Your search within this document for 'development' resulted in four matching pages.
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“...shared faith that members’ needs will be met through their commitment to be together.” However, in the case of post-earthquake Sherpa experiences the definition of ‘community’ kept morphing depending on the time and situation; subsequently, this sense of community was also adjusted to reflect this morphing definition. Communities were at once ‘territorial,’ and ‘relational’ (Gusfield 1975), and not mutually exclusive. Territories were defined at different scales—village, region, VDC (Village Development Committee), district—and there were different sets of relationships involved in identifying what constituted ‘communities.’ In our discussions, sometimes we talked about one community, at other times we spoke of many communities, and often we discussed more than one kind of community woven together in our conversations without distinguishing them. The ‘fluid boundaries’ (Fisher 2001) of communities were self-understood by each member, and our discussions concentrated on supporting this shifting...”
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“...administrative units, the Village Development Committees (VDCs), within the Solukhumbu district: Khumjung, Namche, and Chaurikharka. SOLUKHUMBU DISTRICT Figure 1. Map of Solukhumbu District Showing VDCs. ‘echh ip \ \ The area overseen by the Khumjung and Namche VDCs are locally known as Khumbu. The area overseen by Chaurikharka VDC is locally known as Pharak. The resi- dents of the Everest region use either Khumbu or Pharak, the Sherpa names, or the name of their individual VDCs, depending on the context of their conversation. According to the government of Nepal’s 2011 census, the combined area of these three VDCs has a population of 7,161 indi- viduals, contains 1,999 households, and is a total of 1,478 sq. km. According to the Nepal Human Development Report 2014 produced by the government of Nepal and the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), Solukhumbu has a Human Development Index (HDl) value of 0.502, which...”
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“...Mount Everest have been repaired with lighter and less expensive materials like the tin walls on the outside, and plywood on the inside. Critical Community Responses The Sagarmatha Sarokar Samaj (SSS) describes itself, on their Facebook page, as ‘a civil organization representing the people of Namche, Khumjung, Chaurikharka, Jubing, and Taksindo VDCs, established to advocate and support sustainable development, good governance, human rights, and social inclusion.’ It was formed shortly before the first earthquake, and presented its letter of demands, advocat- ing for sustainable development in the Everest region, to the then Prime Minister Shushil Koirala. The post-earth- quake reality halted the SSS’s progress on these previously set goals. The earthquake, however, also opened space on the Web to be critical of how the community reacted to the distribution of emergency relief goods. On May 4, 2015, SSS wrote on their Facebook page: Ten days passed since the disastrous earthquake. Observation...”
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“... (accessed on June 3, 2016). Sir Edmund Hillary Foundation. Second Anniversary of Nepal Earthquake. (accessed on May 14, 2017). Thame Sherpa Heritage Fund. Our Thame Valley. (accessed on May 14, 2017). United Nations Development Program. 2016. Human Development Index, development-index-hdi> (accessedjuly 12, 2017). ------. 2014. Nepal Human Development Report 2014: Beyond Geography, Unlocking Human Potential. (accessed on May 14, 2017). Wyrick, Randy. 2016. Pemba Sherpa Launched Sherpa Foundation and is Receiving Nepal’s Equivalent of Knighthood. Vail Daily, October 28, 2016.