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Political
Screening of Niyamgiri film on January 8, 2011
Posted on 04 Jan, 2011 10:12 AMContent and Image Courtesy: The Press Club Mumbai
Screening of Award winning film ‘Niyamgiri You Are Alive’ by Suma Josson. The film won the Vasudha Award for the best environmental documentary in the International Film Festival Goa, 2010.
Civil society consultations for the 12th Five Year Plan Approach Paper: Urban & Rural WATSAN sector
Posted on 30 Dec, 2010 11:20 AMAt the request of the Planning Commission, Arghyam and WaterAid agreed to co-ordinate and support a process of civil society consultation for inputs on rural and urban domestic water and sanitation for generating recommendations for the Approach Paper to the 12th Five Year Plan of the Government of India.
A glimpse of the audience
National Seminar on Water Pollution and Health Hazards, Brahmanand College, Kanpur - Submission of abstracts Jan 20, 2011
Posted on 29 Dec, 2010 04:26 PMOrganizer: Brahmanand College
Influence of Chalukya architecture on Hampi stepwell - Paper presented at the National Seminar on Water and Culture (2007)
Posted on 29 Dec, 2010 04:16 PMThis paper discusses the reasons for building tanks in ancient India and mentions ancient texts like 'Samarangan Sutradhar' to indicate how wells and other water bodies were constructed.
These water storage systems indicate the knowledge of geology, soil engineering, construction engineering and structural engineering in ancient times.
Water Jobs via DevNetJobsIndia.org dated December 29, 2010
Posted on 29 Dec, 2010 01:07 PMContent Courtesy: DevNetJobsIndia
- Regional Manager
WaterAid India
Location: Bhubaneshwar
Last Date: January 5, 2011
Workshop on "Advanced Water & Wastewater Treatment Technologies", CEPT, Ahmedabad
Posted on 29 Dec, 2010 12:10 PMOrganizer: Center for Environmental Planning and Technology University (CEPT)
Venue: CEPT Conference Room, CEPT University, Ahmedabad
Description:
Centre for Environmental Planning and Technology (CEPT) is a leading institution located at Ahmedabad. It offers undergraduate and postgraduate programs in disciplines related to the Natural and Built Environment. CEPT University also aspires to train competent technocrats and is a recognized centre of excellence in its areas of pursuit.
Droplets: e-Newsletter from Everything About Water - December 2010
Posted on 29 Dec, 2010 10:56 AMArticle and Image Courtesy: Everything About Water
The December edition of Droplets e-newsletter published by the Everything About Water had the following highlights:
Damming North East India - Juggernaut of hydropower projects threatens social and environmental security of region
Posted on 28 Dec, 2010 07:49 PMThis report by Kalpavriksh, Aaranyak and ActionAid India deals with the large dams’ juggernaut, which happens to be the biggest ‘development’ intervention in this ecologically and geologically fragile, seismically active and culturally sensitive region in the coming days. With the Northeast identified as India’s ‘future powerhouse’ and at least 168 large hydroelectric projects set to majorly alter the riverscape, large dams are emerging as a major issue of conflict in the region.
Although the current scale of dam-related developments far outstrips anything which took place in the past, the region has been no stranger to dam-related conflicts. For example, the Kaptai dam, built in the Chittagong Hill Tracts of East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) in the 1960s, submerged the traditional homelands of the Hajong and Chakma indigenous communities, and forced them to migrate into parts of Northeast India.
Blueprint for farm growth
Posted on 28 Dec, 2010 03:12 PM
Since the start of the 11th Five Year Plan, the growth rate in agriculture has virtually remained stagnant. A scene at a paddy field in the outskirts of Hyderabad.
Saltscapes - Dholavira, Gujarat - A guest post by Amitangshu Acharya and Ayan Ghosh
Posted on 27 Dec, 2010 11:41 PMGuest Post: Text by Amitangshu Acharya, Photographs by Ayan Ghosh
Kachchh – a brilliant halfway between a turmeric yellow Rajasthan and the emerald green Sahyadris – offers an upside down version of life. It tells you that seeds of life and civilisation are often hidden beneath the sands of time in inhospitable terrains.