Death in India, 1871–1921
- 1 August 1973
- journal article
- Published by Duke University Press in Journal of Asian Studies
- Vol. 32 (4) , 639-659
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2052814
Abstract
The British impact on India perhaps was as profound on issues of the death rate and population growth as on political and economic development, but it has been less thoroughly examined.1 And in contrast to successes by the mid-twentieth century in limiting small-pox, malaria, and cholera, there was an earlier and darker tale, almost as obscure as the lives of the millions who perished in terrible epidemics in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This was how new economic conditions, ineffective village sanitary practices, the impact of modern transport and irrigation works, and population pressure and poverty all helped the spread of disease, and how public health measures failed to prevent a high mortality.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Utilitarianism and Agrarian Progress in Western IndiaThe Economic History Review, 1965
- The British and the Moneylender in Nineteenth-Century IndiaThe Journal of Modern History, 1962