PROGRAMME ON MAN AND
THE BIOSPHERE (MAB) UNESCO
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HABITAT, HABITATION AND HEALTH IN THE HIMALAYAS
A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE PEOPLE OF SIKKIM AND THE GADDIS OF HIMACHAL PRADESH
VEENA BHASIN (University of Delhi, Delhi, India)
1990 • Pages: XVI+350 • Maps: 60 • Plates: 16 • Size:
180 × 240 mm • ISBN 81-85264-03
Binding: Hard • Price: US $ 65/- Rs. 950/-
This volume is a
valuable source of biological, socio-economic, and demographic data for two
Himalayan regions, Sikkim
State and one district in
Himachal Pradesh, India.
The strength of this book is its wealth of information....I welcome this
volume as a source of information for demographers and human biologists
—HUMAN BIOLOGY (U.S.A.)
Man Könnte das Buch
insofern als eine Art sozialmedizinische Landeskunde bezeichnen.
—ZEITSCHRIFT FUR MORPHOLOGIE UND
ANTHROPLOGIE (GERMANY)
Bhasin’s endeavour
is significant to studies on population ecology and medical anthropology
—JOURNAL OF HUMAN ECOLOGY
The present study analyses various
facets of Population ecology of the people of Sikkim
State and Bharmour Tehsil,
Chamba District, Himachal
Pradesh to Project some fresh insight into certain areas not yet fully
explored, which will eventually lead to a more comprehensive overview of
population ecology and its various problems. No study can be completely
exhaustive but the present one claims to be a step in
that direction.In ecosystems of which human beings,
including human settlements, form a part, human cultural components are taken
into account. Although culture is a product of human populations and is
ineffectual as an ecological force in the absence of such populations, it is neverthless useful to depict culture as a separate set of
components of the system. Though it is generally understood that human
well-being in a human settlement is essential, it does not have a commonly
accept critierion. It may be vague or ambigous and hence elude definition. Well being has
physical, mental, ethical, socio-economic, political and ecological
dimensions. What constitutes “health” or “welfare” or “pathology” changes
according to cultural setting, environmental conditions and ecological relationship.
CONTENTS
Preface
1.
Introduction •
2. Natural and Human Environment •
3. Field Area and Methodology •
4. Human Settlement and Amenities •
5. Economic Pursuits •
6. Socio-Cultural Factors •
7. Estimates, Trends and Differentials in
Fertility and Mortality •
8. Health, Disease Incidence and Health Care
•
9. Concluding Remarks and Suggestions •
Glossary • Bibliography• Index•
Rates in Rupees (Rs.) for India
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