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Monday, January 11, 2021

India's 'Institutions of Eminence' can now set up campuses in foreign countries

 Indian universities and colleges with the Institutions of Eminence (IOEs) tag, which include several IITs, will now be able to set up campuses in foreign countries with the University Grants Commission (UGC) issuing fresh guidelines on the same

The Education Ministry had launched the IoE scheme in 2018 as per which 20 institutions were to be selected -- 10 public and 10 private ones -- that would enjoy complete academic and administrative autonomy.

The new guidelines have been issued in line with the new National Education Policy (NEP) as per which foreign universities will be allowed to set up campuses in India and top Indian institutes in foreign countries.

According to the norms, IoEs shall be permitted to start a maximum of three off-campus centres in five years, but not more than one in an academic year.

They will, however, require approval from as many as three ministries -- education, home and external affairs -- before they can venture out.

“Institutions of Eminence...shall be permitted to set up new off-campus centres-maximum of three in five years and not more than one in one academic year by following the procedures,” according to the new guidelines.

“An institution willing to establish an off-campus centre shall have to submit an application to the Ministry of Education containing its 10-year ‘strategic vision plan’ and a five-year ‘rolling implementation plan’ which would include the plans for academics, faculty recruitment, student admissions, research, infrastructure development, finance and administration, etc,” it added.

The IoEs shall be permitted to start an off-campus centre in an interim campus, subject to the condition that the permanent campus shall be ready “within a reasonable time period not exceeding five years”.

“The institutes shall be allowed to start new off campuses with the prior approval of the education ministry after receiving no objection certificate from the ministry of external affairs and ministry of home affairs.“IoEs shall ensure that the norms and standards of offshore campus shall be the same as that maintained in the main campus for similar courses, and shall follow similar admission criteria, curriculum, exam and evaluation system," the guidelines said.

In the first lot, Indian Institutes of Delhi, IIT Bombay and the Bengaluru-based Indian Institute of Science (IISc) were awarded the IoE status in the public sector, and Manipal Academy of Higher Education and BITS Pilani in the private sector, while the Jio Institute by Reliance Foundation was given the tag in Greenfield category.

In 2019, five public institutions including Delhi University, Banaras Hindu University, University of Hyderabad, IIT-Madras and IIT-Kharagpur were granted the status.

A Letter of Intent for granting the IoE status was also issued to five private universities -- Amrita Vidyapeetham and Vellore Institute of Technology in Tamil Nadu, Odisha’s Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology, Jamia Hamdard University in Delhi and Satya Bharti Foundation's Bharti Instiute in Mohali.

While the government will provide funding upto 1,000 crore to public institutions with IoE tag, in case of the private institutions proposed as Institutions of Eminence, there will be no financial support. But they will be entitled to more autonomy as a special category Deemed University.

A proposed off-campus centre is expected to achieve a teacher-student ratio of 1:20 initially, and 1:10 by the end of five years.

“The faculty for this purpose shall include the regular faculty, adjunct faculty, overseas faculty, visiting faculty, contractual faculty, industry faculty and tenure track faculty or faculty as otherwise permitted by the Statutory Council concerned,” the guidelines said.

It adds that at least 60 per cent of the appointed faculty members should be on permanent basis. The institute should also have enrolled a minimum of 500 students on its rolls under regular classroom mode with one third PG/research students. PTI GJS TIR TIR.

Source: Hindustan Times, 9/01/21

Pay attention to the needs of the elderly

 About 45 million have cardiovascular diseases and hypertension; about 20 million suffer from diabetes; and 24% of the elderly have difficulty in performing daily functions

About 75 million elderly people in India suffer from chronic diseases, shows the first part of The Longitudinal Ageing Study in India (LASI), released last Wednesday. About 45 million have cardiovascular diseases and hypertension; about 20 million suffer from diabetes; and 24% of the elderly have difficulty in performing daily functions. With the demographic transition underway, from 9% in 2011, the 60-plus population is likely to go up to 20% in 2050.

The LASI study is a pressing reminder that India needs to invest substantial financial and human resources in geriatric care. Traditional support systems have weakened over the years due to fewer children in each family, increased employment opportunities for women, and the rise of nuclear families. According to another study by Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, there is no specialised training in geriatrics in most medical schools. And whatever little geriatric care is available, it is restricted to tertiary hospitals in urban areas and is prohibitively expensive.

The Centre’s National Programme for the Health Care of Elderly in 2011 promises preventive, curative and rehabilitative care, specialised training of health professionals, and aims to ensure full participation of the elderly in society. To meet this objective, geriatric health care services must be made part of the primary health care services. Importantly, as the PGIMER report says, the Centre must come up with a comprehensive preventive package, which provides awareness regarding common geriatric problems with a focus on nutrition, exercise, and the promotion of mental well-being.

Source: Hindustan Times, 10/01/21

Friday, January 08, 2021

Quote of the Day January 8, 2021

 

“Giving people self-confidence is by far the most important thing that I can do. Because then they will act.”
Jack Welch
“लोगों को आत्मविश्वास दिलाना ही सबसे ज़रूरी काम है जो मैं कर सकता हूं। क्योंकि तब वे स्वयं कर्म करेंगे।”
जैक वेल्च

Fight against pandemic taught me to listen more, value of collaborative leadership

 It is January 8 again, a year since the first meeting of the Joint Monitoring Group under the Director General Health Services was convened by director, emergency response, to formulate the government’s stand on COVID-19, a fast-emerging health threat then. A national task force with experts was also constituted.

Thus began India’s battle against a pandemic, which was not just a public health crisis but also one with economic and social consequences.

Backed by scientific advice and led by the Prime Minister, India’s proactive, pre-emptive and graded response exemplified the myriad fronts on which the central government coordinated policy and implementation across multiple departments and states.

The first advisory was received on January 17, 2020. DG, ICMR, colleague secretary in the ministry, always a phone call away, ensured that testing was arranged at the ICMR’s NIV laboratory. India’s first case came on January 30, a student returnee from Wuhan. Personally, till I handed over charge as health secretary to an able successor in end-July, these seven months were life changing. I had served as commissioner, disaster management, in the combined state of Andhra Pradesh, handled two cyclones, seven floods, a drought, and Zika and Nipah outbreaks, but this was unimaginably different. COVID was an evolving challenge, with no known “right way”, health infrastructure and human resources constraints, no treatment guidelines or training modules, high dependence on imports for essential protective equipment and testing probes/reagents. There was also an “infodemic” to counter.

These seven months taught me much — from lessons in humility to listening more than speaking, the value of collaborative leadership, and admiration for the selfless work of colleagues in central and state governments. I came away with respect and gratitude for the efforts of doctors, nurses, ASHAs, frontline workers, including police personnel and the armed forces, who apart from assisting in emergency operations, opened their facilities to civilians, compensating for infrastructure shortages. There was pride at the capability of our scientists and researchers, the pharma and related industry, which quickly re-engineered their processes to “Make in India” the essentials needed to fight the pandemic. Young journalists on the MoHFW beat kept awake all night to cover the news sent by our team, a media shy joint secretary became the face of the MoHFW. More importantly, I was filled with respect for our people who, ungrudgingly, made sacrifices, and a renewed faith in our resilience and ability to stand together.

Led personally by the PM, the states and the Centre worked in harmony to meet the COVID-19 challenge in a spirit of cooperative federalism. Regular interactions of the PM with the chief ministers, Group of Ministers chaired by the health minister, committee of secretaries under the Cabinet Secretary, 11 empowered groups led by secretaries/member/CEO NITI Ayog, and almost daily video conferences of the minister, secretary and officers of MoHFW with states, enabled a focused response.

Guidance for public health teams, health facilities and service providers and the lay public was given. Testing, quarantine and isolation norms were framed and surveillance and case management protocols drafted. Guidelines were issued for the use of protective equipment, maintaining essential non-COVID health services, wearing masks and maintaining do gaz ki doori. Free helpline numbers were set up for COVID-related queries, specifically for mental health issues. Training resources for volunteers and frontline workers were created via the iGOT platform and human resources were moblised through covidwarriors.gov.in. Safety net packages for the vulnerable were organised (PM Garib Kalyan Yojana, a Rs 1.70-lakh-crore relief package). Guidelines were also issued for highlighting the inspirational work of COVID health professionals, development of the Arogya Setu App, redesigning e-Sanjeevani for teleconsultation, uploading real-time testing data on the ICMR portal and indigenous manufacturing of Trunat and rapid antigen testing kits. Once an importer of PPEs, masks and ventilators, the country became an exporter of these items.

Today, with a population of 135 crore, we have a case fatality rate of 1.45 per cent, a recovery rate of 96.3 per cent, over 15 lakh isolation, 2.7 lakh oxygen and 80,557 ICU beds and 40,627 ventilators. From one lab at the beginning of the pandemic, the country has 2,305 labs, and an enhanced testing capacity of 12 lakh tests per day. Behind this is the untiring work of experts, search for global best practices and consensus-building across stakeholders.

On January 3, India approved two indigenously manufactured vaccines, concurrently making extensive arrangements to rollout the world’s largest vaccination drive. I am sure, as always, together we can.

Written by Preeti Sudan

Source: Indian Express, 8/01/21

YOUNG: Table of Contents

 Volume 29 Issue 1, February 2021


Articles

Full Access
First Published November 6, 2020; pp. 5–11
Open Access
First Published August 27, 2020; pp. 12–27
Open Access
First Published April 25, 2020; pp. 28–44
Full Access
First Published August 17, 2020; pp. 45–61
Full Access
First Published December 13, 2020; pp. 62–80
Open Access
First Published April 19, 2020; pp. 81–96

Draft Science, Technology and Innovation Policy Proposes Major Changes to India’s Open Access Culture

 On 2/01/2021, the Ministry of Science and Technology rolled out the draft version of the proposed Science, Technology and Innovation Policy. The process to have a new policy, subsequent to the 2013 one, was in the works since May 2020 (see here for our coverage of the same). And after a claimed 4 track process of consultations and “nearly 300 rounds of consultations with more than 40,000 stakeholders well distributed in terms of region, age, gender, education, economic status, etc” the present draft version of the policy is brought out for public consultation. The substantive portion of the policy is spread out in eleven chapters and for the purpose of this post we shall discuss the first chapter titled “Open Science”. It is to be noted – the Ministry of Science and Technology is concerned only with STEM type sciences, while research in social sciences seems to fall under the ambit of the Indian Council of Social Science Research, under the Ministry of Education. Therefore on the face of it, research in social sciences are not covered by this policy and it would thus be very pertinent to see whether the Ministry of Education will be joining this endeavour or not. As per the Press Release, the draft is open for comments till Jan 25, 2020 on email: india-stip[at]gov[dot]in 

Is Access now granted (read Open)? 

The draft policy places a lot of importance on Open Science and the need for publicly funded research to be inclusive and accessible. In pertinent part it states: 

“Open Science fosters more equitable participation in science through diverse steps like increasing access to research outputs, more transparency and accountability in research, inclusiveness, better resource utilisation through minimal restrictions on reuse of research outputs and infrastructure, and ensuring constant exchange of knowledge between producers and users of knowledge. It is important to make publicly-funded research output and resources available to all to foster learning and innovation. STIP aspires to build an ecosystem where research data, infrastructure, resources and knowledge are accessible to all.” (emphasis provided)

Open Access Portal: The policy proposes to establish an open access, interoperable portal called the Indian Science and Technology Archive of Research (INDSTA). The portal shall be dedicated “to provide access, specifically, to the outputs of all publicly-funded research (including manuscripts, research data, supplementary information, research protocols, review articles, conference proceedings, monographs, book chapters, etc.).” Notably, INDSTA is to also support text and data mining, querying and visualisations. 

Open Data: Importantly, the draft policy also proposes to make available all the data used in and generated from publicly funded research to the scientific community and public at large. The Policy suggests that all the data shall be available in Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR) terms. These guiding principles provide both machines and humans better ability to engage with the vast amounts of data that is being generated in scientific eco-systems. (More on FAIR principles can be read here.) 

It also states that wherever applicable, on the basis of grounds of privacy, national security and IPRs, data will be made available to the public, subject to anonymisation or redaction. Or if the same is not possible then, it will still be made available to “bonafide and authorized researchers”. While it is understandable that not all data can (or should) be made available, this does require clarity on what qualifies a researcher as a ‘bonafide’ researcher, what type of data is eligible for being kept away from the reach of the general public, etc. 

Post-Print Repositories: The policy calls for an important Open Access mandate on manuscripts coming from public funds. It states,

“Full text of final accepted author versions of manuscripts (postprints and optionally preprints) along with supplementary materials, which are the result of public funding or performed in publicly funded institutions, or were performed using infrastructure built with the support of public funds will be deposited, immediately upon acceptance, to an institutional repository or central repository”.

The draft doesn’t elaborate on this but this type of a requirement would also have the double benefit of pushing all public funded manuscripts away from publishing in ‘closed’ journals, which traditionally don’t allow post-prints (i.e., post peer review) to be shared in accessible manners. This institutional push away from ‘closed’ journal publishing is a huge step in itself – as such mandates may be the only way of getting around the high pressure academic publishing environment that often pushes (ie., forces) academics to publish in closed journals, based on impact factor and reputation, etc. And regarding the central repository – unlike Mendeley, SSRN etc, there is no question of a giant publisher acquiring this central repository since it would be a government repository. 

One Nation, One Subscription

The most notable feature of the policy is the call for one centrally negotiated subscription which will enable access to “all individuals in India”. While this would have huge repercussions, the draft policy currently doesn’t elaborate on much. The whole provision is reproduced below: 

The Government of India will negotiate with journal publishers for a “one nation, one subscription” policy whereby, in return for one centrally negotiated payment, all individuals in India will have access to journal articles. This will replace individual institutional journal subscriptions.”

It is laudable that such a radical proposal is being considered in a way that makes clear that the research communities’ concerns regarding access and excessive subscription fees have been heard. While this, if successfully implemented, would be a game changer for researchers in the country, a lot depends on how large the theory-practice gap is when this provision is sought to be converted from paper to practice. As noted in an earlier post – there is a strong need to question why so many people need to depend on shadow libraries in the first place – and this policy proposal goes right to the heart of that question – but in its current limited form, leaves many other questions open. 

Firstly – would journal publishers be open to such a proposal? While it would certainly make their job easier to just negotiate with one bulk governmental consumer, would it make business sense (read: profit maximisation) for them to provide access to ‘all individuals in India’ at one price? On the other hand however, is the fact that access to top scientific journals is an inelastic demand – i.e., at the end of the day, institutes need access to this if they want their researchers to be internationally relevant. And at this unprecedented scale of India-wide subscription level – will this end up with the Government just paying whatever ridiculous price the journals put forth? (relevant – see here and here). Another question is who will decide which journals are worth subscribing to, now? This is especially relevant since it also says this will replace individual institutional journals. (This would be presumably be more problematic in social sciences, where various other considerations could come into the picture but perhaps a less troubled, even if still a tedious issue within STEM sciences). Given market dynamics – if an individual / private institute wants/needs to subscribe to a journal outside of the government selected ones – is there a chance that these (non-subscribed) journals will now become even higher priced, since the only ones who go after them, will presumably have a higher demand for them? 

Regardless, much of the direction of this policy marks significant progress by the Indian government towards a culture of greater / open access. It also shows an understanding that public funded research is meant for the public (see here and here), as well as a desire to reach into the vast catalyzation potential that such access would provide. It now remains to see whether the next step of converting this to the implementation stage is one which is feasible or not. 

The Consultation Process

The consultation/ public participation in the background of the policy merits appreciation independent of the policy document. The policy discloses that close to 300 rounds of negotiation has occurred for its formation, since May 2020 till date. The participative model behind the policy is based on four interdependent tracks. 

  • Track I is concerned with creating a repository of public voices to guide the drafting process.
  • Track II is consulting 21 expert-driven thematic collectives for feeding evidence based recommendations in the drafting process.
  • Track III comprises of engaging with ministries through nominated nodal officers 
  • Track IV (a bit ambiguous)  engagement of apex-level multi stakeholder at national and global levels.

The independent organization Science Policy Forum (SPF) led the Track I initiatives and devised six instruments for fulfilling the commitments therein (more about these instruments can be found here).

Additional notes

The Open Science portion of the document also touches upon other important aspects, even if only briefly. It looks at infrastructural needs of the community by calling for libraries at public funded universities to be accessible to the public without undue hassle. It further endeavors to make ‘learning spaces’ universally accessible, “especially for people with special needs” and also seeks to enable the right of attribution, preservation and translations (especially in regional languages) of the publicly funded educational resources. The policy further highlights the need to improve awareness and accessibility of the Indian journals internationally, as well as the issue of predatory journals in India. To that extent, the limited text in the draft policy does seem to reflect a well rounded understanding of the problems of access in India. However, the devil is often in the details, and only when those details are available, will we know if the solutions also reflect an understanding of these problems. As mentioned above, the draft policy is laudable for its initiative to rattle the cage, however it is yet to be seen if the proposed ‘maverick-esque’ solutions have the needed teeth to take the proposed bite. 

 

Source: SpicyIP, 4/01/21

 

Current Affairs – January 8, 2021

 

India

EDUCON 2020

On January 7, 2021, the union Education Minister Ramesh pokhriyal nishank inaugurated at today virtual International Akhand conference EDUCON 2020. Theme:  envisioning education for transforming youth to restore global peace. The conference is organised by Central University of Punjab and global Educational Research Association .

Central sector scheme for Industrial development of Jammu and Kashmir

On January 6, 2021, the cabinet committee on economic affairs shared by Prime Minister Narendra Modi approved the proposal of department for promotion of industry and internal trade. The DPIIT proposed for the central sector scheme for Industrial development of Jammu and Kashmir.

Panel set up to look into issues of culture and language in Ladakh

On January 6, 2021, the ministry of home affairs announced that a panel has been set up under the chairmanship of Kishan Reddy to find solutions on the issues related to language, culture and conservation of land in the union territory of Ladakh due to developmental activities .

Free sanitary pads to high school and college girls by Punjab

On January 7, 2021, the Punjab Chief Minister Amrendra Singh announced a slew of welfare schemes. He also launched a scheme to provide free sanitary pads to high school and college girls. Also he launched the Basera program to give property rights to slum dwellers.

Telangana High Court gets first woman chief justice

on January 7, 2021, justice Hima Kohli was sworn in as the chief Justice of High Court of Telangana.

Satya Paul dies at 79

On January 6, 2021, the fashion designer Satya Paul passed away at the age of 79. He launched the first saree boutique in India L’Affaire.

GDP of India to decline by 7.7% in 2020- 21

The Ministry of statistics recently announced that the gross domestic product of India will shrink by 7.7 % in the financial year ending March 2021. Accordingly, the agriculture is projected to grow at 3.4 %, manufacture sector is to contract by 7.4%, transport, hotel and trade are projected to contract by 21.4%.

306 kilometre of Western dedicated freight corridor section dedicated to the nation

on January 7, 2021, the Prime Minister Narendra Modi dedicated 306-kilometre Rewari-Madar section of Western dedicated freight corridor.

World first double stack long haul 1.5 km long container train in India

on January 7, 2021, the Prime Minister Narendra Modi flagged off the first double stack long haul 1.5 km train hauled by electric traction.

Urban local bodies reforms by Telangana

after Madhya Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh telangana has become the third state to successfully undertaken the urban local body reforms stipulated by the Ministry of Finance. It has become eligible to mobilize additional financial resources of 2508 roads of rupees through open market borrowings.

World

US Capitol Building Protests

Four people died as supporters of President Donald Trump violently attacked the US Capitol.

US Congress certifies Joe Biden’s victory

on January 7, 2021, joint session of US Congress formerly certified the electoral victory of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.

US democrats take control of US Senate

the democratic party captured the control of Senate in the run off election in Georgia.

New York Stock Exchange delists three Chinese Companies

On January, 7, 2021, the NEw York Stock Exchange delisted three Chinese telecom companies.

Indian-American appointed as US Army first Chief Information Officer

The US Trade Representative concluded the digital taxes imposed on India, France, ITaly and Turkey against US Tech firms such as Facebook, Google, Apple and amazon.com.

China denies entry of WHO team investigating origin of COVID-19

China has denied the entry of WHO team to probe the origins of COVID-19.

Pakistan test fires rocket system

On January 7, 2021, successfully completed the test flight of an indigenously developed rocket system named Fatah-1. It is capable of delivering conventional warheads with a maximum range of 140 kilometres.