Abhinav Kapoor - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Abhinav Kapoor

Research paper thumbnail of Measuring female work participation in rural India: what do the primary and secondary data show?

Review of Agrarian Studies, Dec 31, 2018

A serious problem related to structural changes in the Indian economy has been the low and declin... more A serious problem related to structural changes in the Indian economy has been the low and declining worker-population ratio (WPR) of women in rural India over the last two to three decades. Fluctuations in the estimated number of workers across different categories of workers suggest the probability of classification errors in the National Sample Survey Organisation's (NSSO) Employment and Unemployment Surveys (EUS). From the point of view of the conceptual validity of economic activity and to prevent possible measurement errors, it is preferable to calculate augmented WPR by including the specified activities category (i), i.e., production of primary goods for home consumption, including animal husbandry. The trend in female WPR after 2011-12 is unknown as the NSSO stopped disseminating EUS data. After examining comparability with the Labour Bureau's EUS data, we use the latter to extend female WPR up to 2015-16. This exercise shows that the decline of female WPR after 2004-05 decelerated but continued till 2015-16. Village surveys conducted by the Foundation for Agrarian Studies (FAS) in West Bengal in 2010 and 2015 show that female employment opportunities outside the village were limited, and that most employment was in agriculture. Further, female WPRs in West Bengal are low. Animal husbandry is an important aspect of the work of women in the village. A majority of female workers engaged in animal husbandry belong to poor, marginal, and landless households in the village. We argue that WPR defined as usual principal and subsidiary status (UPSS), plus specified activity participation rate, may be more appropriate for measuring women's participation in economic activities in rural areas, than WPR (UPSS) alone.

Research paper thumbnail of Peri-Urbanism in Globalizing India: A Study of Pollution, Health and Community Awareness

International journal of environmental research and public health, Aug 30, 2017

This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people's acknowledge... more This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people's acknowledgements of, and responses to, health issues in Karhera, a former agricultural village situated between the rapidly expanding cities of New Delhi (India's capital) and Ghaziabad (an industrial district in Uttar Pradesh). A relational place-based view is integrated with an interpretive approach, highlighting the significance of place, people's emic experiences, and the creation of meaning through social interactions. Research included surveying 1788 households, in-depth interviews, participatory mapping exercises, and a review of media articles on environment, pollution, and health. Karhera experiences both domestic pollution, through the use of domestic waste water, or gandapani, for vegetable irrigation, and industrial pollution through factories' emissions into both the air and water. The paper shows that there is no uniform articulation of any environment/health threats assoc...

Research paper thumbnail of Measuring Female Work Participation in Rural India: What Do the Primary and Secondary Data Show?

A serious problem related to structural changes in the Indian economy has been the low and declin... more A serious problem related to structural changes in the Indian economy has been the low and declining worker-population ratio (WPR) of women in rural India over the last two to three decades. Fluctuations in the estimated number of workers across different categories of workers suggest the probability of classification errors in the National Sample Survey Organisation's (NSSO) Employment and Unemployment Surveys (EUS). From the point of view of the conceptual validity of economic activity and to prevent possible measurement errors, it is preferable to calculate augmented WPR by including the specified activities category (i), i.e., production of primary goods for home consumption, including animal husbandry. The trend in female WPR after 2011-12 is unknown as the NSSO stopped disseminating EUS data. After examining comparability with the Labour Bureau's EUS data, we use the latter to extend female WPR up to 2015-16. This exercise shows that the decline of female WPR after 2004-05 decelerated but continued till 2015-16. Village surveys conducted by the Foundation for Agrarian Studies (FAS) in West Bengal in 2010 and 2015 show that female employment opportunities outside the village were limited, and that most employment was in agriculture. Further, female WPRs in West Bengal are low. Animal husbandry is an important aspect of the work of women in the village. A majority of female workers engaged in animal husbandry belong to poor, marginal, and landless households in the village. We argue that WPR defined as usual principal and subsidiary status (UPSS), plus specified activity participation rate, may be more appropriate for measuring women's participation in economic activities in rural areas, than WPR (UPSS) alone.

Research paper thumbnail of Peri-Urbanism in Globalizing India: A Study of Pollution, Health and Community Awareness

International journal of environmental research and public health, Aug 30, 2017

This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people's acknowledge... more This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people's acknowledgements of, and responses to, health issues in Karhera, a former agricultural village situated between the rapidly expanding cities of New Delhi (India's capital) and Ghaziabad (an industrial district in Uttar Pradesh). A relational place-based view is integrated with an interpretive approach, highlighting the significance of place, people's emic experiences, and the creation of meaning through social interactions. Research included surveying 1788 households, in-depth interviews, participatory mapping exercises, and a review of media articles on environment, pollution, and health. Karhera experiences both domestic pollution, through the use of domestic waste water, or gandapani, for vegetable irrigation, and industrial pollution through factories' emissions into both the air and water. The paper shows that there is no uniform articulation of any environment/health threats assoc...

Research paper thumbnail of Measuring female work participation in rural India: what do the primary and secondary data show?

Review of Agrarian Studies, Dec 31, 2018

A serious problem related to structural changes in the Indian economy has been the low and declin... more A serious problem related to structural changes in the Indian economy has been the low and declining worker-population ratio (WPR) of women in rural India over the last two to three decades. Fluctuations in the estimated number of workers across different categories of workers suggest the probability of classification errors in the National Sample Survey Organisation's (NSSO) Employment and Unemployment Surveys (EUS). From the point of view of the conceptual validity of economic activity and to prevent possible measurement errors, it is preferable to calculate augmented WPR by including the specified activities category (i), i.e., production of primary goods for home consumption, including animal husbandry. The trend in female WPR after 2011-12 is unknown as the NSSO stopped disseminating EUS data. After examining comparability with the Labour Bureau's EUS data, we use the latter to extend female WPR up to 2015-16. This exercise shows that the decline of female WPR after 2004-05 decelerated but continued till 2015-16. Village surveys conducted by the Foundation for Agrarian Studies (FAS) in West Bengal in 2010 and 2015 show that female employment opportunities outside the village were limited, and that most employment was in agriculture. Further, female WPRs in West Bengal are low. Animal husbandry is an important aspect of the work of women in the village. A majority of female workers engaged in animal husbandry belong to poor, marginal, and landless households in the village. We argue that WPR defined as usual principal and subsidiary status (UPSS), plus specified activity participation rate, may be more appropriate for measuring women's participation in economic activities in rural areas, than WPR (UPSS) alone.

Research paper thumbnail of Peri-Urbanism in Globalizing India: A Study of Pollution, Health and Community Awareness

International journal of environmental research and public health, Aug 30, 2017

This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people's acknowledge... more This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people's acknowledgements of, and responses to, health issues in Karhera, a former agricultural village situated between the rapidly expanding cities of New Delhi (India's capital) and Ghaziabad (an industrial district in Uttar Pradesh). A relational place-based view is integrated with an interpretive approach, highlighting the significance of place, people's emic experiences, and the creation of meaning through social interactions. Research included surveying 1788 households, in-depth interviews, participatory mapping exercises, and a review of media articles on environment, pollution, and health. Karhera experiences both domestic pollution, through the use of domestic waste water, or gandapani, for vegetable irrigation, and industrial pollution through factories' emissions into both the air and water. The paper shows that there is no uniform articulation of any environment/health threats assoc...

Research paper thumbnail of Measuring Female Work Participation in Rural India: What Do the Primary and Secondary Data Show?

A serious problem related to structural changes in the Indian economy has been the low and declin... more A serious problem related to structural changes in the Indian economy has been the low and declining worker-population ratio (WPR) of women in rural India over the last two to three decades. Fluctuations in the estimated number of workers across different categories of workers suggest the probability of classification errors in the National Sample Survey Organisation's (NSSO) Employment and Unemployment Surveys (EUS). From the point of view of the conceptual validity of economic activity and to prevent possible measurement errors, it is preferable to calculate augmented WPR by including the specified activities category (i), i.e., production of primary goods for home consumption, including animal husbandry. The trend in female WPR after 2011-12 is unknown as the NSSO stopped disseminating EUS data. After examining comparability with the Labour Bureau's EUS data, we use the latter to extend female WPR up to 2015-16. This exercise shows that the decline of female WPR after 2004-05 decelerated but continued till 2015-16. Village surveys conducted by the Foundation for Agrarian Studies (FAS) in West Bengal in 2010 and 2015 show that female employment opportunities outside the village were limited, and that most employment was in agriculture. Further, female WPRs in West Bengal are low. Animal husbandry is an important aspect of the work of women in the village. A majority of female workers engaged in animal husbandry belong to poor, marginal, and landless households in the village. We argue that WPR defined as usual principal and subsidiary status (UPSS), plus specified activity participation rate, may be more appropriate for measuring women's participation in economic activities in rural areas, than WPR (UPSS) alone.

Research paper thumbnail of Peri-Urbanism in Globalizing India: A Study of Pollution, Health and Community Awareness

International journal of environmental research and public health, Aug 30, 2017

This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people's acknowledge... more This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people's acknowledgements of, and responses to, health issues in Karhera, a former agricultural village situated between the rapidly expanding cities of New Delhi (India's capital) and Ghaziabad (an industrial district in Uttar Pradesh). A relational place-based view is integrated with an interpretive approach, highlighting the significance of place, people's emic experiences, and the creation of meaning through social interactions. Research included surveying 1788 households, in-depth interviews, participatory mapping exercises, and a review of media articles on environment, pollution, and health. Karhera experiences both domestic pollution, through the use of domestic waste water, or gandapani, for vegetable irrigation, and industrial pollution through factories' emissions into both the air and water. The paper shows that there is no uniform articulation of any environment/health threats assoc...