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040 _cAL
082 _223
_a307.7
_bVIDT
100 _aL P Vidyarthi: Binay Kumar Rai
_9177353
245 _aTribal Culture of India
250 _a2nd Ed.
260 _aNew Delhi:
_bConcept Publishing Company,
_c1985.
300 _axii,488 p.
_bPB
_c21x13 cm.
365 _b70.00
_c
_d70.00
520 _antroduction to Second Edition THE tribal culture blooms in the isolated highlands and forests of India. Computed to 39 million at the time of 1971 Census the tribal population increased to 52 million in 1981 with the Amendment Act of 1976 when the area restrictions within a state were removed. Thus over seven per cent'of India's total population follows a distinct life style identified as tribal culture. It is tied up with land and forests and characterised by their own language and heritage, love for freedom and self-identity, Our anthropologists and development planners take cognizance of the tribal tradition and way of life lest the overwhelming non-tribal culture swamps their pristine, grass-root culture. Successive Five Year Plans, aimed at bringing the fruits of planned development to the tribal areas and their inhabitants, have taken special care to protect and preserve the tribal culture. The Sixth Five Year Plan, 1980-85, which includes a series of sub-plans for tribal areas, states, "Tribal identity and the tribal way of life will be preserved in a manner consistent with their aspirations for development." (Chapter 26, 26:13) The Approach to the Seventh Five Year Plan, 1985-90, mentions in no uncertain term, "In tribal areas, where the tribal economy revolves around forests and forest-based produce, the forestry-based programmes have to be so devised as to be in consonance with the socio-economic fabric of tribal culture and ethos." (Part II, p. 11) Since independence, we have actively thought of and planned for the upliftment of our tribal people. The late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru gave serious thought to the problems of tribal welfare and sugge- sted his own enlightened approach, "to develop the tribals along the lines of their own genius" and expressed his disapproval of the "false idea to call some people primitive and to think of ourselves as highly civilised." For the past 35 years the Union and the State governments have made efforts to raise the level of tribal living at par with the other citizens. The plans and programmes formulated for their development can be found in the annual reports of the Commissioner for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes from 1950 onwards, the report of the Backward Classes Commission 1955, the report of the Study Team on Social Welfare of Backward Classes 1959, the report of the Committee on Special Multi-purpose Tribal Development Blocks 1960-61.
650 _aIndian Anthropology
_911706
650 _aTribal India
_911707
650 _aTribal Village
_911708
650 _aArt and Craft of the Tribal
_911709
650 _aTribal Development in India
_911710
700 _aVIDYARTHI (L P)
_911711
700 _aRAI (Binay Kumar)
_911712
942 _2ddc
_cGF
999 _c220955
_d220955