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Journal ArticleDOI

Rural Services, Rural Infrastructure and Regional Development in India

Sudhir Wanmali, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1995 - 
- Vol. 161, Iss: 2, pp 149
TLDR
In this paper, the spatial distribution of rural services in selected regions of three states in India (Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Tamil Nadu), based on data collected over three decades, is analyzed.
Abstract
This paper analyses the spatial distribution of rural services in selected regions of three states in India (Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Tamil Nadu), based on data collected over three decades. In spite of economic disparities between regions, Christaller's Central Place Theory provides a framework in which to examine demographic, functional and spatial characteristics of settlements in these regions. In all regions, there has been a tremendous improvement in rural service provision, since the late 1960s, especially in smaller sized settlements. Over time, more complex services in particular, have become more widely available. In Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, the introduction of new agricultural technologies was largely responsible for stimulating such improvements, whereas in Maharashtra they were a consequence of urban industrial development in a metropolitan city. The government played a critical role in this process during the earlier stages of development of the regions, which facilitated greater involvement of the private sector at later stages. The changes in rural service provision are further examined in the context of decentralized service centre planning in India. The analysis suggests how the concepts and methodologies employed in this study might provide the basis for a more integrated regional approach to planning and policy formulation for rural service provision at the district level in India.

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Small Towns and Regional Development: Major Findings and Policy Implications from Comparative Research

TL;DR: The role of lower-order urban centres in regional development constitutes an important subject of debate as discussed by the authors and the existing controversies in the literature and the lack of empirical data to support the optimistic assumptions of policy-makers and planners inspired a team of geographers at Utrecht University in the 1980s to start a programme of comparative studies on the role of small towns in a selected number of regions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pattern of Regional Disparities in Socio-economic Development in India: District Level Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the pattern of disparities in socio-economic development at the district level in India applying the Wroclow Taxonomic technique (following Ewusi.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multilevel Geographies of Poverty in India

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used multilevel logistic models to partition variation in poverty by levels of states, regions, districts, villages, and households, and mapped the residuals at the state, region and district levels to visualize the geography of poverty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rural Infrastructure and Agricultural Development in Southern Africa: a centre-periphery perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the provision of rural infrastructure in Southern Africa by drawing on two case studies from Zimbabwe and Zambia, taking the centre-periphery model of regional development as a point of departure for explaining the differences between communal or smallholder African farming areas and large-scale commercial European farming areas in both countries.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Locational Analysis in Human Geography

John Kolars, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1967 - 
TL;DR: Locational analysis in human geography has been studied extensively in the literature, see as discussed by the authors for an overview. But this paper is different from previous work: http://www.locationalanalysisinhumangeography.org/
Book

Locational analysis in human geography

Peter Haggett
Abstract: (1967). Locational Analysis in Human Geography. Economic Geography: Vol. 43, No. 3, pp. 276-277.
Book

The Green Revolution Reconsidered: The Impact of High-Yielding Rice Varieties in South India

TL;DR: The Green Revolution reconsidered : the impact of high-yielding rice varieties in South India as mentioned in this paper, The green revolution reconsidered: the role of high yielding rice varieties and their impact in the South Indian Green Revolution.
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In Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, the introduction of new agricultural technologies was largely responsible for stimulating such improvements, whereas in Maharashtra they were a consequence of urban industrial development in a metropolitan city.