Academic literature on the topic 'India Office Records'

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Journal articles on the topic "India Office Records"

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Dr., G. Aghalya. "EAST INDIA COMPANY IN INDIA OFFICE RECORDS IN LONDON." International Journal of Computational Research and Development 2, no. 1 (2017): 73–76. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.569734.

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The historical research, which involves interpreting past events to predict future ones. Historical research design involves synthesizing data from many different sources. The purpose of the research is to further encourage the limited but fruitful cross-disciplinary conversations of recent years. The historical scope of the records begins in 1600, when the East India Company was granted exclusive rights to trade in much of Asia, including the entire Indian subcontinent. The records of the East India Company’s Governments in India are probably the best historical materials in the world. The re
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Haig, Joan M. "From Kings Cross to Kew: Following the History of Zambia's Indian Community through British Imperial Archives." History in Africa 34 (2007): 55–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hia.2007.0004.

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In the summer months of 2005 I traveled to London for the purpose of carrying out archival research in the Oriental and India Office Collection (OIOC) of the British Library at Kings Cross. My aim was to document the history of Indian immigration to the former British protectorate of Northern Rhodesia (present-day Zambia), about which very little has been published. The OIOC contains a vast amount of material relating to Asia and Africa—reportedly some 14 kilometers of shelving—including the India Office Records (IOR) and its key manuscripts detailing Indians' migration to British Central Afri
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Harnetty, Peter, and Martin Moir. "A General Guide to India Office Records." Pacific Affairs 62, no. 3 (1989): 410. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2760648.

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Moon, Antonia. "DESTROYING RECORDS, KEEPING RECORDS: SOME PRACTICES AT THE EAST INDIA COMPANY AND AT THE INDIA OFFICE." Archives: The Journal of the British Records Association 33, no. 119 (2008): 110–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/archives.2008.8.

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Desmarais, Norman. "East India Company: India Office Records from the British Library, 1595-1947." Reference Reviews 32, no. 1 (2018): 29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/rr-11-2017-0244.

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Gallop, Annabel Teh. "Malay Documents In The Melaka Records in the British Library." Itinerario 30, no. 2 (2006): 54–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115300013966.

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In 1964 F.R.J. Verhoeven, then Director General of the National Archives of Malaysia, wrote an article entitled ‘The lost archives of Dutch Malacca’ in which he lamented the apparent disappearance of the c. 2,000 volumes of records which he estimated must have been produced during the Dutch administration of Melaka from 1641 to 1824. Apart from 150 volumes in the National Archives of Indonesia in Jakarta, some fifteen volumes of Church registers now in the National Archives of Malaysia, and a small number of records in The Hague and elsewhere, nothing was known to have survived. It was only wi
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P., Gomathidevi, and P. Rangarajan Dr. "PERCEPTION AND SATISFACTION OF RURAL POLICY HOLDERS TOWARDS PRODUCTS AND SERVICES OFFERED BY LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION OF INDIA IN COIMBATORE." International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Modern Education 3, no. 1 (2017): 117–23. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.345719.

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LIC continues to be the dominant life insurer even in the liberalized scenario of Indian insurance and is moving fast on a new growth trajectory surpassing its own past records. LIC has issued over one crore policies during the current year. LIC has crossed many milestones and has set unprecedented performance records in various aspects of life insurance business. Today LIC functions with 2048 fully computerized branch offices, 109 divisional offices, 8 zonal offices, 992 satellite offices and the corporate office. LIC’s Wide Area Network covers 109 divisional offices and connects all the bran
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Garg, Nitin, Nirupam Madaan, Vijaydeep Siddharth, and D. K. Sharma. "Office Records Management Practices of a Leading Tertiary Care Institute in India." Indian Journal of Public Health 67, no. 4 (2023): 680–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/ijph.ijph_1589_22.

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Wallace, Marion. "Accidental Archives: Tracing Africa in the India Office Private Papers in the British Library." African Research & Documentation 98 (2005): 23–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305862x00015545.

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This article deals with the British Library's collections on Africa, and especially with its collection of private papers of India Office officials (with a particular focus on the twentieth century). The choice of India-related collections may seem surprising, but in fact these records contain much that is relevant to African history.In this article I am concerned not only to describe what is held at the British Library, but to discuss the historical construction of these collections. That is, how factors that might be thought mundane and pedestrian - decisions about the selection or destructi
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Wallace, Marion. "Accidental Archives: Tracing Africa in the India Office Private Papers in the British Library." African Research & Documentation 98 (2005): 23–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305862x00015545.

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This article deals with the British Library's collections on Africa, and especially with its collection of private papers of India Office officials (with a particular focus on the twentieth century). The choice of India-related collections may seem surprising, but in fact these records contain much that is relevant to African history.In this article I am concerned not only to describe what is held at the British Library, but to discuss the historical construction of these collections. That is, how factors that might be thought mundane and pedestrian - decisions about the selection or destructi
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "India Office Records"

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Mitchell, Peter. "The Centre of the Muniment’: the India Office Records and the Historiography of Early Modern Empire, 1875-1891." Thesis, Queen Mary, University of London, 2014. http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/8767.

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archivists, antiquarians, geographers and civil servants within the India Office reorganised the records of the East India Company, the Board of Control and the India Office itself into what is now the India Office Records. My thesis focuses on the earliest materials of the East India Company - the records of its trading activities in the Indian Ocean from 1600 to 1623 - and how these materials were absorbed into the India Office Records between 1875 and 1891. I study the documents themselves as evidence of a complex early modern documentary culture; then I study the processes by which they we
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Books on the topic "India Office Records"

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India Office Library and Records., ed. India Office Library and Records.: Publications. Library of Congress Office, 1999.

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Records, India Office Library and. A general guide to the India Office Records. British Library, 1988.

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India Office Library and Records. Baxter's guide: Biographical sources in the India Office Records. 3rd ed. Families in British India Society in association with The British Library, 2004.

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A, Baxter Ian, ed. A brief guide to biographical sources - India Office Library and Records. 2nd ed. British Library, 1990.

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Records, India Office Library and. A brief guide for teachers. 2nd ed. British Library, 1987.

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Tuson, Penelope. Women and India 1900-1947: Sources in the India Office Library and Records. India Office Library, 1985.

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Library, India Office. Catalogue of the Burney Parabaiks in the India Office Library. British Library under the auspices of the British Academy Oriental Documents Committee, 1985.

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M, Sims J., and India Office Library and Records., eds. Selections from the records of the government of India, 1849-1937. India Office Library and Records, British Library, 1987.

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India Office Library and Records., ed. The Indian "Mutiny" 1857-58: A guide to source material in the India Office Library and Records. the British Library, 1986.

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Seton, Rosemary. The Indian "Mutiny" 1857-58: A guide to source material in the India Office Library and Records. British Library, 1986.

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Book chapters on the topic "India Office Records"

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Marriott, John, Bhaskar Mukhopadhyay, and Partha Chatterjee. "Selection of Papers from the Records at the East-India House relating to the Revenue, Police, and Civil and Criminal justice under the Company's Governments in India, 5 vols (London, East India Company, 1820-6), vol. 2, pp. 5-10, 51-73, 172-8. British Library, Oriental and India Office Collections, shelfmark W 2426." In Britain in India, 1765-1905. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003113577-2.

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Beckingham, C. F. "William Foster and the Records of the India Office." In Compassing the Vaste Globe of the Earth. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315573120-8.

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Lee, J. L. "Key to Footnoted Records in the India Office Library." In The 'Ancient Supremacy'. BRILL, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004491762_024.

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Bhattacharya, Sabyasachi. "Developments Leading to the Creation of a Central Archive." In Archiving the British Raj. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199489923.003.0003.

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This chapter explores the fundamental issues encountered by the Government of India in archiving records. The colonial state was evolving a policy of record keeping that oscillated between certain polar opposites. First, there were two opposite models in the 1860s—that of archival organization in a decentralized departmental basis, as opposed to the concept of a centralized record office. Second, there were different ideas about how to go about the business of documenting British rule in India. There was another issue: a choice between a policy of limiting access to documents to those authoriz
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Mills, James H. "‘From the old records of the Ganja Supervisor’s Office’: Smuggling, Trade and Taxation in Nineteenth- Century British India." In Cannabis Britannica. Oxford University PressOxford, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199249381.003.0003.

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Abstract By the nineteenth century India was established as the main source of information for the British about the hemp plant and about medicinal and intoxicating preparations made from it. Yet hemp in India was not simply the source of information about cannabis substances for the British. It was also a source of income. The British were, after all, in India to make money. Before 1858 the British in India were employees of the East India Company that had traded spices, agricultural products, and luxury goods for profit since the seventeenth century. It had become militarized in the eighteen
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Frankel, Francine R. "Kashmir." In When Nehru Looked East. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190064341.003.0003.

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India’s suspicion of US motives set in during the first India-Pakistan war over Kashmir in 1950, after the Hindu maharaja of Muslim majority Kashmir acceded to India. Great Britain, considering that Kashmir should join Muslim-majority Pakistan and that India-Pakistan cooperation was essential to Commonwealth defense, feared India could exercise its legal right to self-defense after tribesmen aided by Pakistan invaded across the northern border. Foreign Office records reveal how the British acted behind the scenes in the UN Security Council to block a discussion of India’s request to remove the
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"The India Office Records as a Source for the Economic History of the Middle East." In Studies in the Economic History of the Middle East. Routledge, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315000312-39.

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"IP Due Diligence." In Pharmaceutical, Biotechnology and Chemical Inventions, edited by Duncan Bucknell. Oxford University PressOxford, 2011. https://doi.org/10.1093/9780199289011.003.0099.

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Abstract This chapter outlines the approaches to IP due diligence across Australia, Canada, China, India, Japan, and the United States, focusing on registered IP and procedural best practices. It explains that in Australia, due diligence should be tailored to its purpose with agreed scope, timing, and materiality thresholds, and should include thorough reviews of patents, trade marks, and registered designs. It also highlights that in Canada, patent office records are publicly accessible except within an 18-month confidentiality period, requiring attention to filing dates and potential gaps in
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Bhattacharya, Sabyasachi. "Anticipations of Freedom." In Archiving the British Raj. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199489923.003.0005.

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In the last two decades of colonial rule in India, there were anticipations of freedom in many areas of the public sphere. In the domain of archiving these were chiefly felt in the form of reversal of earlier policies. The biggest change was that the habit of looking at the records as resources exclusively to be used by the civil servants for purposes of governance was abandoned. The resistance of the bureaucracy from the 1860s to opening the records to the Indian public was overcome. And, above all, the locus of policymaking shifted in the 1920s to the Indian Historical Records Commission, co
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Oruc, Firat. "Historicizing the Gulf Moving Image Archives." In How Film Histories Were Made. Amsterdam University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463724067_ch09.

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This chapter aims to debunk presentist assumptions about film-making and cinema culture in the Gulf and excavate genealogies of the moving image rooted in the early formations of hydrocarbon modernity. It traces the history of film and visual representation in the countries of the Arabian Peninsula in multiple historical stages. Despite the increasing appeal of the turn to archival research in film studies, any attempt to historicize the moving image in the Gulf, however, immediately encounters significant methodological and empirical challenges. In order to produce such a history, one has no
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Conference papers on the topic "India Office Records"

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Khera, Ashish, Rajesh Uprety, and Bidyut B. Baniah. "Self Directed Integrity Assessment of Non-Piggable Pipelines." In ASME 2015 India International Oil and Gas Pipeline Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/iogpc2015-7949.

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The responsibility for managing an asset safely, efficiently and to optimize productivity lies solely with the pipeline operators. To achieve these objectives, operators are implementing comprehensive pipeline integrity management programs. These programs may be driven by a country’s pipeline regulator or in many cases may be “self-directed” by the pipeline operator especially in countries where pipeline regulators do not exist. A critical aspect of an operator’s Integrity Management Plan (IMP) is to evaluate the history, limitations and the key threats for each pipeline and accordingly select
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Richard, Olwa, Macronald Pauline, Ochanda David, and Angubo Richard. "Application of Mitigation Hierarchy During the Development Phase of Tilenga Project, Uganda." In SPE International Health, Safety, Environment and Sustainability Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/220252-ms.

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Abstract The Tilenga project operated by TotalEnergies Exploration and Production Uganda, is an onshore oil project located in the Lake Albert Basin of Uganda. The project consists of six fields with one field in the Murchison Falls National Park, a critical habitat homing many threatened species of animals including lion, African elephant and Eastern chimpanzees. In line with TotalEnergies‘ Biodiversity Commitments, TotalEnergies Exploration and Production Uganda integrated the mitigation hierarchy doctrine throughout all the different phases of project activities. To inform mitigation hierar
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