VADODARA: Gujarat’s dairy co-operative movement is widely hailed for its luck. But the reason at the back of the luck of dairy co-operative societies (DCS) unfold across thousands of villages in the state isn't just economic.
A latest study by means of researchers of the Verghese Kurien Centre of Excellence (VKCoE) on the Institute of Rural Management Anand (IRMA) unearths that the dairy co-operatives owe their luck as they have got remained socially related even after five a long time.
VKCoE researchers had carried out a study titled information sharing ties in DCS to discover the consequences of social networks in a DCS on dairy trade networks and vice versa.
It was once 20 years in the past that India surpassed the United States to emerge as world’s biggest milk manufacturer. “India’s milk production luck tale is largely owed to DCS that had began out in the past due 1940s. Some dairy cooperatives, which are actually over six to seven a long time previous, have turn out to be social entities in their own right, forging robust community ties,” stated professor Shyam Singh, a social sciences professor who along with research officer Neha Christie carried out the study.
The study outlined a dairy information community (DIN) as one the place contributors share information on dairy-related matters akin to vet services, animal health, animal feed, milk sales regardless that the DCS and financing.
A social information community (SIN) was once outlined as a community the place contributors share information on social matters akin to marriage, functions, friendship, personal lifestyles, cultural events and events/incidents taking place in the village.
For the study, the researchers analysed DCS at Dolapura, a five-decade-old society under Amul Dairy, which has 340 contributors, comprising round 95 % of the total households in the village.
“There are social differences in every village. But villagers come together to reach their common economic goals via DCS. This indicates that this economic convergence during the DSC has scope for nurturing social harmony and co-existence,” stated Singh.
“Dairy co-operatives have established their social roles throughout the societies. They participate in community affairs like festivals, distribute meals or give a contribution monetarily or non-monetarily in cultural and social functions, support programmes arranged at colleges throughout the villages and also assist farmers in misery via advance payments,” he stated.
“We seen that contributors of DCS take care of separate networks for their dairying ties vis-vis social community ties. They do this to stay their dairy community free from societal conflicts and complexities. This might be some of the explanation why the dairy cooperative society has been able to sustain its operations for decades with an ever-increasing turnover of milk collection and sales,” stated Singh.
A latest study by means of researchers of the Verghese Kurien Centre of Excellence (VKCoE) on the Institute of Rural Management Anand (IRMA) unearths that the dairy co-operatives owe their luck as they have got remained socially related even after five a long time.
VKCoE researchers had carried out a study titled information sharing ties in DCS to discover the consequences of social networks in a DCS on dairy trade networks and vice versa.
It was once 20 years in the past that India surpassed the United States to emerge as world’s biggest milk manufacturer. “India’s milk production luck tale is largely owed to DCS that had began out in the past due 1940s. Some dairy cooperatives, which are actually over six to seven a long time previous, have turn out to be social entities in their own right, forging robust community ties,” stated professor Shyam Singh, a social sciences professor who along with research officer Neha Christie carried out the study.
The study outlined a dairy information community (DIN) as one the place contributors share information on dairy-related matters akin to vet services, animal health, animal feed, milk sales regardless that the DCS and financing.
A social information community (SIN) was once outlined as a community the place contributors share information on social matters akin to marriage, functions, friendship, personal lifestyles, cultural events and events/incidents taking place in the village.
For the study, the researchers analysed DCS at Dolapura, a five-decade-old society under Amul Dairy, which has 340 contributors, comprising round 95 % of the total households in the village.
“There are social differences in every village. But villagers come together to reach their common economic goals via DCS. This indicates that this economic convergence during the DSC has scope for nurturing social harmony and co-existence,” stated Singh.
“Dairy co-operatives have established their social roles throughout the societies. They participate in community affairs like festivals, distribute meals or give a contribution monetarily or non-monetarily in cultural and social functions, support programmes arranged at colleges throughout the villages and also assist farmers in misery via advance payments,” he stated.
“We seen that contributors of DCS take care of separate networks for their dairying ties vis-vis social community ties. They do this to stay their dairy community free from societal conflicts and complexities. This might be some of the explanation why the dairy cooperative society has been able to sustain its operations for decades with an ever-increasing turnover of milk collection and sales,” stated Singh.
‘Social relevance behind success of dairy co-co-operatives’
Reviewed by Kailash
on
April 14, 2019
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