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Thursday, April 21, 2016

Earth day: Faiths groups take climate change seriously



Tomorrow is a day when many people in India and around the world will be thinking about the Earth and our environment.
For many Catholics, people of all faiths and none, April 22 is international Earth Day. It is also the day when heads of state and government representatives gather in New York to renew their vows to the Paris Agreement, which they signed last December as a pledge to end the fossil fuel era.
This should be a day to celebrate the world; however, the current state of our planet means we must rather bemoan its condition and act to rectify them.
Almost a year on from the Pope’s Encyclical, Laudato Si, which I invite everyone to read, how much has the world and India changed? Pope Francis wrote that, due to pollution and climate change, ‘our home is beginning to look more and more like an immense pile of filth’. Step outside in India, and often you will be breathing some of the dirtiest city air on the planet. Talk a walk through our towns and villages, and you will see the foulness of our rivers.
Of course, there are reasons for optimism. The Paris Agreement on climate change has been signed. The government’s ambitious targets for renewable energy sources such as solar and wind are noble, and worldwide renewable energy investments are increasing at an astonishing rate. With the cost of solar energy plummeting, the situation can only get better. And Delhi has recently trialed its car pollution-reduction scheme to great success.
This is simply not enough, however. A recent report stated that India has the world’s highest number of people without access to clean water – a staggering 76 million. Droughts are currently crippling several Indian states. Six of the world’s ten worst polluted cities are Indian — their citizens are breathing air that’s up to 15 times dirtier than what is considered healthy. Immorally, it is of course the poor who have contributed least to these problems that are worst impacted. For their sakes, the burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil and gas, coupled with unabated and unplanned urbanisation, must cease soon as possible. Twenty-one countries have already proven that it is possible to reduce greenhouse gas emissions while keeping the economy growing — India could be among them, but is not.
That is why, on April 18th, together with over 260 other faith leaders, I signed a declaration calling on heads of state to implement the Paris Agreement as soon as possible, and urging the swift phase-out of fossil fuel subsidies as part of a transition to using 100% renewable energy by 2050. Faith communities are already working hard to alleviate many of the world’s problems, but we can do even more by reducing emissions in homes, workplaces and centres of worship, and to divest from fossil fuels and invest in renewable sources of energy.

Together, people of all faiths and none, let us therefore strive to make this April 22nd a reminder of how humanity is abusing our planet, a gift from God.


Source: Hindustan Times, 21-04-2016


For A Sustainable Solution to Drought


Think & act beyond immediate drought relief
The government has informed the Supreme Court that a quarter of India's population is affected by drought. Why the judiciary gets involved in something that clearly is in the domain of the executive is a valid discussion we defer for now. The government also apprised the court of its remedial measures. The urgent always gets precedence over the important. The important thing to do is to plan for optimal utilisation of the water resources India has, and India has just 4% of the world's water while it has 18% of the world's population.India allows most of the bounty of the two monsoons it gets to drain away to the sea. It must build more dams, big, small and tiny , to store a much larger proportion. Vidarbha gets more rain than the drier parts of Gujarat, but has not bothered to carry out water harvesting as Gujarat has, and so suffers. India needs a policy for national, integrated use of water across the country , based on equitable water entitlements of all Indians, overriding upp er riparian chauvinism. Such an in ternal model would help India's and other nations' claims against upper riparian chauvinism over the waters of rivers that originate outside the na tional borders. Canals and pipelines should be planned to make equitable access to water a reality. Water, as well as power that is used to extract water, must shed their subsidy , to prevent overuse. If these subsidies are removed, water-guzzling crops will become non-competitive in water-deficient areas: sugarcane will shift from Maharashtra to Bihar and eastern UP . Archaic flooding of fields must give way to drip irrigation and fertigation. Capital-intensive farming will call for economies of scale and, therefore, for allowing leasing of farmland. For this to be viable, firm titles to land must be guaranteed by the state. Industry must learn to recycle all the water it uses, and strive for zero net use of water.
All this is doable, with sufficient political will and leadership. An informed public discourse will help build the consensus needed to make these bold changes to policy. Stop hyperventillating over IPL.

Source: Economic Times, 21-04-2016
Save & Shut Those Files


We need to click the mouse on the filename if we wish to open it. Otherwise, the file is safely tucked away , part of the many seldom-opened files in the mental computer. However, something in each one of them remains to be finished. It may be an apology that was due. Or an unwillingness on our part to accept a loss.Maybe a part of the mind continues to deny the reality of that particular event. The merest twinge of regret about a past event -`Why didn't I qualify for that post?' -is enough to bring it periodically into our focus. That niggling file is always open in the mental computer screen. All it takes is a lull in the external hub of life for the file to flash painfully across our relentless monitors.As sole operators of the `files' that trouble us, we have it in our power to `complete' those files and also save them in that folder tucked away in the recesses of the mind. But first, we will have to let go of some of the pride, hurt, guilt, resentment or whatever is coming in the way of our `completing' that file. We will have to embrace the loss, be it of a person, possession or our own self-image.
Far more important than any external manifestation of our closing that file is our own inner total acceptance of all that it throws up within us. So each time you are haunted by an unpleasant memory recognise that it's unfinished business that you still have. Make use of the present to close the past.
Want a long life? Cut down your sitting time by 71 min
London
PTI


Office-goers, take note! Reducing sitting time at workplace by 71 minutes per day may lower the risk of heart diseases, diabetes and allcause mortality , a new study has claimed. Researchers conducted a multicomponent work-based intervention to reduce sitting time and prolonged sitting periods.The results, which were followed up at one month and three months, showed a reduction of 0.61percentage points in body fat percentage. This was as a result of 71minutes shorter sitting time during working hours after one month.
“A reduction in sitting time by 71 minutes per day and increases in interruptions could have positive effects and, in the long run, could be associated with reduced risk of heart diseases, diabetes and allcause mortality , especially among those who are inactive in their leisure time,“ said Janne Tolstrup from University of Southern Denmark.
As many as 317 office workers in 19 offices across Denmark and Greenland were randomly put into the intervention or control groups. The intervention included environmental office changes and a lecture and workshop, where workers were encouraged to use their sit-stand desks.By wearing an accelerometre device, researchers were able to measure results across a five day working week.
The findings were published in the journal International Journal of Epidemiology.



Source: Times of India, 21-04-2016
Study reveals poor state of medical research


60% Of Institutes Don't Have A Single Publication In 10 Years, Only 4.3% Produced Over 100 A Year
A handful of institutes, a majority of them publi cly-funded, account for the bulk of research output from medical institutions in India. At the other extreme, nearly 60% of institutes did not have a single publication over a decade. Moreover, states that have the largest number of private medical colleges produce very little of research publication.This was revealed in a study on the research output of all institutions in India during 2005-14 using Scopus, the largest database of peer-reviewed literature. The evaluation done by Dr Samiran Nundy, gastrointestinal surgeon and dean of Ganga Ram Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research, along with two colleagues, looked at 579 institutes recog nised by the Medical Council of India (MCI) and the National Board of Examinations (NBE), which conducts the largest portfolio of examinations in medicine in India.
According to the study published in `Current Medicine Research and Practice', only 25 (4.3%) of the institutions produced more than 100 papers a year and these accounted for 40.3% of the country's total research output.Over 57% or 332 of the medical colleges did not have a single publication during this period while over 90% of NBE-affiliated colleges in Karnataka and Kerala had none.
The annual research output of the Massachusetts General Hospital and Mayo Clinic in the US was over 4,600 and 3,700 respectively.Even the most prolific research institution in India, AIIMS, published less than a third of these numbers. The top 10 medical institutes under MCI were AIIMS, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research in Chandigarh, Christian Medical College in Vellore, Sanjay Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Medical Sciences in Lucknow, King George Med ical College in Lucknow, Kasturba Medical College in Manipal, Tata Memorial Centre in Mumbai, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bangalore, Institute of Medical Sciences of Banaras Hindu University , and Maulana Azad Medical Col lege in New Delhi. These accounted for 40.8% of the research output from the 579 medical institutions. The top 25 institutes under NBE, all private, contributed just 5.6% .
Overwhelming clinical burden leaving little time for academic activities is often cited as the reason for this state of affairs. “This is belied by the fact that the most prolific Indian publications come from institutions that also deal with the largest numbers of patients. This is also true of many of the world's great hospitals, which along with providing a high standard of patient care are also leaders in publication,“ observed the study .
It said lack of guidance and absence of role models among seniors, who themselves have published little, were major factors as was inadequate institutional support in the form of funds and infrastructure. However, the lack of incentives to do research and publish could be an even more important factor, since most faculty promotions in India are usually time-bound, based on seniority and influenced by political and bureaucratic `contacts', rather than on researching and publishing, the study noted.
The policy of increasing the number of doctors by liberally allowing the creation of new medical institutions, mainly through private funding and enhancing seats has not been an unqualified success with what is generally perceived as a fall in standards of medical education, “which has now become a business venture for many politicians and is accompanied by widespread corruption both in its entry and exit processes“, the study said, while calling for an overhaul of the medical education system.

Source: Times of India, 21-04-2016

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents


Vol. 51, Issue No. 16, 16 Apr, 2016

Editorials

50 Years of EPW

Law and Society

Commentary

Budget 2016–17

Book Reviews

Perspectives

Special Articles

Notes

Discussion

Current Statistics

Postscript

Appointments/programmes/announcements 

Letters

Web Exclusives

Reports From the States

High NAAC graders to enjoy Autonomy of Operations


In a major enabling move linking up NAAC grades to that of the sought after status of Autonomy, UGC recently announced that autonomy would be granted to colleges which get highest grades in the three assessment cycles, of the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC). The on-the-spot inspection by an expert committee has been done away with, which was mired with significant controversies and lack of objectivity.
The latest procedure envisages, a college to be accredited with the highest grade in two consecutive cycles. In addition, it should secure the highest accreditation grade in the third NAAC assessment cycle in order qualify for an autonomous status. The college would however have to obtain a no-objection certificate from the university, it is affiliated to.
Autonomy is considered to be a major milestone in an institution’s progress. Autonomy allows institutions to incorporate suggestions from students, industry experts as well as the alumni in their teaching learning processes. It also enables the institution to design the syllabus for different courses. Autonomy opens up the avenues for UGC funding under various heads as well.
digitalLEARNING View::
Linking the subsequent NAAC grades to a tangible milestone as autonomy is a substantial reform in a sector which was largely influenced and governed by subjective commentaries which were allegedly influenced at times. It would be difficult to do so with Consecutive expert committees year on year and would open up the vistas for objective data driven governance. These baseline reforms would certainly help bridge the innumerable fault lines existing in our higher education system refraining it from soaring high to its intended levels of quality and empowerment.
Source: Digital Learning