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Friday, January 04, 2019

Keep Out the Five Thieves


We try to protect our homes from intruders, but are we taking care to keep the five thieves of negative qualities from entering our inner home? They sneak into our being, causing us to be angry and be deceitful. They make us greedy and selfish. They cause us to be intolerant. They make us egotistical. They rob us of spirituality. How do we get rid of these thieves? When all else fails, prayer succeeds. Prayer is an act of humility. Simran, or repeating the name of God, can help chase away the five thieves. It can prevent anger from sneaking in. We will become calm and peaceful. The desire to be selfish will be replaced with an urge to help others. We will be filled with humility. Being in the presence of one who radiates spirituality can also change the tendency of our mind. Not only do we gain when we are in the company of saints, but through meditation on the inner Light and Sound of God, our mind is stilled and the soul remains unperturbed by wayward thoughts. It can stay concentrated on the inner Light and Sound long enough to transcend physical body consciousness. From there, it can soar into the divine regions within. We can find security by attending satsang. The benefit of satsang is that it is a place where we can leave our worries by the door. It gives our soul a chance to connect with the God-power within. The atmosphere in a satsang is so charged and wonderful that we can carry it back with us. It becomes an inner retreat where we can return to and find that still place within.

Source: Economic Times, 4/01/2019

Only 10 Indians on list of world’s 4,000 top scientists


 China 3rd On List With 482 Names

India boasts of eminent science and social science institutes like IISc, IITs, TIFR, JNU and Tiss. Yet, only 10 Indians figure among the world’s top 1% highly-cited researchers (HCR) in the two fields. To top it, some of the 10 are not from the country’s leading institutes. The list, comprising over 4,000 of the globe’s most ‘influential’ researchers has been released by firm Clarivate Analytics. Eminent scientist and former head of the scientific advisory council to the PM, CNR Rao, figures on the list. More than 80% of the names in the list, which covers over 60 countries, come from only 10 countries. Remarkably, 70% are from just five countries. Among institutions, Harvard University has the highest representation on the list, with 186 names. While India’s representation is negligible, China with 482 names is third on the list. The US tops the list with 2,639 names and the UK comes second with 546 names. JNU’s Dinesh Mohan, who figures on the list, said that till last year, less than five Indians would be on the list. “This year, they have included an additional category of ‘cross-field’, which took the number to 10,” he said. Rao said India must improve its quality of research, along with quantity to improve citations. “About 15 years ago, China and India were at the same level. But China contributes to 15- 16% of science in the world and ours is only about 3-4%,” he said. Ashok Pandey, from CSIR’s Indian Institute of Toxicology Research, is the only HCR from CSIR, which has a network of 5,000 scientists. “It is a matter of concern and needs to be addressed by the government, and stakeholders, including scientists,” he said. IIT-Kanpur professor Avinash Agarwal, who is on the list, said applied research does not get enough respect in a country like India, which is obsessed with fundamental research. “We need to improve our research ecosystem... Predatory journals, where you pay and publish, need to be penalised.” The other Indian names on the list are: Alok and Jyoti Mittal (a married couple; Jyoti is the only woman researcher on the list) from NIT Bhopal; Rajnish Kumar from IITMadras; Sanjeeb Sahoo from Institute of Life Sciences, Bhubaneswar; Rajeev Varshney from International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Hyderabad; Sakthivel Rathinaswamy from Bharathiar University, Coimbatore

Source: Times of India, 4/01/2019

Thursday, January 03, 2019

Indian Journal of Gender Studies


Table of Contents

Volume 25 Issue 3, October 2018

Focus on North East India

No Access
First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 331–350
No Access
First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 351–367
No Access
First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 368–383

Articles

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First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 384–409
No Access
First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 410–432

Research Note

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First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 433–438

Personal Narrative

No Access
First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 439–451

Book Reviews

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First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 452–455
No Access
First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 455–457
No Access
First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 457–458

New Resources

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First Published August 13, 2018; pp. 459–464

Breaking the stranglehold


There is scant focus on India’s secret shame: bonded labour

Last year, on December 22, an incident of bonded labour reached the national headlines, even if only for a fleeting moment. BJP president Amit Shah tweeted on the subject. A week earlier, 52 trafficked labourers had been rescued from a ginger farm in Karnataka where they had been made to work inhuman hours with little pay. Yet, for the most part, both the mainstream discourse and social media commentary miss the underlying phenomenon: bonded labour, India’s secret shame.
The practice was abolished under the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976 after the issue found a place in the Emergency-era’s 20-point programme. Four decades on, independent surveys and State government-led committees still point to its myriad forms. The Global Slavery Index 2016 estimated there to be 1.8 crore Indians in modern slavery, including bondedness, while the International Labour Organisation said there were 1.17 crore bonded labourers in 2014.
However, there has been no government-led nationwide survey since 1978, despite each district having been given Rs. 4.5 lakh for such surveys. Instead, the government relies on rescue and rehabilitation numbers: Since 1976, over 3.13 lakh people have been rescued, with Karnataka topping the list (nearly 66,300 people). This does not reflect the extent of the prevalence of bonded labour, as most labourers are not aware of the Act and turn to the authorities only when it becomes overtly violent.
Moreover, National Crime Records Bureau data show that not all cases are reported by the police. Between 2014 and 2016, they recorded just 1,338 victims, with 290 police cases filed — a stark difference from 5,676 rescues reported by six States in this period.
This becomes important given the structure of the disbursal of rehabilitation funds: Rs. 20,000 is given as immediate relief while the rest (which depends on the case) is given only after conviction of the accused. In these three years, only 28 cases (of the 334 in trial) saw judicial resolution, resulting in a conviction rate of just 32%. It is no surprise that the Centre has had to spend just Rs. 7.65 crore on rehabilitation in this period. Some patterns emerge. Traffickers continue to source labour in socio-economically backward districts, an example being Bolangir in Odisha. Tribals and Dalits remain vulnerable. Advances and small loans accompanied by promises of steady pay are tools of entrapment. Brick kilns, quarries, horticulture farms, shoe and plastic factories in metropolises are venues for this practice.
The Ministry of Labour says, “The root of the problem lies in the social customs and economic compulsions,” before listing a “multi-pronged” strategy which focusses solely on rescue and rehabilitation processes. However, a preventive measure, which must start with a survey, is missing. Creating financial access for vulnerable communities/vulnerable districts could help. Further, regulatory attention must focus on trafficking rings and sectors.
The writer is a Principal Correspondent at The Hindu’s Bengaluru bureau
Source: The Hindu, 3/01/2019

Religion vs religious nationalism


The starting point for anti-Hindutva politics must be the distinction between Hinduism and Hindutva. Else, it’s doomed

Any rigid secular approach, unrestrained by considerations of electoral politics, could only lead to disapproval of Congress president Rahul Gandhi’s demonstration of his religious faith and his characterisation of the Congress as a “party of Hinduism”. His approach has been widely termed “soft Hindutva”, and as an attempt to compete with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in its game. Those who deride Hindutva and those who swear by it both consider Mr. Gandhi a poor imitator of it. Centrist politics by definition is vulnerable to criticism from radical perspectives of different hues — for instance, Marxist M.N. Roy, Dalit leader B.R. Ambedkar and Hindutva proponent, and later his assassin, Nathuram Godse, were all critical of Mahatma Gandhi’s ideas of Hinduism. What is worth a closer analysis in the current context is the suggestion that the invocation of Hindu symbols for electoral gains is Hindutva, albeit a softer version.
A clear trajectory
Mainstream Indian nationalism and Hindu nationalism shared a range of symbols and personalities during their formative decades, and distinguishing one from the other can appear a challenging task often. Consolidation of the Hindu society was a preoccupation of several reformists and leaders of the struggle for independence, who were not linked to Hindutva. In a classic essay written in the 1990s, at the peak of the Ram Janmabhoomi movement, historian Sumit Sarkar marked the stages of the evolution of Hindu nationalism in two distinct phases: first from the use of the word Hindu as a geographical marker to ‘Hinduism’, an attempt to codify the cultural and religious practices, and then to Hindutva. Swami Vivekananda was the seer of the first shift. “Of the Swami’s address before the Parliament of Religions, it may be said that when he began to speak it was of the religious ideas of the Hindus but when he ended, Hinduism had been created,” wrote Sister Nivedita, the Swami’s closest disciple. Three decades later Veer Savarkar, who invented Hindutva, did not merely seek to unify Hindus, but tried to achieve it by imagining the other as those who do not consider India their sacred land. While secular nationalism’s adversarial image was imperialism, the edge in Savarkar’s Hindutva was against Muslims and Christians. Vivekananda’s Hinduism had no enemy figure.
The political rise of Hindutva has been directly proportionate to the success of its proponents’ attempts to equate itself with Hinduism.
The Gandhi-Nehru way
For Gandhi, Hinduism was the essence of his existence, but even the avowedly secular Jawaharlal Nehru was not dismissive of faith and tradition. The Discovery of India draws from sacred texts and beliefs; “though I have discarded much of past tradition and custom… yet I do not wish to cut myself off from that past completely,” he wrote in his will, asking for some of his ashes to be immersed in the Ganga.
The vertical rise and the horizontal spread of Hindutva challenge its opponents to devise new political idioms. A puritan view is that Hindutva can be challenged only with an unyielding secular paradigm, devoid of Hindu symbols. Those leaders and parties that are directly involved in electoral politics are more conflicted on these questions than those who have the convenience of a quarantined approach. In the early 2000s, when critics began to use the neologism saffronisation to describe the A.B. Vajpayee government’s policies that advanced Hindutva, within the Congress there was a debate on the wisdom of it. A.K. Antony and Digvijay Singh vehemently opposed the expression, arguing that it amounted to legitimising the Hindutva agenda given the cultural association of the colour saffron with sacrifice and renunciation. The Congress discontinued use of the word.
Other parties too have used Hindu symbolism and terminology. Rashtriya Janata Dal leader Lalu Prasad, whose mastery of electoral politics broke the Hindutva momentum in Bihar, connects his community to Lord Krishna. “Haathi nahin Ganesh hai, Brahma Vishnu Mahesh hai (this is not merely an elephant, but is Lord Ganesh; and Brahma Vishnu Mahesh)” was the Bahujan Samaj Party’s 2005 slogan referencing its election symbol, the elephant. Groups associated with the Communists Party of India (Marxist) in Kerala recently organised events around Ramayana month. “The Sangh has created a particulate image of Ram, that a majority of the faithful do not relate to,” said V. Sivadasan, CPI(M) State committee member, who was closely associated with the programme. “Given this context, it is the duty of the secularists to come in support of the believers who understand Ram different from the way the RSS (Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh) tries to make him. All secular people have this responsibility to help protect the plurality of faith that exists among religious people.”
Whether or not these attempts add up to a robust and credible challenge to Hindutva is an open question. However, the notion of ‘soft Hindutva’ is detrimental to anti-Hindutva polemics and mobilisation.
For one, it ignores the tactical components of electoral politics, which the moralist might dismiss as opportunism, for good reasons. What is more critical is that the notion of expressive faith as ‘soft Hindutva’ is an inadvertent endorsement of the Hindutva claim that it is equivalent to Hinduism. The proponents of Hindutva also acknowledge the existence of ‘hard’ and ‘fringe’ elements within its fold. Categories of soft and hard, being relative terms, trick moderates and offer an alibi to opportunists to side with the softer versions — Vajpayee against L.K. Advani, Mr. Advani against Narendra Modi, and who knows, perhaps Mr. Modi against Yogi Adityanath in the future?
Any equivalence between Hinduism and Hindutva, conversely, is taken to mean that any criticism of Hindutva is an attack on Hinduism. That one could be accused of being anti-Hinduism for questioning the logic of building a temple on the site of a destroyed mosque at Ayodhya draws from the logical premise of likening Hinduism to Hindutva. To take another example, the Hindu American Foundation claimed recently that even the questioning of ‘Brahminical patriarchy’ is a an act of Hindu-phobia.
To Hindutva’s advantage?
And most consequentially, any polemical negation of the wall between Hinduism and Hindutva makes the transition from the first to the second easier. It could even encourage believers to consider Hindutva their natural political abode, if they sense hostility in the anti-Hindutva camp. If non-Hindutva platforms expect temple-goers to explain their conduct, that is not an enticing recruitment pitch. The fact is that there are numerous people who visit temples and even believe in vastu, astrology, tantra, etc. while still being secular in a political and public context.
The only politics that benefits from associating Hinduism to Hindutva is Hindutva. The practice of Hinduism, even when it is exhibitionist and for political ends, is not Hindutva — soft or hard. Hindutva stands out for its conceptual clarity, leaving little scope for a spectrum within it. A manifesto for any durable anti-Hindutva politics is still a long way away, but its singular starting point is an assertion of the distinction between Hinduism and Hindutva. Anything else is doomed.
varghese.g@thehindu.co.in
Source: The Hindu, 3/01/2019

Think Big, Act Wisely And Show Results


At different times, we face different problems. At the individual level, they relate to health, emotions, relationships, marriage, children and career. At the national level, they pertain to poverty, unemployment, social unrest, education and corruption. These problems often bring us sorrow and pain. Yet, when honestly analysed, we find that their root cause is almost entirely a lack of proper thinking and acting. Wrong thoughts lead to a defective world vision and a chaotic relationship with it. The result is false expectations and disappointments at every step. If only we improve our thinking, we can mend our homes and make the world a better place to live in. Alas, many choose to suffer rather than to think! Caught up in the mesh of wrong thinking, their mental states are often coloured by prejudices and narrow-mindedness. The solution is to think big, act wisely and show results. The foremost need is for right thinking, leading to a clear vision of life. We should remove all barriers of pettiness and think big. Big things are achieved by first daring to mentally conceptualise them. Man dared to think that he could fly like a bird and the first flying machine was invented. He dared to think that he could reach the moon, and behold ... he landed there! Nothing is impossible for the one who thinks positive. Our thoughts can either bind us and make us small, or free us. So why not think big? This pertains not only to the individual but to the nation as well. Think about what is beneficial for the nation, what will bring forth national good. Swami Chinmayananda learnt the scriptures from his teacher. He turned his mind to how he could pass on this knowledge to people of the nation and the entire world. This is “Thinking Big”. Swami Vivekananda spent restless nights in America thinking of the welfare of India and the world. After “Thinking Big” through proper vision, one should then strive hard to act wisely. Swami Chinmayananda said, “Plan out your work, and work out your plan.” To act wisely is to act with proper understanding and a good attitude. The famous Serenity Prayer by Reinhold Niebuhr presents this beautifully: “God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” Sri Rama knew which situations to accept and where to take action. Without complaint or mental agitation, he accepted his exile in the forest for 14 years as the call of Dharma. However, when his wife Sitaji was kidnapped, he made a huge effort to get her back. Keep your head calm and balanced and act efficiently to show results. Strive to become a better human being and let the results be seen in the transformation of your personality. Purity, efficiency and wisdom should steadily grow. The result of our work should reflect in our environment and lead to harmony, beauty, and prosperity in society. Use all available opportunities to harness this inner potential, learn to break all barriers in thought. Use every opportunity to learn the secret of right action. Finally, get inspired and achieve greatness in the world within and without. We can. We must. We will. The writer belongs to Chinmaya Mission.

Source: Times of India, 3/01/2019

Wednesday, January 02, 2019

What is inflation targeting in economics


This refers to an approach to monetary policy where the primary mandate of a central bank is to manage the rate of price inflation in the wider economy. Economists who support inflation targeting believe that a stable inflation rate is essential to keep the economy fully employed while protecting the value of the currency at the same time. Central banks with an explicit inflation targeting mandate usually have a target range of inflation. They try to keep inflation within the target range by adjusting the economy’s money supply. The policy of inflation targeting, which was first introduced in some European countries in the 1970s, became a popular approach in the 1990s.

Source: The Hindu, 2/01/2019