Land policy in India at the time of independence confronted three important issues. First, land was concentrated in the hands of a few with an extremely skewed distribution and there was a proliferation of intermediaries who had least interest in self-cultivation of land. Therefore leasing out land to the landless was a common practice and tenant exploitation was quite prevalent. Second, the tenancy contracts wer
The aim of this paper is to examine land ownership, land alienation and a condition of the tenant in...
India is noted for her initiatives on urban land-reform measures, and she has been experimenting wit...
Between the passage of the Dawes Act in 1887 and the Indian Reorganization Act in 1934, Indian landh...
Contemporary India is among the top seven countries in the world witnessing the rise of mega urban r...
Since Indian economy is an agrarian economy, land continues to be a source of livelihood for the maj...
Under conditions of market-orientation and globalization, land is being transferred from agriculture...
Changes in agrarian structure can occur in either of the two ways:(1) as a result of the spontaneous...
Indian land is a topic of great interest. Land has traditionally been the most important issue in I...
There is no one great "Indian Land Problem". Rather, there are a variety of problems which centre ab...
Land laws, regulations, and land tenure systems are interrelated factors that affect the socioeconom...
The question of a constitutional property regime governing eminent domain gave rise to nuanced and p...
The International Growth Centre debates the impact of India’s small landholdings on agricultural pro...
This study offers the first instalment of a general history of land acquisition in British India, c....
Indian land markets have been in a state of frenzy. This is largely driven by the economic space pro...
Until Independence, then, and well after that in Tamil Nadu, intermediaries and owners were bound to...
The aim of this paper is to examine land ownership, land alienation and a condition of the tenant in...
India is noted for her initiatives on urban land-reform measures, and she has been experimenting wit...
Between the passage of the Dawes Act in 1887 and the Indian Reorganization Act in 1934, Indian landh...
Contemporary India is among the top seven countries in the world witnessing the rise of mega urban r...
Since Indian economy is an agrarian economy, land continues to be a source of livelihood for the maj...
Under conditions of market-orientation and globalization, land is being transferred from agriculture...
Changes in agrarian structure can occur in either of the two ways:(1) as a result of the spontaneous...
Indian land is a topic of great interest. Land has traditionally been the most important issue in I...
There is no one great "Indian Land Problem". Rather, there are a variety of problems which centre ab...
Land laws, regulations, and land tenure systems are interrelated factors that affect the socioeconom...
The question of a constitutional property regime governing eminent domain gave rise to nuanced and p...
The International Growth Centre debates the impact of India’s small landholdings on agricultural pro...
This study offers the first instalment of a general history of land acquisition in British India, c....
Indian land markets have been in a state of frenzy. This is largely driven by the economic space pro...
Until Independence, then, and well after that in Tamil Nadu, intermediaries and owners were bound to...
The aim of this paper is to examine land ownership, land alienation and a condition of the tenant in...
India is noted for her initiatives on urban land-reform measures, and she has been experimenting wit...
Between the passage of the Dawes Act in 1887 and the Indian Reorganization Act in 1934, Indian landh...