ABSTRACT

First Published in 1968. Dr. Harold H. Mann was during his lifetime an acknowledged authority on applied science and agriculture in England, the Middle East and India, but it is less widely known that he was equally distinguished by his work in the social sciences. He not only pioneered modern-style village surveys in both England and India, but also modern style urban surveys and studies in India. There he broke new ground in his remarkable first-hand research on agricultural labour, village economics, depressed or “Untouchable” classes in town and country, and human and industrial relations in India’s first steel town, Jamshedpur. This book reproduces thirty-five of Dr. Mann’s papers—in whole, in part, or in summary.

part II|111 pages

Village Studies in India and England

chapter 5|33 pages

Life in an Agricultural Village in England

A Study in Economics*

part IV|89 pages

The Social Setting of Agricultural Development in India

chapter 20|17 pages

The Agriculture of India*

part V|57 pages

The USSR and the Middle East