Stream-channel alluvium (Holocene)-Unconsolidated gravel, sand, and silt that is subject to stream transport each year. Poorly to moderately sorted and low-angle crossbedding. Generally without soil or vegetation. Forms low islands and bars within braided ard meandering stream channels. Maximum thickness about 3 m Qfp Flood-plain and fan alluvium (Holocene)-Moderately bedded and sorted, sand and gravel channel and debris-flow deposits overlain by thin veneer of sandy silt and clay fro~a overbank flooding and slope-wash deposition. Typically deposited adjacent to streams or in fan-shaped bodies at mouth of canyons or gullies. Maximum thickness beneath flood plains about 6 m and beneath fans about 20 m Qas Alluvium and windblown silt, undifferentiated (Holocene and upper Pleistocene)~Eolirn silt and stream-channel, flood-plain, terrace, and slope-wash alluvium intermixed in small areas that cannot be depicted separately at map scale. Such deposits typical'" 7 occupy small depressions in the Margala Hills. Less than 10m thick Qp Potwar Clay (Holocene and Pleistocene)-Windblown silt and clay and subordinate amounts of alluvial gravel. Sediment is light brown to gray, very fine grained, hard, compact, and calcareous. Windblown sediment averages 71-74 percent silt-size and 15-16 percent clay-size material. Unit is 14-18 percent calcium carbonate. Mineral composition is predominantly quartz, but subordinate amounts of feldspar and clay minerals, such as kaolinite and illite, are present (Rendell, 1988, p. 392). The welldeveloped vertical partings and lack of bedding suggest that much of the sediment is atmospheric dust, but stratification of some of the sediment indicates partial reworkir 7 by surface wash and streams. Locally, silt is intercalated with crossbedded lenses of sand and gravel and with the Lei Conglomerate. Thermoluminescence ages of loers from the Rawat area range from 20 to 132 thousand years (ka) from near the surface to 11-m depth, and greater than 170 ka for more deeply buried loess beneath a gravel facies. Calculated accumulation rates range from 6 to 27 centimeters per thousand years (cm/1,000 yr)(Rendell, 1988, p. 393). The silt and clay beds are very erodibh; hence deep, steep-sided gullies and badlands are extensive. Unit subject to loss of bearing strength when wet. Thickness is highly varied, depending on relief of underlying unconformity. Exposed thickness 1-35 m. Similar deposits intercalated with Lei Conglomerate extend to a depth of 152 m (Ashraf and Hanif, 1980) Terrace alluvium (Holocene and Pleistocene) Gravel, clay, and silt locally cemented by calcium carbonate. Includes clast-supported boulders, cobbles, and pebbles of sedimentary rocks in a sandy and clayey matrix. These former stream-channel and flood-plain deposits no longer receive sediment because subsequent downcutting by streams has left them high above flood level. Repeated episodes of uplift or climate change and erosion have left terrace deposits at several levels. Unit resembles Lei Conglomerate but is younger and retains d...
The terminology of ?civil society? has gained currency in recent discussions of democratic movements around the globe. Although less grandiose in its implications than claims about the ?end of history,? this terminology does suggest a certain universality in human experience. We argue that this claim of universality is warranted, but also problematic. We establish the relevance of our argument in reference to the literatures in African and Indian studies. We note first that the common employments of the concept ignore the theoretical and historical specificity of civil society: civil society is used to label any group or movement opposed to the state, regardless of its intent or character, or used so generically that it is indistinguishable from the term ?society.? Instead, we argue that civil society is a sphere of social life, involving a stabilization of a system of rights, constituting human beings as individuals, both as citizens in relation to the state and as legal persons in the economy and the sphere of private association. Thus, we link the wide resonance of the concept to its embeddedness in the logic of liberal capitalist society and the capitalist global division of labor. This conception allows us to see that, although the emergence of a sphere of civil society involves at least minimal democranization and is supportive of struggles for further democratization, the status of democracy is also made quite problematic by the tensions endemic to liberal capitalism and the processes of uneven development within international capitalism. Our usage also allows us to distinguish more clearly movements dedicated to the construction of civil society from those that may count actually as counter-civil society movements
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