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Friday, September 05, 2014

Sep 05 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
India is world's suicide capital with 2.6L casesyr
New Delhi
TIMES NEWS NETWORK


India records by far the largest number of suicides in the world, accounting for nearly a third of the global total and more than twice as many as China, which is second on the list.India also has the highest rate of suicides among young people — those aged 15 to 29 years.
These were among the sobering facts revealed in a report released by the WHO, “Preventing Suicide, A Global Imperative”. The report noted that an estimated 8 lakh suicide deaths occurred worldwide in 2012. It is the second leading cause of death in 15-29-year-olds.
In 2012, India recorded nearly 2.6 lakh suicides, dwarfing China’s 1.2 lakh.
India’s overall rate of suicides (incidents per lakh population) was 12th at 20.9. The worst countries on this parameter were North and South Korea, Guyana, Lithuania and Sri Lanka. Hungary, Japan, the Russian Federation and Belarus also had higher suicide rates than India. The Scandina vian countries, Sweden, Norway and Denmark — often perceived as societies with high suicide rates — had much lower rates.
In richer countries, three times as many men die of suicide as women, but in low and middle-income countries, the male-to-female ratio is much lower at 1.5 men to each woman. Globally, suicides account for 50% of all violent deaths in men and 71% in women. n India, the ratio was about I 1.6 with close to 1.6 lakh men committing suicide in 2012 compared to just under 1 lakh women. In four countries in India's immediate neighbourhood -China, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan -women outnumbered men among suicides. Only in Iraq and Indonesia was the proportion of women to men among those committing suicide higher than these countries.
India, despite its horrific statistics, has actually seen a decline in the tendency to commit suicide since 2012, with the rate declining by 9.2% over this 12-year period.China, in the same period, saw its suicide rate drop by 59%.
India is a clear exception to the global pattern of the 70+ age group having the highest suicide rates. At 21.1 per lakh population, suicides among this age group are only about as common as among the entire population. Risk factors associated with the health system and society at large include difficulties in accessing health care and in receiving the care needed, easy availability of the means for suicide, inappropriate media reporting that sensationalizes suicide and increases the risk of “copycat“ suicides, and stigma against people who seek help for suicidal behaviours, or for mental health and substance abuse problems.
For the full report, log on to http:www.timesofindia.com

Thursday, September 04, 2014

Journal of Community Practice: Table of Contents 

Volume 22, Issue 3, 2014


Anna Maria SantiagoTracy Soska & Lorraine Gutierrez
pages 275-280

  • DOI:10.1080/10705422.2014.949508
  • Published online: 13 Aug 2014
  • Citing articles: 0
  • Article Views: 13

Articles

Nancy P. Kropf & Barbara L. Jones
pages 281-298

  • DOI:10.1080/10705422.2014.929539
  • Published online: 13 Aug 2014
  • Citing articles: 0
  • Article Views: 19
Further Information

Kelly L. PattersonTom Nochajski & Laiyun Wu
pages 324-341

  • DOI:10.1080/10705422.2014.929605
  • Published online: 13 Aug 2014
  • Citing articles: 0
  • Article Views: 8
Further Information

From the Field

Book Reviews

Carmen Luca Sugawara MSW, PhD
pages 405-407

  • DOI:10.1080/10705422.2014.929485
  • Published online: 13 Aug 2014
  • Citing articles: 0
  • Article Views: 3

Colleen Henry PhD, MSW
pages 418-421

  • DOI:10.1080/10705422.2014.929895
  • Published online: 13 Aug 2014
  • Citing articles: 0
  • Article Views: 4

Alma Mater of Legends to Get New Life

Posted by Elets News Network (ENN)



Intellectuals who put the country on the path of progress are often remembered. Unfortunately though, we have failed to recognise the institutions that nurtured these legends. In a move directed at correcting this anomaly and for facilitating the right infrastructure and environment to students at such institutes, the Human Resource Development ministry is about to embark on an exercise to draw up a list of schools and colleges whose alumni have won the country international recognition in different spheres.
The exercise, to be carried out in collaboration with the states will honour the alma mater of these historic figures and also help breathe new life into these institutes.
Also on the agenda is a move to pay tribute to national leaders such as S. Radhakrishnan, Raja Ram Mohan Roy, Swami Vivekananda, Zakir Husain, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Deen Dayal Upadhyay, Madan Mohan Malaviya among others by instituting 50 new centres across universities and institutions of higher education. The University Grants Commission will offer the seed money of Rs. 7.5 lakh to set up these centres which will be named after people who have made stellar contribution towards education, social reform and nation building. Universities and institutions of higher education can apply for the grant and set up these centres.
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2014/09/alma-mater-of-legends-to-get-new-life/#sthash.IbmvbePU.dpuf

SC Orders Compensation for Students Denied MBBS Seats 

The Supreme Court has ordered the Maharashtra government to pay a compensation of Rs 20 lakh each to the 21 aspirants who were denied MBBS seats. In a sharp reaction to the state government and the malpractices adopted by private colleges, the apex court has held that the state needed to pay the students for having failed to “take necessary action on the students’ complaints”.
In a case in 2012, 21 students were either denied admissions to private medical and dental colleges or were not allowed to shift from dental to medicine despite having the required scores.
The students had earlier approached the Pravesh Niyantran Samiti (PNS), a quasi-judicial body, which conducted an inquiry and found that the colleges had been flouting rules for admissions. PNS asked the state to cancel admissions to 250 seats in 17 colleges, most of which are run by politicians. With the government failing to take action, the students approached the Bombay high court and then the Supreme Court for being denied the rightful admission in 2012.
Though the detailed copy of the order is awaited, it is learnt that the court has also ordered an inquiry against the authorities who facilitated admissions without merit and revised the process to suit their needs.
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2014/09/sc-orders-compensation-for-students-denied-mbbs-seats/#sthash.lpWYVmtM.dpuf

NIOS to Partner With NSDC for Vocational Training



The National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) and the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) have joined hands to provide vocational training to students of class 10 and class 12. The courses will be based on National Occupational Standards (NOS) set up by the industry through the respective Sector Skill Councils (SSCs).
NIOS students will have the option to select one vocational course as part of their five subjects in class 10 and 12. The marks of this subject will be clubbed with the four other academic subjects to get NIOS certification for class 10 and 12. At present, the programme has been launched as a pilot in few sectors of Delhi an NCR covering 1,00,000 students. The pre-pilot phase was launched today in four sectors – security, retail, telecom and gems and jewellery.
“We are honoured to partner with NSDC for introducing these vocational courses as part of our curriculum. This will enhance the employability of our students and make them job ready,” said Dr Sitanshu S Jena, Chairman of NIOS. Appreciating the partnership, Atul Bhatnagar, Chief Operating Officer, NSDC said, “We are honoured to partner with NIOS in this unprecedented initiative. I encourage students to make the best of this opportunity. The skill certificate will be their partner for life and will give their career a great boost. We are confident of the success of this pre-pilot programme. We will soon look at extending this to other states as well.”
After completion of the course, students will be certified with a degree which will enable them to get employed.
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2014/09/nios-to-partner-with-nsdc-for-vocational-training/#sthash.vyXL4biS.dpuf
Sep 04 2014 : The Economic Times (Delhi)
It’s the Population, Stupid


India has more than its fair share of the super-rich. Which isn't necessarily a good thing
The Times of India recently reported, not without a certain self-congratulatory air, that the latest wealth index by New World Wealth has ranked India eighth in the global rich list, below countries such as the US, China, Germany and Britain, but above Singapore and Canada. The index looks at multimillionaires: individuals with net assets of at least $10 million.The ranking has sent Indian cyberspace into a tizzy. A common celebratory headline is: “India has more multimillionaires than Australia, Russia and France!” And given that the largest number of the world’s poor also live in India, a common admonitory reaction is: “Told you so! India is just a corrupt society.”
Make it Large
This isn't the first time we've been gobsmacked by the sort of numbers India can generate. Recently , farmer suicides did the rounds. And some participants in a recent BBC debate had it wrong by a factor of 10. All quite understandable. India is so large that nobody has a real sense of the numbers anyway . Which is why the following handy little motto should always be clutched close to heart and brain: when confronted by a large Indian statistic, consider dividing it by the population.
We learn from the same source (New World Wealth) that the world has 495,000 multimillionaires, and India has 14,800 of them. Divide, and India has just 3% of the world’s multimillionaires. However, it has 17% of the world’s people. Suddenly, it looks like India doesn’t have its ‘fair share’ of multimillionaires.
Now, of course, India is a poorer country. The real question is whether the country has more than its expected share of multimillionaires once we take into account this fact.
To do this in serious detail will take some real work, but there’s enough space on the back of the envelope to deliver this message.
Problem of Plenty?
In 2012, India's per-capita income stood at $1,550, and world per-capita income around $10,235, suggesting that the ratio of Indian per-capita income to the world average is a measly 0.15.Meanwhile, the multimillionaire ratio (India's share relative to its population) is 317 = 0.17. These two ratios are close, which suggests that neither self-congratulation nor admonition is quite called for at this stage. But we will need to dig deeper.
Let's think about millionaires for a moment: those with assets of $1 million or more. According to WealthInsight, India had 251,000 millionaires in 2012, which is around 0.02% of the population.
The corresponding number for the US stood at 5,231,000, around 1.64%. Thus, using the US as a benchmark, India's millionaire share in the population relative to the US is 1.22% (the ratio of 0.02 to 1.64). At the same time, India's per-capita income is only 3% of that of the US.
So, does India have too few millionaires relative to the US, after making the income correction? Not really. If two countries have the same level of relative inequality but different mean incomes, a halving of mean income predicts a change in the popu lation incidence of (multi)millionaires by a factor that typically comes down by more than half.
We use data on wealth distributions in the world to get an estimate of the drop. With the income correction in place, both the millionaire share and the multimillionaire share in India should be approximately 1.28% that of the US. Since the actual millionaire share in India relative to the US is 1.22%, which is remarkably close to the prediction, India does not appear to be out of line, as far as millionaires are concerned.
But Indian multimillionaires appear to be singing a different tune. Their share is 0.001% of the population, against 0.058% in the US. Taking ratios, the relative multimillionaire share in India is 2.06% of the corresponding share in the US. This number is surely high relative to the prediction of 1.28%.
Swiss Bank Millionaires
We would tentatively conclude that India, controlling for economic differences, has `more multimillionaires than it should'. This may generate applause in some circles. Therefore, we side with the admonitory warning bell sounded by RBI governor Raghuram Rajan on the dangers of cro ny capitalism.
If anything, our results may be underestimates. After all, the Indian rich are particularly adept at hiding their money . Our concerns are also reinforced when we remember that the US is a country with very high inequality . Countries such as Japan and Germany come in far below the predictions for multimillionaires, as does the world as a whole. Other countries that exceed their predicted values are Hong Kong, Singapore and Switzerland.
What are the takeaway points? India is poorer than the world average and, so, naturally has a greater percentage of poor people and a lower percentage of rich people. Yet, using the absolute numbers, India has more of almost everything, which is misleading. Indeed, correcting for income differences, India has the `expected share' of millionaires relative to the US. But looking at the multimillionaires, India has more than its expected share: something not too savoury is cooking on the very end of the right tail.
M Ghatak is professor of economics, London School of Economics, and D Ray is professor of economics, New York University



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