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Monday, July 27, 2015

Economic & Political Weekly: Table of Contents

The Antisocial Media

The new democratic space is being overrun by a viciousness which threatens its very nature.

The Hanging Question

Is the death penalty justifi ed within an iniquitous justice system?
Editorials
Fourteen years after the Doha Round was launched, plans are on to empty it of its original content.
Stratrgic Affairs
The nuclear deal between Iran and the Western powers could lead to some major changes in the geopolitics of West Asia. Even though there remains fairly strong domestic opposition to the deal in both camps, the historically important strategic...
H T Parekh Finance Column
The Greek tragedy contains more than its fair share of irony. Perhaps the biggest irony of all is that in the drafting of the Maastricht Treaty on Economic and Monetary Union in the late 1990s, it was Germany that insisted on the “no...
Commentary
A survey to identify who the poor are and how many are actually poor is necessary if programmes and benefits targeted at the needy are to reach them. The Socio Economic Caste Census, of which partial results have been published, was intended to...
Commentary
The 21st Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, to be held in Paris from 30 November 2015 to 11 December 2015, will need to resolve several long-standing issues pertaining to climate-induced loss...
Commentary
The Indian National Army usually evokes passionate responses in India. Its Commander-in-Chief Subhas Chandra Bose is the subject of several hagiographies and the army is often eulogised as the second front of the Indian Freedom Struggle. It has...
Commentary
Serious ethical implications emerge when private hospitals are run as corporate entities and doctors working in these hospitals are given targets to bring in a certain number of patients for hospitalisation and conduct a certain number of...
Commentary
The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 provides complete impunity to the law-enforcing agencies to conduct their activities in an unlawful manner. The judiciary has also become an accomplice. The presence of this act in Indian law statute...
Commentary
Yakub Memon is guilty only of playing a peripheral role in the 1993 terrorist bombings in Mumbai (then Bombay). Hanging him serves no purpose other than satisfying the bloodlust of society. It is for the Indian judicial system to reflect on...
Commentary
A tribute to the economist, Ajit Singh, who taught at the University of Cambridge and recently at Panjab University.
Book Reviews
Thinking Small : The United States and the Lure of Community Development by Daniel Immerwahr, Harvard University Press, 2015; pp 272, $35.
Book Reviews
A Fleeting Moment in My Country: The Last Years of the LTTE De Facto State by N Malathy; New Delhi: Aakar Books, 2013; pp 176, Rs 225.
Book Reviews
Muslim Political Discourse in Postcolonial India:Monuments, Memory, Contestation by Hilal Ahmed,Delhi: Routledge, 2014; pp 344, Rs 850.
Perspectives
An inadequate information base and limited institutional capacity for policy formulation seem to be important factors constraining India's public policy pursuits. A look at the major recommendations of the Report of the High Level Committee on...
Special Articles
This critical review and comparison of the Gadgil and Kasturirangan panel reports on the Western Ghats highlights various concerns related to their methodology, recommendations, and the manner in which they resolve the contradictions between the...
Special Articles
Urban water and waste water management have not been relatively well understood in India. The Indian urban space has been considered in an undifferentiated manner, which ignores the specificities deriving from different stages of urban...
Special Articles
The relationship between land and identity in the hills of Manipur encompasses both "geographical territory" and "cultural territory." The colonial and postcolonial states are external actors that have restructured the society. They have...
Notes
For Gandhi, the national question was much more than a struggle between two culturally-defined civilisations. For him, getting rid of colonial rule was part of a larger project to replace and resist modern civilisation. This article situates...
Discussion
Continuing with the discussion around "The Doctor and the Saint," Rajmohan Gandhi counters Arundhati Roy's response in four areas--Gandhi and the Blacks of South Africa, Gandhi and caste, Gandhi and Ambedkar, and the subject of...

A department of state

The modern Indian university has always been yoked to the state project of the moment.


The fundamental disagreement in the clash of the titans, Amartya Sen and Pratap Bhanu Mehta, appears to centre on the question of whether political interference in universities today is more egregious than in the past. Mehta claims that there is nothing unprecedented about this, “even in its scope or scale,” and Sen responds with impeccable logic that that does not make it acceptable. It could nevertheless be argued that Nalanda — with its short history tainted by allegations not all of which have been convincingly refuted — is scarcely the most alarming example of all the attempts, past and present, to control academic institutions. Both Sen and Mehta seem to share the somewhat optimistic assumption that academic institutions in this country once were or could potentially be autonomous entities that are constitutively free of governmental and/ or partisan political control. Neither acknowledges the black hole at the heart of any debate about higher education in India, a fact that has to do with the very nature of the beast itself: that the modern Indian university has, from colonial times to the present day, been viewed as properly yoked to the state project of the moment. Every major commission on education in India over the last 60 years — from the S. Radhakrishnan Commission to the National Knowledge Commission — has sought to harness universities to state projects of, variously, constitutional values, nation-building, development and the creation of a 21st century knowledge society. It is only the particular state project to which universities were hitched that has changed from time to time, not the fact of such a harness, much less the legitimacy attached to it. Partisan politics of one sort or another has undoubtedly made this worse, but this is at best an exploitation of the opportunities provided by structural weaknesses in university governance. Fundamentally, universities are not, and have never been, autonomous. Even as we recognise that public funding is incontrovertibly essential for higher education, we neither have institutional mechanisms for securing public accountability while safeguarding university autonomy, nor an archive of past institutional practices of this kind available for retrieval. To confine governmental power to domains of university functioning in which it is appropriate, and to resist its relentless encroachments into domains in which it is not, calls for serious reflection on how to strike this balance. The Napoleonic model of the university as a department of state, with faculty treated as (lesser) civil servants, has long thrived in India. Centralisation and bureaucratisation have serious implications — curricular and pedagogical — for universities. Indeed, a major concern of the university community today is the clumsy attempt, initiated by the last government and being energetically promoted today, to standardise the curricula of the central universities, ostensibly to give students more choice. Ironically, this so-called choice entails the sacrifice of diversity and greater control through homogenisation. This is certainly among the most serious challenges facing universities today, along with the stifling of dissent, the packing of leadership positions with individuals whose calling card is loyalty rather than academic credentials, and the pathetic attempts to infiltrate the intellectual life of the academy armed with faith and myth rather than objective standards of scientific achievement. It could be argued that there is, in any case, little scope for autonomy in academic institutions whose primary function has, since colonial times, been seen as the transmission of knowledge and the certification that such knowledge has been duly transmitted. The Indian university has increasingly and exclusively become a source of credentialisation for a society in which certification matters more than what is learned. Two current obsessions — that of fake degrees and of 100 per cent marks in school-leaving examinations — are poignant symbols of this. The view that the purpose of the university is to transmit knowledge rather than to produce it led, in the early years after Independence, to the creation of standalone institutions for research, in the social sciences and even more in science and technology. The accomplishments of some of these institutions were surely impressive, but an unintended consequence was the arrangement of research and teaching in a hierarchy that privileged researchers, or the producers of knowledge, over teachers as its transmitters. The introduction of research and publications as a formal requirement for recruitment and advancement in universities is a relatively recent phenomenon that has, in both design and implementation, ill-served the objective. In the states, where the bulk of Indian universities are located, talk of nepotism, cronyism, and even corruption in appointments — from lectureships to vice-chancellorships — is commonplace. In the “elite” Central universities, many conform to the Napoleonic model fortified by the self-conscious virtue that comes with association with the higher purposes of state, and sometimes also the power and that results from such association. Others live out the fantasy of a Humboldtian community of scholars engaged in the pursuit of knowledge for its own sake. This wishful imagination may be the source of elitist islands of scholarly excellence, but let us not forget that it inhabits a meta-institutional hyper-reality. In the end, what we have is a highly uneven and differentiated university system in which there is little reflection and no consensus on what a university is for. Even the arriviste private liberal arts college has come to us from the United States and not from the British Isles where Cardinal Newman articulated the vision centuries ago. But colonialism did not give us universities modelled on Dublin or Oxford. It gave us institutions modelled on the University of London, essentially affiliating institutions formulating syllabi and conducting examinations. To entertain greater expectations of the mass of Indian universities is to be deluded, because this is and has always been their purpose: to transmit received knowledge, conduct examinations and award degrees, all of these functions performed by state personnel called faculty under the watchful eye of a micro-governing state. Jayal, professor at the Centre for the Study of Law and Governance, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi, is writing a book on the death of the public university in India. 
Reform Labour We Must -- But How?


Sometimes, the twain do meet: the Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS), an affiliate of the Sangh Parivar that parents the ruling BJP , and the Citu, the trade union wing of the largest communist party in India, the CPI(M). Both have said very similar things on the government's attempts to change labour laws.Coming from absolutely opposite sides of the ideological spectrum, both have opposed the Modi government's attempts to `liberalise' labour laws. In this case, it was Bandaru Dattatreya, the labour minister and BJP member from the Telangana region, who spoke on `reforming' labour laws.But what does India want to do? In what conditions will future generations of Indians work? Does any civilised nation en visage flexible labour markets sans functional social security? Should the bulk of young India find employment with delivery of online orders, flipping burgers, waiting on tables and so on? Do trade unions believe manufacturing can thrive with rigid labour laws at odds with the dynamics of contemporary production? But does being in accord with the dynamics of globalising production mean workers with no toilet breaks, no security of employment and no right to improve their lot? The challenge is to find answers to such questions that find the right balance between capital and labour.
Labour voices have been silenced over the years; trade unions have been sterilised. But without a vibrant, well-paid workforce, India will not have the domestic demand to fuel its 1.3billion-people economy . Keynes wrote about a `multiplier effect': blue-collar wage earners are consumers, their next generation the talent pool India needs in the knowledge economy tomorrow. Deprived workers are a drag in the present, and in the future. Is anybody out there listening?
the speaking tree - The Close Relationship Between Science & Religion


Science explains a phenomenon in a logical framework while religion recommends certain guide ines without going into the details of why they need to be followed. The main difference in the approach lies n the fact that science is meant for hose who are mentally ready for an explanation while religion addresses he general public. Both are concerned with welfare of society , but the difference lies in the fact that science ries to experiment with methods and outcomes, both, while religion aims at a set of outcomes for which the method is fixed. For the latter, the outcome is more important than explaining why the specificities are o be followed. Thus, those used to ogical explanations may find the path of religion a bit authoritarian hough in actuality it is not so.Since the main responsibility of religion is to create a disciplined life it cautions about the adverse outcomes, if deviations are too many . The approach is seen to be creating fear in the human mind though actually it is only a warning ­ like a mother tries to tell her naughty child when he is up to mischief.
Let us take the example of environmental degradation. environmental degradation.Science would tell us exactly which particular human action is involved and in what way it would result in harmful living conditions.Religion, on the other hand, would not go into the details of these steps; rather, it would highlight the consequences in their most adverse forms. For example, lessons on cleanliness are imparted through parables so that peo ple are fearful of taking recourse to vulgarities. Besides, religion's do main is very wide ­ in one go, it adt dresses innumerable aspects of life, aiming at providing stability to the entire issue of a balanced existence.Naturally , it does not have the space and time to go into the nitty-gritty .Only experienced teachers, gurus, can provide you with the link through intuition, perspective and contemplation. Realisation of that link is a state of mind where everything looks crystal clear ­ the entire complex, causal structure reduces to a simple proposition.
Religion and philosophy are like two sides of the same coin. One emerges from observations and another from the analysis of those observations. On the other hand, science and philosophy share a close domain. Philosophy provides support to define a clear-cut objective and route to scientific enquiry . It enables the abstract to take a more tangible shape by providing inputs to form the right kind of hypothesis in the course of enquiry .
The human mind can never sit idle. It believes in acquisition, whether of material wealth or knowledge. In the case of an average person, the tendency to accumulate material wealth is commonly observed. On the other hand, those in search of higher realities also need religion to get the moral strength to stick to their pursuits. Else, there can be a vacuum, momentarily though, and such crises can do more damage than what greed can actually cause. Hence, knowledge is of great importance in religion and in life. Only a disciplined mind can realise the symbiosis between science and philosophy.And religion is nothing but the core of discipline.
Jul 27 2015 : The Times of India (Delhi)
70% of all suicide victims had annual income of Rs 1L
New Delhi:


'14 Data Showed Poverty Linked To Deaths
While people commit suicide for various reasons, a poor person is more likely to kill himself for the same reason than one who is rich.The data from NCRB for 2014 shows a direct relationship between poverty and suicide. While the exhaustive data segregates suicides according to various causes, the common thread running through a majority of suicides is poverty . According to the data, 70% of all suicide victims had an annual income of less than Rs 1 lakh. Conversely, those who earned over Rs 10 lakh a year made up for just 0.6% of victims. This simply means that even if the reason for suicide is absolutely personal, such as failure in love or a family dispute, a poor person is more likely to end his life than a rich person. The data shows that as the economic prosperity of people improves, their rate of suicide decreases. It also shows that those who earned between Rs 1-5 lakh made up for 27% of victims, while those who made between Rs 5-10 lakh accounted for 2.8% of suicides.
Curiously , Bihar being one of the poorest states had one of the lowest suicide incidents among the poor (with income of less than Rs 1 lakh). It recorded just 408 suicides as against a prosperous Maharashtra which had the highest share of poor (12,590) people ending their lives. Another prosperous state, Tamil Nadu, was a close second with 11,738 suicides by the poor. Given that in India, one's educational qualification is often related to one's economic status, it is also reflected in suicide trends.
According to NCRB data, 75% of those who committed suicide had not studied beyond Class 10. It can be presumed that this must have affected their employability in better jobs and thus adversely impacted their economic wellbeing. That the government is rightly stressing on skill development is reflected in the fact that those with professional qualifications are least likely to commit suicide.
Professionals (with MBA, engineering or medical education) made up for just 0.3% of all suicide victims.
Only 5 aspirants got over 50% marks in civils
New Delhi:


No more than five candidates who appeared for the Civil Services Exam 2014 “passed“ with over 50% marks, with the No.1 rank-holder scoring 53.4%. While just 13 candidates scored more than 1,000 marks out of a maximum score of 2025, comprising 1,750 for Mains and 275 for personality test, 527 were in the 900-1,000 marks bracket, 674 in the 800-900 marks bracket and 22 passed with less than 800 marks.Incidentally , the minimum overall score in the 2014 exam was 713, with the candidate concerned clearing the Mains round with 513 marks and personality test with 200 marks.
Ira Singhal, who topped the fiercely competitive exam with an overall score of 1,082, was the only candidate to score above 900 (her marks being 920) in the Mains examination, with the second rank-holder way behind with a Mains score of 858. However, Singhal scored just 162 in the interview round against the best score of 220 earned by two other candidates.
As may as 33 candidates got a Mains score above 800 marks. The lowest Mains score was 513 marks. In the personality test round, 111 candidates sailed through with over 200 marks. While the highest score was 220, secured by two candidates (not in the top 5), the lowest interview score was 83.
Among the top scorers, after No.1 rank-holder Singhal, Renu Raj secured an overall score of 1,056 (858 in Mains and 198 in the personality test), Nidhi Gupta 1,025 (846 in Mains and 179 in personality test), Vandana Rao 1,019 (832 in Mains and 187 in personality test), and Suharsha Bhagat 1,014 (813 in Mains and 201 in personality test).
A total 1,236 candidates were selected for appointment to various civil services including IAS, IPS and IFS in the Civil Services Exam 2014 results declared by UPSC on July 4.
The successful candidates included 590 in general category , 354 belonging to other backward classes, 194 from scheduled castes and 98 from scheduled tribes.
The elite exam was conducted on August 24, 2014 at 2,137 centres in 59 cities across the country .
Approximately 9.45 lakh candidates had registered for the examination and about 4.51 lakh candidates appeared for it.
49% of children out of school are SCSTs, 25% are Muslims: Survey
Bengaluru:


Six years since the Right To Education Act came into effect, around 60.6 lakh children between the ages of 6 and 13 years are still out of school in the country.While SC ST children constitute 49.03% (29.73 lakh) of them, those from other backward classes (OBC) form 36%, which shows that RTE has brought little change in the lives of marginal groups.The trend was revealed in an extensive survey recently conducted by an independent agency for the Centre. According to the survey, the majority of out-of-school (OOS) children are in rural areas (77%). Besides, 15.57 lakh Muslim children are out of school, constituting 25% of the OOS children. The OBC category includes Muslims.
In all, 2.9% of the total 20.4 crore school-going age children have been deprived of their right to education.
Speaking to TOI, Rakesh Senger, director, Victim Assistance and Campaign at Bachpan Bachao Andolan, said, “It is not necessary that even this number is accurate as a recent study by us shows that many children who continue to work as labourers in Delhi are being marked present in schools. That is just dubious. There is a long way to go in this regard.“
Activists argue that fam ilies from backward communities fail to send their children to school largely due to non-affordability . They say non-affordability doesn't necessarily mean payment of school fees, which may be subsidized. It could mean sending a child to school would reduce the family's earnings by a few rupees the child could otherwise contribute by working.
The study also revealed that more than 48% of the children out of school, rough y 29 lakh, are girls.
The statistics are based on a survey commissioned by the HRD ministry and conducted across all 640 districts of the country . This is the third round of such a survey , the previous ones having been conducted in 2006 and 2009.
The number of OOS chil dren has always been a bone of contention. A July 2015 Unesco report saying India “has made mpressive progress provision of primary education“ is based on the 2012 figures provided by ndia, according to which 17 akh children are out of school.The number was borrowed rom various agencies.
The Unesco report clubs ndia with some of the worst performing nations. “At least 10 lakh children were denied he right to education in each of the following countries: India, Indonesia, Kenya, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines, South Sudan, Sudan and the United Republic of Tanzania,“ it notes.