Notice to beneficiaries to return multiple grants

Material Information

Title:
Notice to beneficiaries to return multiple grants
Creator:
Suji, Manoj
Donor:
cIRcle, University of British Columbia Library
Publication Date:
Language:
English

Notes

Abstract:
Many beneficiaries were found to have accessed the housing grants from multiple locations in which they had houses, but the government policy is for one grant per beneficiary household. In this notice, the National Reconstruction Authority is requesting such multiple beneficiaries to return any additional grants they might have taken. Titled 'Request from the National Reconstruction Authority,' it seems to have arisen out of a meeting of the National Reconstruction Authority Directive Committee on 6 September 2018. It lists two types of beneficiaries who should return the grants: 1) those who have received the grant but also have a safe house in another location, and 2) those have received the grant from various places where they have houses. Otherwise, the amounts that had been distributed will be treated and recovered as government payables. Taken during the 2nd phase of fieldwork conducted by the research team based at Social Science Baha in Kathmandu, Nepal, as part of the SSHRC Partnership Development Grant, ‘Expertise, Labour and Mobility in Nepal’s Post-Conflict, Post-Disaster Reconstruction’. See project details at https://elmnr.arts.ubc.ca/. ( en )
General Note:
Still Image
General Note:
Date issued: 2018-12-12
General Note:
Expertise, Labour, and Mobility in Nepal’s Post-Conflict, Post-Disaster Reconstruction (Reconstructing Nepal Project). University of British Columbia
General Note:
This image is part of a collection produced by the collaborative research partnership, ‘Expertise, Labour, and Mobility in Nepal’s Post-Conflict, Post-Disaster Reconstruction’, which was funded by SSHRC Partnership Development Grant 890-2016-0011 from 2017-2021. Additional support was provided by the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies, the Faculty of Arts, the School of Public Policy & Global Affairs, and the Department of Anthropology at UBC. Sara Shneiderman (Associate Professor, Anthropology and School of Public Policy & Global Affairs, UBC) served as Principal Investigator, along with Co-Investigators Philippe Le Billon (Professor, Geography and School of Public Policy & Global Affairs, UBC) and Katharine Rankin (Professor, Geography and Planning, University of Toronto). The research team based at Social Science Baha in Kathmandu, Nepal, included Jeevan Baniya, Bina Limbu, Prakash Chandra Subedi, and Manoj Suji, who worked in partnership with Nabin Rawal of the Central Department of Anthropology, Tribhuvan University. The photographic collection was curated by Khem Shreesh of Social Science Baha in collaboration with Emily Homolka of UBC’s School of Information, with additional support from Emily Amburgey and Jonathan Eaton of UBC’s Department of Anthropology. Full information about the project is available at https://elmnr.arts.ubc.ca/
General Note:
This image and metadata have been made available by the University of British Columbia Library (Vancouver)
General Note:
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0392286
General Note:
Handle: http://hdl.handle.net/2429/75074

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of British Columbia
Rights Management:
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International