Ghusel

'Ghusel (Nepali: घुसेल) is a village and former Village Development Committee that is now part of Bagmati Rural Municipality in Bagmati Pradesh of central Nepal. It is located southern part of Kathmandu Valley at similar or less heights. At the time of the 2011 Nepal census it had a population of 1510 in 308 individual households, down from the time of the 1991 Nepal census when it had a population of 1715 in 294 individual households.[1]

Ghusel

घुसेल

kuh-shyahl
Village of Bagmati Rural Municipality
Ghusel
Location in Nepal
Coordinates: 27.55°N 85.26°E / 27.55; 85.26
Country   Nepal
ProvinceBagmati Pradesh
DistrictLalitpur District
Population
 (2011)
  Total1,510
Time zoneUTC+5:45 (Nepal Time)
Area code(s)01

Record of 1994

Over the past decade, Ghusel VDC, Lalitpur District has moved from primarily subsistence agriculture into the wider cash economy aided by the Small Farmers' Development Program (SFDP), which provides credit to farmers mainly for the purchase of buffalo for milk production, and by the National Dairy Corporation, which supports local dairy cooperatives. Analysis reveals that buffalo-keeping and milk sales are increasing the well-being of many households, while at the same time creating new inequalities in gender roles and responsibilities, greater inequities between Brahmin and Tamang residents in Ghusel, and placing pressures on the ecosystem for increased supplies of fodder and fuelwood. Evidence suggests that there is critical, need for attention to the social, and particularly gender-based, implications of maintaining livestock for milk sales and to the ecological underpinnings of this livelihood system.

Education

Shree Ghusel Secondary School is only secondary school in village which was established in 1960 (2017 BS) as primary school. The school is located at almost center part of village at Mane Danda. "Mane" is a monastery or religious Stupa for Buddhist people. The name of area is taken from this word.

gollark: The economy *does matter*, though, even in a "lives saved" sense. As someone on the interweb put it:> Damage to productivity eventually results in damage to people, since we use part of our productivity to preserve life.
gollark: Well, we could engineer humans with better DNA error correction or something, eventually.
gollark: Forever might be an overestimate, but cancer generally will probably stick around for a while as it is a complex and hard-to-cure thing.
gollark: ... maybe these are just hard problems which they're working on, rather than some kind of conspiracy?
gollark: It seems like the problem here might be lack of systems to track and respond to demand, since I think lots of people probably would be willing to pay some money for a ventilator to be available if they need it during this pandemic.

References

  1. "Nepal Census 2001". Nepal's Village Development Committees. Digital Himalaya. Archived from the original on 2008-10-12. Retrieved 2008-09-03.


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