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Friday, January 27, 2023

Current Affairs-January 26, 2023

 

INDIA

  • India and Egypt signs a MoU to facilitate content exchange, capacity building, and co-productions between Prasar Bharati and National Media Authority of Egypt.
  • President has approved the conferment of 106 Padma Awards- 6 Padma Vibhushan, 9 Padma Bhushan and 91 Padma Shri Awards.
  • President of India approves 412 Gallantry Awards for Defence personnel.
  • 5.9-magnitude earthquake hits Western Nepal
  • Chief Justice of India D.Y. Chandrachud announced in open court that the Supreme Court will release 1,268 judgments in 13 Indian languages on Republic Day.
  • The Monument Mitra scheme will soon be revamped to enable private firms, to upkeep 1,000 ASI monuments.
  • Five to seven countries to sign up for adopting ‘India Stack’- India-developed technology platforms like UPI, DigiLocker and Aadhaar.

ECONOMY

  • Google announced it would change its Android and Play policies in India in order to comply with the CCI’s directives.
  • UN predicts India growth to moderate to 5.8% in 2023, in its World Economic Situation and Prospects 2023 report.
  • Tata-owned Air India rolls out a staff stock option plan.
  • Centre to release 3 million tonnes wheat to open market to tackle high prices.
  • RBI Proposes Stressed Assets Securitisation Framework for Quicker Resolution

WORLD

  • UNESCO designates Ukraine’s Odesa a World Heritage in Danger site
  • Australians are marking the 235th anniversary of British colonization;  Australia Day focuses on Black recognition in constitution.
  • North Korea locks down capital city Pyongyang over ‘respiratory illness’
  • Germany and the United States said they will send battle tanks to Ukraine.

SPORTS

  • Women’s IPL auction attracts Rs 4,670 cr in winning bids as the second most lucrative cricket leagu; Adani tops bidder list.
  • Hockey World Cup: Germany beat England and Netherlands defeat Korea to enter Semi-finals
  • Australian Open: Sania Mirza and Rohan Bopanna defeat American-British duo in mixed doubles semifinal.

Scholarship Alert: Seattle University announces scholarship for Indian students pursuing LLM Program, know the details here

 

The Remala Family Scholarship will provide a full-tuition scholarship to one Indian student each year so they can complete their degree



Meritorious Indian students with financial need will have support to secure a graduate law degree from Seattle University School of Law’s Master of Laws (LLM) Program, thanks to an endowment from the Satya and Rao Remala Family Foundation.

The programme – named the Remala Family Scholarship – will offer a full-tuition scholarship to one Indian student each year so they can complete their degree. The scholarship is open to academically bright students who demonstrate financial need. Apart from tuition, the scholars will receive academic and mentoring support.

“We are proud to support Seattle University School of Law’s efforts to build a bridge with India and its future law practitioners,” says Rao Remala, who leads the foundation with his wife, Satya. “The spirit of this scholarship aligns with our family foundation’s efforts to give aspiring Indian students access to first-rate higher education programs, so they can build better lives for themselves like I was able to do.”

“The Remala Family Fellows who receive these scholarships in the years to come will benefit from life-changing opportunities here at Seattle U Law to move their careers forward and benefit their communities. In addition, the presence of these outstanding scholars at Seattle University will enhance our intellectual life and deepen our engagement with India,” says Anthony E Varona, dean of the law school.

Seattle U Law’s LLM Program offers two options. A tech focused LLM in Technology, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship, enables lawyers and recent law graduates to develop specific expertise in a variety of legal areas, including privacy law, data and cybersecurity, Internet law and digital commerce, financial technology, and artificial intelligence. Also available is a general LLM in American Legal Studies, which serves foreign-trained lawyers and graduates of non-US law schools who want to learn US law and/or sit for qualifying exams to practice law in the United States.

“The globalised nature of commerce and technology in India means that attorneys need experience handling cross-border legal issues. Students in Seattle U law’s LLM Program gain valuable knowledge and training in these and other issues,” says Sital Kalantry, associate dean of graduate studies and international programs and associate professor of law.

The Remala Family Scholarship application is posted on Seattle U Law’s website. Students can follow the link at https://bit.ly/3G818vq

The India Center for Law and Justice, founded by Kalantry and based at Seattle U Law, promotes engagement with India through exchange programmes and the hosting of distinguished speakers and conferences of legal scholars and lawyers from India and the US. It has also spearheaded the development of innovative fast-track dual degree programmes with law schools in India – including Jindal Global Law School – where students are able to complete both an Indian law degree and an American law degree.


Source: Educationtimes.com, 5/01/23

Notable decline: India is degrading its public universities

 Last December, Harvard University announced the appointment of Claudine Gay as its 30th president, to assume the position in the summer of 2023. It is a momentous appointment as Gay, an African-American woman, will be the very first black president to lead America’s oldest university. Gay comes to the job after prestigious academic stints in the country’s elite private education system, at Harvard and Stanford, where she also took her graduate and undergraduate degrees, respectively. What is equally striking is that Gay is the daughter of Haitian immigrants who came to the United States of America with very little, and in her words, “put themselves through college while raising our family”, with her mother training as a registered nurse and her father qualifying as a civil engineer. And “it was City College of New York that made it possible,” Gay says. If she built her impressive academic and administrative career in elite private universities, not far behind them, just a generation away, stands the founding college of the public and widely inclusive City University of New York, known throughout its history for giving lives and careers to poor immigrants, members of the working class, and other members of society for whom the nation’s elite private university system remains distant for an array of reasons.

While the trajectory of Gay’s family story is more recognisable, I have personally witnessed the opposite journey too. In 2013, when I was teaching in the English department at Stanford, my senior colleague, Jennifer Summit, left a full professorship in the department to join the public and inclusive San Francisco State University as Professor and Dean of Undergraduate Studies. The daughter of a pioneer of the online search engine and a former mayor of the wealthy Los Altos Hills in the San Francisco Bay Area, Summit left a life of elite scholarship to pursue her mission to champion public education in California at SFSU, where she now serves as the provost. 

Society celebrates stories like Gay’s family more than the kind of service narrative exemplified by Summit, but for me, the former brought up the memory of the latter as a reminder of the strong symbiotic current that runs between the public and private university systems in the US, notwithstanding the wide gulf between them. The American university, the product of a great historical serendipity in the 19th  century, was brought about by the unexpected coming together of three very different institutions: the British undergraduate college, the American land-grant college, and the German research university. The popular, the practical, and the elite — that is how the education historian, David Labaree, characterised the three forces, respectively, identifying the populist nature of undergraduate social life, the community-facing nature of the land-grant college, and the elite global appeal of the research university.

Notwithstanding the serious crisis that the US university faces today in the face of declining student enrolment and skyrocketing tuition cost, since the early 20th century, it has been the global leader in higher education. The powerful symbiosis and wide, sometimes hidden, networks of relationship between the private and the public system, indicative of America’s high social mobility — have contributed much to the overall excellence of a system that benefits as much from the achievements of its Nobel laureates as from the popularity of college football.

America’s system of elite private universities is unique. Higher education in most other countries in the world is defined by their public universities. Even Oxford and Cambridge, notwithstanding the vast property and real estate holdings of some of their colleges, are public universities. This is the system where most people learn and work. As I had, before joining Stanford — in public universities in India and the US, and the beginning of a teaching career in Canada, where all research universities are public. Teaching at McMaster University in Ontario, I negotiated federal and provincial bureaucracy and grant systems before experiencing the freedom and the wealth that private capital brings to the American university and the costs it extracts.

Even though I now teach at an ambitious private research and liberal arts university in India, I cannot help but see the privatisation of higher education in this country as unsettling — at once bizarre and instrumental, creating very little of the philanthropic culture of academic excellence and none of the public-private synergy that exists in the US where they bolster each other in spite of their differences. The vast public university system in India, much of which made the historical transition from a British colonial to a postcolonial socialist system, is now on the verge of destruction in the hands of unsympathetic governments at the Centre and in various states alike, including West Bengal. Classes are run by a hapless army of ad hoc teachers without benefits, State funding is drying up everywhere, including my alma mater, Jadavpur, while minority institutions such as Jamia Millia face disproportionate funding cuts by a hostile Central government. But with a booming youth population and an expanding middle class, higher education is big business that profiteers are keen to exploit, creating a host of private universities of dubious quality and distressing working conditions for its faculty and staff.

A few months before the onset of the Coronavirus pandemic, I spent a day speaking at the Bhagat Phool Singh Mahila Vishwavidyalaya, in Gannaur in Haryana’s Sonipat district. Many of the journeys scripted there, including those from Hisar to Sonipat, some of them  via  PhDs from Chandigarh and Kurukshetra, felt wider than continents — as did the trajectories of the students from remote corners of rural Haryana. But another trek also felt endless — that to nearby Ashoka University where I teach, an institution of genuine philanthropy in pursuit of global academic excellence that nevertheless cannot dream of doing a fraction of the kind of mass education BPS Mahila Vishwavidyala does with far scantier resources.

The sad truth is that to almost anyone in the middle-class and above, the public system of secondary education is already lost. This system is only left for those who cannot afford to send their children to private schools.

Please, as a nation, let’s not lose our public universities as well.


Saikat Majumdar 


Source: The Telegraph, 26/01/23

Friday, January 20, 2023

Quote of the Day January 20, 2023

 

“If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his head. If you talk to him in his language, that goes to his heart.”
Nelson Mandela
“आप किसी व्यक्ति से जिस भाषा को वह समझता हो उसमें बात करें तो बात उसकी समझ में आती है। लेकिन आप अगर उससे उसकी मातृभाषा में बात करें तो वह उसके दिल में जाती है।”
नेल्सन मंडेला

World Population Review

 The United States Census Bureau World Population Clock recently released its “World Population Review” report. According to the report, the world’s population (as of September 2022) was 7.9 billion. It is to reach 8 billion by November 2022. In 2015, the world population was 7.2 billion.

Key Findings of the Report

  • India and China were the only countries with more than 1 billion people.
  • China is the most populous nation in the world with 1.42 billion people.
  • The population of India is 1.41 billion. India is to overtake China and become the most populous nation in the world by 2030.
  • The population growth rate of the world is decreasing. It will reach zero by 2080-2100. After 2100, the growth rate will be negative.
  • Prediction made: By 2100, the world population is to reach 10.4 billion people.

Countries with more than 100 million people

Twelve countries in the world have more than 100 million people. They are as follows:

  • US: 338 million
  • Indonesia: 275 million
  • Pakistan: 236 million
  • Nigeria: 219 million
  • Brazil: 215 million
  • Bangladesh: 171 million
  • Russia: 144 million
  • Mexico: 127 million
  • Japan: 123 million
  • Ethiopia: 124 million
  • Philippines: 115 million
  • Egypt: 111 million

Of these twelve countries, the population of Russia and Japan is to decrease by 2050. But the population growth rate of the rest of the countries is expected to increase.

Countries with less than 100 million people

  • Vatican City is the least populated country in the world with a population count of 500 people.
  • Eighty countries have populations between 10 million and 99.9 million.
  • Sixty-six countries have populations between 1 million and 9.9 million.
  • Seventy-Four countries have a population of less than one million.

Population Growth rate

  • World Population growth rate: 140 babies are born every minute
  • The growth rate fell below 1% in 2020. This occurrence is the first since 1950.

Future Predictions

Half of the world’s population is expected to come from just eight countries. They are as follows:

  • India
  • Egypt
  • Ethiopia
  • Nigeria
  • Pakistan
  • Philippines
  • Tanzania
  • Congo

As fertility and birth rates are increasing in some African countries, their population is expected to double in the coming days. Another reason for the doubling is the decrease in malnutrition and infant mortality.

Life Expectancy

  • Global life expectancy has increased. It was 72.8 years in 2019. This is nine years longer than the expectancy in 1990. The global expectancy is expected to increase and reach 77.2 years by 2050.
  • Life expectancy is increasing because of the reduction of impacts of non-communicable diseases and AIDS.

Gender equitable world by 2030 is a distant dream

 n 1936, Reza Shah Pehlavi, stopped women from wearing the hijab which many believe ‘more to be in tune with the prevalent tradition and culture of the majority of women than on any devout religious beliefs’


I ran has erupted into a frenzy of protests once again with the rallying cries of ‘Women’, ‘Life, ‘Liberty’, in the aftermath of the custodial death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-yearold Kurdish-Iranian woman, arrested by the Iranian morality police for violations of the ‘hijab code’.

 In 1983, Ayatollah Khomeini introduced mandatory hijab wearing for women and girls above the age of nine in public places. Over the years, Iranian women underwent several restrictions, the latest being the government decree this year barring women’s entry into government offices, banks and in public transport without a complete hijab. 

While the headquarters of the office for the promotion of virtues and prevention of vices, with a renewed vigour embarked on facial recognition technology for tracking offenders, the ‘Morality Police’ took up increased patrolling, arrests and detentions. Under the Islamic Constitution, women in Iran are subjected to a slew of discriminatory civil and criminal laws which segregate them from men, punish them disproportionately, and deprive them of equal rights in personal freedom and family laws.

. Domestic violence is not a crime in Iran, while marital rape is legal. In most of the cases, victims of non-marital rapes are discouraged from reporting, and even if they venture to do so, they are often slapped with charges like adultery, which is punishable with execution. A US-based Iranian academic remarked that in ‘Iranian politics women’s body played out differently at different times’. 

In 1936, Reza Shah Pehlavi, stopped women from wearing the hijab which many believe ‘more to be in tune with the prevalent tradition and culture of the majority of women than on any devout religious beliefs’, while the religious establishment considered it as a ‘blow to its values and power’. With the establishment of an Islamic regime, women’s veil was reimposed as a part of ‘Islamic identity’.

 However, many religious scholars and theologists opined that Muslim religious writings are not entirely clear on whether women should veil, some others are of the view that even if it is mentioned in the Quran, it is more for separation and protection of women’s modesty. Nevertheless, a 2020 survey in Iran disclosed that 58 per cent of the surveyed informed that they don’t believe in the hijab altogether, around 72 per cent opposed the compulsory hijab, while 15 per cent insist on legal obligation to wear the hijab in public. 

“The present generation youth living in a securitised State with a crumbling economy, isolated from the rest of the world, has had enough of it,” commented an Iranian affairs expert. Many feel that the large number of killings and arrests signifies that the ongoing demonstrations, in which, men have also joined, are now for a broader battle for serious political changes, and not limited to fighting against the ‘gender apartheid’. 

Are such flagrant violations of women’s bodily rights restricted to Iran alone? No, they are not. In postRoe America, women are also up in arms with slogans like ‘My body, my choice’, ‘Bans off our bodies’ et al. Many legal analysts commented that the US government regulates women more than guns, as the SC while striking down the 100-year-old New York gun restrictions, immediately after the Roe decisions, interdicted the States from legislating their own gun laws, whereas in overturning Roe, it allowed States to enact abortion restrictions. Abortion care is now unavailable in 14 States.

Further, states like Oklahoma, Missouri, Arkansas, Ohio, and South Dakota are coming up with stricter abortion bans. Notwithstanding, pro-life conservatives are not happy with the enforcement of the restrictions, and are demanding more digital surveillance. Texas is framing a law that would require internet providers to block all abortion pill websites. Moreover, some research studies reported about “gross gender bias in medicine……..and that reproductive health conditions are commonly ignored.” Nevertheless, this year’s midterm elections showed some pro-choice gains, and Democrats could score critical wins in Michigan, California, Pennsylvania and also in red States like Kentucky and Montana.

While President Biden has been limited in his ability to protect abortion access, women in the oldest democracy await the outcome of the 2024 Presidential elections, critical for restoration of universal abortion care. Looking at India, about 30 per cent of women, 31.6 per cent urban and 24.2 per cent rural, in the world’s largest democracy, reportedly, have been victims of physical, emotional or sexual abuse within the four walls of their homes, mostly by their intimate partners, and a large number of such cases (77 per cent) remain unreported, mainly, for fear of victimblaming (NFHS-5).

 India is not among the fifty countries which have outlawed marital rape. In 21st century India, internalised patriarchy, conservative societal norms and deeply ingrained gender favouritism still condition women’s behaviour like what to wear, where to go or whom to marry, etc. No wonder that an actress’s outfit has recently created a political storm, while the growing vigilantism against ‘love jihad’ reflects a new trend in ‘gender governance’. 

The nations of the world under the aegis of the United Nations pledged to turn the world genderequitable by 2030′. Nevertheless, this year’s Global Goalkeepers report, belied any such hopes, and that it is not likely to be reached until at least 2108. As many women’s rights protagonists contend, it is discriminatory social norms that perpetuate systemic gender imbalance. Global efforts must counter such regressive trends, both in policy framework and implementation process, by involving multiple actors from community leaders and civil society to governments.

ARCHANA DATTA


Source: The Statesman, 8/01/23

Poll year: Editorial on upcoming electoral contests in Northeast

 Bharatiya Janata Party, which had a negligible presence in the Northeast earlier, has been deepening its footprints in the region at a furious pace.


The next parliamentary elections in India are expected to take place in 2024. The attention of India and that of the world would, quite naturally, be on their outcome. But a number of crucial electoral contests are scheduled this year as well. As many as nine states would vote in assembly polls. The results, pundits argue, need not reflect the national mood with precision. But the outcomes would still generate interest because the principal players in national politics — the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Congress — would be in the fray in many of these states. Inaugurating this season of polls are three states in the Northeast. Tripura will vote to bring in a new government on February 16 while Meghalaya and Nagaland would do so on February 27, with the results of all three contests being declared on March 2. The Bharatiya Janata Party, which had a negligible presence in the Northeast earlier, has been deepening its footprints in the region at a furious pace. It held  Assam and, most strikingly, took Tripura and is part of the ruling alliance in Nagaland and Meghalaya. But the road to power for the BJP could be a bit of an uphill grind. In Tripura, it is expected to face the combined strength of the Congress and the Communist Party of India (Marxist) with Pradyot Kishore Debbarma’s Tipraha Indigenous Progressive Regional Alliance expected to queer the pitch further. Even in Meghalaya, the BJP’s equation with the ruling National People’s Party has become frosty. The stakes, arguably, are even higher for the Congress that is now a rump of its former self in the region. Meanwhile, if Bengal’s ruling party, the Trinamul Congress, manages to taste some success in Meghalaya, it could provide a fillip to the regional party’s ambition to play a role in Delhi. As for Nagaland, it should be anxious for a credible government as well as a combative Opposition. At the moment, in a peculiar development for a democracy, Nagaland is the only Indian state without an Opposition.

The winner in these three states would have their task cut out. The Northeast, despite being one of India’s strategic corners, continues to battle, among other challenges, underdevelopment, corruption, militancy as well as intra-border tensions. Chinese incursion in Arunachal Pradesh has added to the region’s centrality to policy. It is imperative that the elected dispensations rise above political differences to take on these hurdles for the welfare of the nation, the region, and the people.


Source: The Telegraph, 20/01/23