Gore was born on 15 August 1921 at
Hubli in the south Indian state of
Karnataka to Sadashiv Ramchandra and Venutai and completed his graduation with honors from the
University of Mumbai in 1942. Joining
Tata Institute of Social Sciences, he secured the post-graduate
Diploma in Social Service Administration (DSSA) in 1945 during which time he was selected for the
Sir Dorabji Tata Research Fellowship. During this period he led an extensive sociological study of vagrancy and begging in Delhi, carried out in 1955 and published in 1959, which drew on welfare policy in England and America. He also continued his doctoral research and secured a doctoral degree (PhD) from
Columbia University in 1961. He would later publish his thesis,
The Impact of Industrialization and Urbanization on the Aggarwal Family in Delhi Area as a book in 1990, truncating the name as
Urbanization and Family Change. In between, he served as a visiting professor at
Beloit College of the
University of Wisconsin during 1960–61. Afterwards, he returned to research on the backward class leadership in the state on a Homi Bhabha Fellowship but, a year later, he was appointed as the vice-chancellor of University of Mumbai, a post he held till 1986 when he resigned in protest from the position, allegedly due to a scandal involving award of extra marks to the daughter of
Shivajirao Patil Nilangekar, the then chief minister of
Maharashtra. and books including
Social work and Social Work Education,
Urbanization and Family Change,
Social Aspects Of Development,
Education and Modernization in India and
Vitthal Ramji Shinde: An Assessment of His Contributions. He was the president of organizations such as the Indian Society of Criminology from 1977 to 1979,
Indian Sociological Society from 1981 to 1982 and the
Association of Indian Universities from 1984 to 1985. He was the president of the Indian chapter of the
International Association of Schools of Social Work from 1962 to 1966, during which time he served as the vice-president of the parent association. The Government of India awarded him the civilian honor of the
Padma Bhushan in 1975 and he received the Lifetime Achievement Award of the
Indian Sociological Society in 2006. He was also a recipient of the Special Award of the Indian Council of Social Welfare. Gore was married to Phyllis and the couple had two children, Vikas and Anita. He died on 19 November 2010 at his home town of
Hubli, at the age of 89. == Selected bibliography ==