Nine rupees an hour : disappearing livelihoods of Tamilnadu
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Stack | Stack | 331.2095482 APA/N (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 59231 |
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331.127 91 BRA Brain drain and brain gain : the global competition to attract high-skilled | 331.12791 CON/M Migration and the globalisation of health care :The health worker exodus? | 331.12795483 DEE/L Labour migration to Kerala: the empolyers perspective | 331.2095482 APA/N Nine rupees an hour : disappearing livelihoods of Tamilnadu | 331.252 JAC/G Governing for the long term : democracy and the politics of investment | 331.252 MAC/D Decline of the traditional pension : | 331.3154 HAZ/L Land reforms: myths and realities |
In a rapidly urbanising nation, rural India is being erased from the popular imagination. Through her five years of travelling across the villages of Tamil Nadu, Aparna Karthikeyan gets to know men and women who do exceptional—yet perfectly ordinary—things to earn a living. She documents, through ten of these stories, the transformations, aspirations and disruptions of the last twenty-five years. The people she meets force these questions of her, and her reader: What is the culture we seek to preserve? What will become of food security without farmers? How can ‘development’ exclude 833 million people?
Including interviews with journalist P. Sainath, musician T.M. Krishna and writer Bama, among others, Nine Rupees an Hour is a critical portrayal of the drastic and systematic erosion of traditional livelihoods.
These engaging narratives unravel a peoples’ perspective of work and life, where creative beauty and human dignity merge to matter, even if their worth in market-obsessed economics is merely nine rupees an hour. Evocative and relevant, they jostle our comfort. Statistics and economic analyses of wages and work, juxtaposed with the lives people lead, help us understand the situation on the ground. A book all of us must read’
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