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Wednesday, January 07, 2015

Social Change

Table of Contents
December 2014; 44 (4)

Special Issue: Urban Growth and Exclusion of the Poor

Guest editors: K. B. Saxena and Sonali Mukherjee

Introduction

Articles

Book Reviews

Economic & Political Weekly: Table of Contents


CIA Torture: A Mere Rogue Op?

The culpability of the highest offices of the US state cannot be denied.

Two More Wins

The BJP returns its best ever electoral performance in Jammu and Kashmir, and Jharkhand.
Comment
The aftermath of the 2004 tsunami has thrown up issues regarding humanitarian funding.
Margin Speak
Most converts to Islam and Christianity, being from the lower castes who had converted to escape the yoke of caste bondage of Hinduism, would be reincarcerated into the hellhole of Hinduism which their forefathers strove to escape.
H T Parekh Finance Column
Indian private banks have done well over the past decade, and have allayed fears of foreign banks dominating Indian banking. Kotak calling the shots after the merger of Kotak Mahindra Bank and ING Vysya is an example of this dominance. The major...
Commentary
The United Nations climate talks in Lima, Peru, were important as the last preparatory meet ahead of the Paris talks in late 2015, where a new global agreement to combat climate change is to be negotiated. While few would characterise the "...
Commentary
If one were to explore the dynamics of changes in the "social" in a young state like Uttarakhand, one cannot do so without looking at the "material" and "spatial" facets. In hill societies where an ecological sense...
Commentary
This article argues that the Hindutva drive to "reconvert" Muslims and Christians to Hinduism is essentially about shoring up the numerical strength and political power of the "Hindu community" and has little connection to...
Commentary
The haste with which a public hearing was pushed through for Sesa Sterlite's expansion of its Lanjigarh facility in Kalahandi, Odisha leads to the assumption that perhaps the acche din promised by the new government are actually for the...
Book Reviews
The Bible and Asia: From the Pre-Christian Era to the Postcolonial Age by R S Sugirtharajah (Cambridge: Massachusetts; Harvard University Press), 2013; pp 303, price not indicated.
Book Reviews
Sourcing Surrogates: Actors, Agencies and Networks by V Deepa, Mohan Rao, Rama Baru, Ramila Bisht, N Sarojini and Susan Fairly Murray (New Delhi: Zubaan Publishing Services), 2013; pp 98, price not mentioned.
Insight
The key to improving the quality of healthcare services in India and reducing costs at the same time can be found by enacting legislation which lays down minimum standards of patient care. In the absence of such standards and the reluctance of...
Special Articles
The earthquake that triggered the south and south-east Asian tsunami of 26 December 2004 also caused a significant and permanent shift in the lay of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The northern Andaman Islands saw a lift of up to five feet while...
Special Articles
Among the various axes of inequality in India, regional disparities have acquired greater salience in recent times, with demands being made for special status for certain states on this basis. What has been completely overlooked in the process is...
Special Articles
The dominant theories, methods or epistemologies in sociological or social anthropological work, or even in the wider human sciences, seem inadequate. In response to that challenge, and written from the “South” with due recognition of...
Notes
Coal remains the main fossil fuel for power generation in India. The health impacts of air pollution from these coal-fired power plants include numerous premature deaths and frequent asthma attacks. In the future, the amount of power generated...
Discussion
Would the Hindutva historians, who claim that the Puranas, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata are true historical records needing no further interpretation, be able to tell us which of their versions are we to read? This response to Rajan Gurukkal...
Jan 07 2015 : The Times of India (Delhi)
`Fears of man-made global warming are exaggerated'
Mumbai:


Two of three scientists at a session on climate change and society at the Indian Science Congress on Tuesday felt that fears of man-made global warming were greatly exaggerated. Their presence at the conference was particularly significant in light of the current `development Vs environment' debates.“While I agree that glaciers are melting because of global warming, if this is because of man, then what was the reason for the melting of the glaciers in the Gondwana period long before man arrived on the planet?“ asked Dhruv Sen Singh, Centre of Advanced Study in Geology , University of Lucknow.
“Climate change is a natural phenomenon while pollution is caused by man. We are definitely accelerating climate change, but we cannot predict the rate or extent of climate change that can be attributed to man,“ Singh said. According to him, fears of climate change amount to propaganda and “unnecessarily cause panic“.
“The Cretaceous period 65 million years ago was the hottest in the history of the earth. Man was not around at the time,“ he added.
Singh said that if climate change was the cause of glaciers retreating, they should all be retreating at the same rate. “But in reality, they are retreating at different rates, and some are advancing,“ said Singh. “Despite the melting of glaciers, only at some places the sea level is rising, whereas at others it is constant, possibly due to the sinking of land,“ he added.
As for extreme climatic events such as the Uttarakhand cloudburst, he said such cloudbursts were not new to the Himalayas. “These are cyclical events but not catastrophes. The devastation in Uttarakhand was caused by people living in hazardprone areas,“ he added.
Rajesh Agnihotri, senior scientist at the Radio and Atmospheric Science Division, National Physics Laboratory , who mapped changing trends in India's monsoons, said there was nothing to suggest that this was because of manmade climate change. “Natural forces like solar intensity appear to be dominating monsoons to a greater extent than man-made climate change,“ he added.