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Monday, November 09, 2015

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MAKE IN INDIA-CAMPAIGN FOR INCLUSIVE GROWTH INITIATIVES AND CHALLENGES 

4TH & 5TH JANUARY, 2016.

VENUE: Conference Hall, Department of Commerce, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh (UP), India

Organized By: Department of Commerce, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh (India).
Sponsored By: Indian Council of Social Science Research (ICSSR), New Delhi (India).
 


SUB THEMESPolicy Reforms
Labor and Employment (including legal issues)
Entrepreneurship and Innovation
Emerging Opportunities and Challenges in Manufacturing Sector.
Investment Issues – Domestic and Foreign
Human Development & Training
Marketing Strategies
Management of MSMEs
Corporate Social Responsibility
Other related issues related to “Make in India”and inclusive growth

IMPORTANT DATES AND DEADLINES:
Submission of Abstract: 15 November, 2015
Submission of Full Paper: 30 November, 2015
Confirmation of Full Paper: Latest by 5 December, 2015
Date of Conference: 4th –5th January, 2016.


CONTACT: Prof. Imran Saleem, Lane- 4, Opp. Sunny PCO, Doharra Mafi, Aligarh-202002 (UP), India. 

Friday, November 06, 2015

Vol 52: Socialist Register 2016: The Politics of the Right

Table of Contents

Articles

Leo Panitch, Gregory Albo
Liz Fekete
Richard Seymour
Michael Lowy, Francis Sitel
Walter Baier
Geoff Eley
G.M. Tamas
Richard Saull
Alexander Buzgalin, Andrey Kolganov
Aijaz Ahmad
David Moore
Alfredo Saad-Filho, Armando Boito
Gavan McCormack
Avishai Ehrlich
Doug Henwood
Bill Fletcher Jr.
Stefan Kipfer, Parastou Saberi
Lesley Wood
Reg Whitaker
Andreas Karitzis

China, India, and closely connected dreams

We advocate fostering a community of a shared future with neighbouring countries. In this context, we regard the China-India relationship as one of the most important bilateral relationships for us — Li Yuanchao, vice-president of china.

It is my pleasure to pay an official visit to India at the invitation of Mohammad Hamid Ansari, Vice President of the Republic of India and Chairman of the Rajya Sabha. I would like to take the opportunity to extend my sincere greetings and best wishes to the great people of India.
LI YUANCHAO
As an ancient civilisation, India has been world-renowned for its profound philosophy and splendid culture, which made great contributions to human development. As an emerging country, India’s widely acclaimed economic growth and social vitality have secured this country an influential position in the world. Past and present glories have come together to lend strength to India’s ambitious march towards national prosperity. On the other side of the Himalayas, the Chinese nation has also written its own chapter in the history of human civilisation and created thriving miracles. Throughout history, the Chinese and Indian civilisations have maintained exchanges and learned from each other. With the East’s unique wisdom and charm, the two nations have jointly erected powerful pillars for the civilisation of the East, and contributed their share to world peace and development.
Old civilisational ties

China and India’s friendship dates back to ancient times. As the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore put it, “China and India are very old and beloved brothers.” Over the past 2,000 years and more, there have been numerous tales and legends about the friendly exchanges between the two countries, such as the white horse carrying Buddhist scriptures from India to China, Monk Xuanzang’s pilgrimage to the West, and Chinese navigator Zheng He’s expedition. All these are testament to our friendship as good neighbours. The ancient Silk Road, bustling with merchants and coaches, brought such Chinese and Indian inventions as papermaking, sugar-making and numbers to the wider world. Chinese and Indians learned from each other and together drove Asia’s progress, setting a fine example of inter-civilisational exchanges.
Since modern times, China and India had gone through similar sufferings and supported each other. We realised national independence and liberation, pioneered the liberation movement of Asia, Africa and Latin America — changing the world map of the colonial era once and for all — and strengthened the unity of the Third World countries. In the 1950s, China and India, together with other Asian countries, jointly initiated the Five Principles of Peaceful Co-existence and turned them into basic norms governing international relations, thus making historic contributions to building a new type of international relations based on equality.
A blessing to the world is the simultaneous development of China and India. In recent decades, China and India have seized the opportunities of economic globalisation and technological revolution and embarked on the fast track of development, driven by reform and innovation. Not only have we improved the livelihoods of 2.5 billion people, but we have also become twin engines propelling the economic development of the world. Since the turn of this century, China and India have established and developed strategic and cooperative partnership for peace and prosperity, and explored a way to achieve harmonious co-existence by actively expanding cooperation and effectively managing differences at the same time. China-India relations have become an anchor of regional peace and stability. In recent years, as the two largest developing countries and major emerging economies, the two countries have maintained close communication and coordination, taken an active part in global governance, firmly upheld the common interests of developing countries in major global issues, and made common appeals for building a more just and equitable international order.
A win-win cooperation between China and India has broad prospects. President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Keqiang, and other Chinese leaders have met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other Indian leaders on many occasions, during which they reached important consensus on forging an even closer partnership for development. This has charted the course for a growing bilateral relationship. President Xi pointed out that China and India need to become closer cooperation partners for development, growth, and global strategic coordination. Prime Minister Modi said that China and India are “two bodies, one spirit”. The Chinese people now are striving to achieve the two centenary goals, and the Chinese dream of great national renewal, while the Indian people are working hard to realise the objective of national revitalisation. Both the Chinese dream and Indian dream are closely connected and complement each other. As the second and ninth largest economies, respectively, China and India have a combined GDP of over U.S. $12 trillion and a huge market with one third of the world’s population. The Chinese economy has been steadily upgraded, while the Indian economy has entered a phase of fast growth. The two countries enjoy significant mutual complementarity and huge potential for cooperation.
China is committed to peace, development and win-win cooperation, and adheres to the policies of building friendly relations and partnerships. We advocate fostering a community of a shared future with neighbouring countries. In this context, we regard the China-India relationship as one of the most important bilateral relationships for us.
We are ready to work together with India in line with the consensus between our leaders to increase strategic mutual trust, deepen traditional friendship, and work for faster and greater development of China-India relations.
We are ready to synergise our development strategy with that of India, take forward our respective national development, and facilitate regional and world development and prosperity with our own development.
We are ready to renew our friendly exchanges with India to encourage affinity between the two civilisations and create a new boom in learning about each other’s culture. This will help revive our ancient inter-civilisational exchanges and mutual learning on a larger scale, and in more areas.
Going forward, China and India will continue to be the two major forces calling for a multi-polar world and the main engines driving world economic growth. China and India should carry forward oriental wisdom and traditional friendship for closer cooperation. I am convinced that with our joint efforts, both the countries will embrace an even brighter future, and contribute more Asian wisdom to peace and development of the region and the whole world.
(Li Yuanchao is the Vice-President of the People’s Republic of China)

Challenge before law and society

By talking of the need for comprehensive legislation to deal with the rehabilitation of victims of rape and the inheritance rights of children born out of the crime, the Allahabad High Court has flagged issues that are yet to be fully dealt with in Indian law. The present body of law and judicial pronouncements on rape do deal comprehensively with various aspects of rape as a crime, including compensation to the victims, but on the question of rehabilitation the court says legislation “is not up to the mark”. While disposing of a case relating to the minor victim of rape and her newborn girl child, the court has mixed practical wisdom and humaneness with a wider societal concern over a phenomenon that has begun to greatly engage the nation’s conscience in recent times. On the practical side, the Bench has gone by the 13-year-old survivor’s wish that the infant be given in adoption, and asked the Uttar Pradesh government to take care of her psycho-social needs, including her future education and employment. The State’s Rani Laxmi Bai Mahila Samman Kosh, a medical and monetary relief scheme for women victims of crime, was available to compensate her. It is on the legal and social issues arising out of the victim’s plight that the court has gone beyond the limitations of the case before it and looked for solutions. It has adopted the common sense reasoning that the inheritance right of the newborn to the property of her biological father will be as per the personal law governing her. For, inheritance rights operate irrespective of the manner of birth, that is, whether born out of wedlock, consensual sex or otherwise. In other words, the child would be treated as an illegitimate child of the biological father.
However, the court did not find it necessary to give a specific direction in the present case regarding the child’s property rights, as she is likely to be given away in adoption. Instead, it has chosen to canvass the need for the legislature to deal with it, as it may not be wise for judicial norms to be laid down withregard to the inheritance right of a minor born out of rape. The court has highlighted the absence of adequate research into the various issues arising out of rape and the need for a data bank based on which informed laws could be made. For instance, a comprehensive study on rape victims may help society formulate its approach to rehabilitation of rape survivors. It is now up to the legislature to introduce provisions that will both address their rehabilitation needs and secure the future of children born out of the crime. The Allahabad High Court verdict is a timely and useful reminder that in a country with a grim record of sexual offences, ensuring a life of dignity to rape survivors is not easy. Law and society will have to meet this challenge.

90% of Indian varsities have outdated curriculum: CNR Rao

Eminent scientist and Bharat Ratna awardee CNR Rao believes that 90 per cent of the universities and higher educational institutions in the country have outdated curriculum, keeping them from making into the top institutes of the world.
“90% of the universities in our country have outdated curriculum. We talk about increasing funds, increasing infrastructure but there is no improvement in the content we are teaching in our hi-tech classrooms,” Rao said on Wednesday during the ongoing Visitor’s Conference at the Rashtrapati Bhawan.
“One of the major reasons behind why Indian institutions don’t make it to the top 100 universities in the world. There are lot of Indian students abroad who want to study in our country and come back but there are no quality colleges to offer them the same kind of environment and education,” he said.
Maintaining that Indian institutions need to improve, Rao, who is currently serving as the Head of the Scientific Advisory Council to the Prime Minister, also asserted that the talent search in the country is “marginal”.
“Talent search in our country has always been marginal. We teach our students what Newton and Faraday did but there is no mechanism to look out for similar talent in interiors of the country,” he said.
Rao also called for eliminating the bureaucratic hassles in the education system.
“You want to introduce a course, institute a fellowship, establish an exchange programme, utilise the already allocated funds... there are so many laws, too many bureaucratic rooms. I think that process should be simplified,” he said.
Heads of 114 institutions where President Pranab Mukherjee is the visitor are participating in the three-day Visitors’ Conference which started on Wednesday.
The subjects that will be deliberated upon during the conference include creating inter-linkages of Industry-Academia, interfacing with ranking agencies, providing impetus to research and innovation in educational eco-system, establishing international networks and workforce sustainability, among others.
Also addressing the conference were Nobel laureate Kailash Satyarthi and renowned geneticist MS Swaminathan.
“Though the introduction of Right to Education (RTE) has contributed to a significant progress in the sector but lack of three things - inclusion, quality and equity, are still roadblocks in ensuring progress at the ground level,” Satyarthi said.
Swaminathan, known as ‘Indian Father of Green Revolution’, called for developing courses in “Sustainability Science” in all the institutions.
Source: Hindustan Times, 6-11-2015
There Are Many Ways To Overcome Fear


We've recently had several conversations with friends who commented on fear being so prevalent today in the general consciousness. “Fear of what?“ we asked.“Everything,“ they said. “Losing jobs, going broke, violence, relationships ...“Fear shuts down our life force. Like depression or other problems that inhibit the flow of positive energy , fear starts a negative cycle that becomes selfreinforcing ­ decreased energy causes decrease in will which, in turn, reduces our energy even further. Fortunately , there are ways to reverse this cycle.
In theory at least, it is easy to overcome any problem: Simply put out equal or greater energy in the opposite direction. The best way to cancel a negative tendency is to develop its positive counterpart. To overcome fear, develop faith or non-attachment.
Start with small steps. Concentrate first on simply increasing the flow of physical energy . Exercise daily, do some deep breathing, and practice the Energisation Exercises that Paramhansa Yogananda taught.
Then apply your increased energy to overcoming fear. Think of fear like a wildfire in the brain. Stomp out the small sparks right away before they have time to start a conflagration.
Most fear centres around losing something you value. The more you develop non-attachment, the less vulnerable you will be. Every night, before you sleep, give all your possessions and desires back to God. Make Him responsible for your wellbeing and security . In the morning you can have the responsibility back again if you want.
Replace fear thoughts through the use of affirmation. Here is an affirmation for courage tha is an affirmation for courage that Swami Kriyananda suggests in his book, Affirmations for Self-healing: “I live protected by God's infinite light. So long as I remain in the heart of it, nothing and no one can harm me,“ followed by this beautiful prayer: “I look to Thee for my strength, Lord. Hold me closely in Thy arms of love. Then, whatever happens in my life I shall accept with joy .“
Use this affirmation just before you go to sleep and immediately when you wake up. Say it several times with deep sinceri ty, driving it into the subconscio usness, and then finally lifting it into the superconsciousness. It will become a powerful ally to help you drive out fear.
Fear originates in parts of the primitive brain that are pre-verbal. Visualisation helps re-programme reactive processes in these areas.Visualise yourself bathed in a golden light that both protects and strengthens you. See the light especially bright in your heart centre, radiating away all little dark clouds of attachment and anxiety . The more clearly and power fully you visualise, the more quickly the light can change your very brain cells.
Here is a final tool to change thought habits: Give to others that which you want for yourself. In this case, give love and security to others. Look for at least two opportunities each day to allay fear in someone else.
One of the opportunities should be for a friend or loved one. But the other, if possible, should be for a stranger. This practice unleashes the infinite power of the law of karma and the Golden Rule, which advises us to give unto others that which we would like to receive ourselves.
Remember, that God's infinite love and protection already surrounds you.Your job is simply to recognise its presence and let it work its magic. As Paramhansa Yogananda said, “To those who think me near, I will be near.“

Thursday, November 05, 2015

India 92 in education among 142


India ranks 92 in education among 142 countries that have been assessed in numerous sectors,the Legatum Prosperity Index 2015 stated.
The country, though, is nowhere near the top 10 countries when it comes to economy, entrepreneurship and opportunity, governance, education, health, safety and security, personal freedom and social capital. As per the Legatum Prosperity Index 2015, India ranks 99 in these sectors.
Education is an essential thing for developing any country. Many other countries are surging ahead such as Malaysia 51, Sri Lanka 59, and Philippines 76 etc.
The Legatum Prosperity Index is an annual ranking, developed by the Legatum Institute, of 142 countries. The ranking is based on a variety of factors including wealth, economic growth, education, health, personal well-being, and quality of life.
List of Top 10 Countries in Education Sector as per the Legatum Prosperity Index 2015:
Iceland
United States
Ireland
Finland
New Zealand
Norway
Netherlands
Denmark
Canada
Australia

Source: Elets News Network (ENN) Posted on November 4, 2015 -