Category Archives: revenue registers

Huge Flaws in Sri Lanka’s Tax System …. Apoyi!…. Apoyi!

Sanjeewa Jayaweera in the Sunday Island, 21 September 2025, where the title reads Sri Lanka’s Tax Conundrum–2025

The eagerly awaited Performance Report of the Inland Revenue Department (IRD) for 2024 has recently been published. It offers some context regarding the IRD’s tax collections. There is room for wider disclosure that would improve transparency. The timeliness of the report’s release could also be considerably enhanced. After all, most large corporations listed on the Colombo Stock Exchange publish their Annual Reports within two months of the financial year’s end.

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Filed under accountability, centre-periphery relations, economic processes, governance, historical interpretation, modernity & modernization, performance, politIcal discourse, revenue registers, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society

Caste Issues in Sri Lanka: A Partial Bibliography

Michael Roberts

I came across this undated list in my computer files — one drawn up quite sometime back, maybe 20 years back. Though I would seem to have been part of the enterprise, some spellings suggest the involvement of others; while Iranga Silva of the ICES Kandy also seems to have been one of the compilers. It will, nevertheless, interest some readers & scholars and could assisit budding researchers. The items or authors presented in black were part of the File I found. I have taken the liberty of deploying a colour scheme, with red indicating rare items that I have not seen/studied; blue some highly important studies; ….

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Filed under British colonialism, caste issues, centre-periphery relations, communal relations, cultural transmission, demography, discrimination, economic processes, ethnicity, governance, heritage, historical interpretation, island economy, landscape wondrous, life stories, politIcal discourse, revenue registers, sri lankan society, working class conditions

Portugal and Sri Lanka: The Historiography Today

Chandra R. de Silva,* whose original title runs thus: “Portugal and Sri Lanka: Recent Trends in Historiography”[1] … an article that was originally published in Re-exploring the Links: History and Constructed Histories between Portugal and Sri Lanka, ed. Jorge Flores, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2007, pp. 3-26

In a recent article entitled ‘Theoretical Approaches to Sri Lankan History and the Early Portuguese period,’ Alan Strathern points out that although historical writing in Sri Lanka has become ‘the site of vibrant controversy’ due partly to the ethnic conflict, by and large, it has contributed little to wider debates on post-colonialism and the nature of historical thinking.’[2] I would agree with this broad proposition. What I intend to do in this paper is to extend my gaze beyond the sixteenth century to which Alan consciously limits himself and look critically at the extent to which historical writing in the past half century has enhanced our understanding of the complex connections between Portugal and Sri Lanka in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. However, … I will concentrate largely on the area of social interaction and leave the other areas — political, economic and cultural – for detailed consideration at a later time.

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Filed under economic processes, hatan kavi, heritage, historical interpretation, Indian Ocean politics, insurrections, landscape wondrous, life stories, military strategy, patriotism, Portuguese imperialism, Portuguese in Indian Ocean, power politics, religiosity, revenue registers, sri lankan society, teaching profession, the imaginary and the real, transport and communications, unusual people, world events & processes