9788171887194
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Uni… Altro …
Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009. Softcover. New. The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is to provide independent quality reference documents on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDRs are meant to discuss the constraints and challenges facing the States and provide a vision, blueprints or a roadmap for its overall progress and prosperity. Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed national level-agencies under the supervision of a Core Group, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including senior representatives of the State Government. The publication of the Delhi Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Orissa, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Karnataka, Kerala and Sikkim. The Delhi Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights issues critical for the State`s development in the years ahead. The Report is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for accelerated growth in the future. CONTENTS IN DETAIL : The Core Committee, including Partner Agencies and Project Team Message from Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Foreword from Chief Minister, Delhi Message by Member, Planning Commission Introduction by Principal Advisor, Planning Commission Acknowledgements List of Tables, Figures and Annexures Executive Summary 1. Profile of the State 1.1 History 1.2 Phases in Development of Modern Delhi 1.3 Geography 1.4 Climate 1.5 Area of NCTD 1.6 Civic Administrative Division 1.7 Demography 1.8 Economy of NCTD 1.9 Development Disparities 1.10 Education 1.11 Medical Facilities 1.12 Physical Infrastructure 1.13 Energy 1.14 Water 1.15 Environment 1.16 Industrial Effluent 1.17 National Capital Region (NCR) 1.18 Flora and Fauna 1.19 Culture 2. Economy and Fiscal Management 2.1 General 2.2 Rate of Economic Growth 2.3 Per Capita NSDP 2.4 Structure of the Economy 2.5 Primary Sector 2.6 Secondary Sector 2.7 Services Sector 2.8 Labour Supply and Employment 2.9 Special Provisions for Delhi 2.10 Revenue Receipts 2.11 Tax Receipts 2.12 Own Non-Tax Revenue 2.13 Central Transfers 2.14 Expenditure 2.15 Plan Expenditure 2.16 Non-Plan Expenditure 2.17 Expenditure on General Services 2.18 Expenditure on Social and Economic Services 2.19 Assignment to Local Bodies 2.20 Revenue Surplus 2.21 Fiscal Deficit and Debt 2.22 Concluding Remarks 3. Urban Development 3.1 Housing 3.2 Land Development and Management 3.3 Sanitation 3.4 Housing and Urban Policy 3.5 Data Base Development and Management 4. Infrastructure Development 4.1 General Features of Delhi Power Situation 4.2 Review of Policies, Programmes and Projects 4.3 Current State of the Sector 4.4 Implementation of the Reform Package and Prospects of Achieving Financial Viability 4.5 Areas of Strengths, Weaknesses and Where Intervention is Needed 4.6 Introduction 4.7 Traffic Characteristics and Overall Transportation Scenario 4.8 Status of Roads and Their Development So Far 4.9 Limitations of the Existing Road System 4.10 Sanctioned Road Development Projects and Their Present Status, Planning for Completion and Projects in the Pipeline 4.11 Development of Roads Leading to and Bypassing Delhi 4.12 New Expressways 4.13 Institutional Measures 4.14 Phasing of Projects Printed Pages: 436., Planning Commission Government of India/Academic Foundation, 2009<
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Informazioni dettagliate del libro - Delhi Development Report
EAN (ISBN-13): 9788171887194
ISBN (ISBN-10): 8171887198
Copertina rigida
Copertina flessibile
Anno di pubblicazione: 2009
Editore: ACADEMIC FOUND
430 Pagine
Lingua: eng/Englisch
Libro nella banca dati dal 2010-12-16T08:24:25+01:00 (Zurich)
Pagina di dettaglio ultima modifica in 2021-11-13T16:57:42+01:00 (Zurich)
ISBN/EAN: 9788171887194
ISBN - Stili di scrittura alternativi:
81-7188-719-8, 978-81-7188-719-4
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Autore del libro : government
Titolo del libro: delhi
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