Followers

Wednesday, August 03, 2016

Phase Out Attachment


Dependence on material things, worldly relations and pleasure-seeking steadily decrease as our love for God increases.Interestingly , as we move towards the Lord with faith, love and devotion, we automatically develop a certain amount of detachment to worldly objects.For example, when the child is a baby , parents buy her toys.But as she grows and become a teenager, do we not want her to outgrow the toys and develop academic pursuits? Similarly , in life, we have to grow out of desire for the lower and seek the higher and subtler. We need to distance ourselves from the `toys' of the world.
Spirituality is that in which faith, love and devotion for God steadily increase, as desire for and attachment to objects and beings progressively decrease. The spirit or essence of spirituality can be practised in any walk of life. Firstly , as we live life, we spend some time reflecting on its meaning. We ask ourselves: is there a greater purpose to this existence?
Such a line of thinking and contemplation is possible in your family life. Secondly , the various relationships and numerous duties we have can be different. But an attitude of service can be maintained in the performance of these.
Thirdly , let's overcome our psychological dependence on things and beings. So, give up past regrets and let go worries of the future. Lastly , our goal should be a state where attachments and pleasure-seeking from the world are reduced.Simultaneously , love for God and longing for this knowledge is intensified.

Tuesday, August 02, 2016

THE TWELFTH BIENNIAL CONFERENCE ON ENTREPRENEURSHIP

(FEBRUARY 22-24, 2017)
CALL FOR PAPERS

The Twelfth Biennial Conference on Entrepreneurship testifies to the institute's pursuit of excellence and clear contribution to entrepreneurship education, training, research and institution building within India and internationally. Entrepreneurship Development Institute of India (EDII) derives much satisfaction in assisting and building entrepreneurship development institutes in countries namely, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Vietnam. Based on the successful establishment of these institutes, EDII has been further assigned by Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India to help build and mentor entrepreneurship development institutes in five countries of the African Region and Uzbekistan.

As India's preeminent institute of entrepreneurship education and research, EDII invites researchers, educators and practitioners in the field of entrepreneurship to participate in and contribute to the Twelfth Biennial Conference on Entrepreneurship to be held during February 22-24, 2017 at EDII, Ahmedabad.

In keeping with eleven biennial conferences over the past 22 years, the Twelfth Biennial Conference onEntrepreneurship continues to be an established forum for researchers, educators and practitioners to share their ideas and research results with other researchers and thinkers in the field, exchange feedback and hone their own research pursuits. Whereas researchers are invited to contribute papers and reports that bear upon and enfold the field of entrepreneurship theory and practice, some indicative themes are:
  • Entrepreneurship: Perspectives & Practices
  • Entrepreneurship Education and Pedagogy
  • Trans Indian Entrepreneurship
  • Innovation and Entrepreneurship
  • Entrepreneurship in the SME Sector
  • Corporate Entrepreneurship and Intrapreneurship
  • Trans-generational Entrepreneurship (Family Business)
  • Start-ups, Incubators, Accelerators
  • Social Entrepreneurship & Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Women's Entrepreneurship
  • Sectoral Entrepreneurship (e.g.)
    • Agripreneurship
    • Edupreneurship
    • Technopreneurship
    • Digital Entrepreneurship
    • Green Entrepreneurship
    • Tourism Entrepreneurship, etc.
Contributors may e-mail their submissions and inquiries to conference@ediindia.org.
Submission deadline:
  • An Abstract (about 200 words) should be submitted through email by November 18, 2016.
  • An electronic version (MS Word) of the full paper should be submitted by December 16, 2016. Full papers (less than 4000 words, typed double space) must adhere to formatting and referencing guidelines of academic/ professional journals.
  • Acceptance decisions on papers will be made by January 6, 2017.
REGISTRATION: 
  • A fee of Rs. 2,500/- (US$ 75 for international delegates) is payable by authors and delegates. The fee includes conference kit, conference proceedings and on-campus room & board for three days, Fee is to be paid before January 31, 2017 through EDII payment gateway.
  • Registration fee may be waived for Ph.D./FPM scholars, not in employment, and not supported by their institutes/universities.
Silver Jubilee Celebration of The Journal of Entrepreneurship
The Journal of Entrepreneurship will be completing 25 years of its publication by the end of 2016. EDII will be scheduling a special session to celebrate the Silver Jubilee of the JoE's journey.
Download Detailed Brochure

Sasi Misra,
Institute Professor
Conference Chair
Sunil Shukla,
Director, EDI
Conference Hostt
Nikhilesh Desai
Conference Secretary
Cell: 098982 94400
B. Ganapathi
Conference Coordinator
Email:ganapathi@ediindia.org
Cell: 093270 45345
Ashok Madnani
Organizing Secretary
Cell: 093270 21491
 Source: http://www.ediindia.org/conferenceannouncement.asp (27/07/2016)

The cause is AFSPA

The campaign depended too much on Irom Sharmila. The decision she has taken should serve as a wake-up call that the cause must always remain greater than the leader

Irom Chanu Sharmila has always made puzzling decisions, whether it is going on a hunger strike and steadfastly sticking to it for 16 whole years, or suddenly calling it off and deciding to contest elections. Most remarkable, however, is how she remained in solitary confinement all these years, foregoing the sense of taste, unquestionably a fundamental need which adds texture and meaning to life, and stayed sane. Sanity for her certainly does not mean what it means to others — conforming to practised norms and standards.
India, in general, and Manipur, in particular, were caught unawares by her latest decision, but now as emotions settle, there is widespread agreement that the Iron Lady’s decision may be the most practical way forward, both for her and for the campaign. It was perhaps the people who were being unfair — and not Ms. Sharmila with her decision — by expecting her to always be their superhuman icon. There is, however, a touch of tragic surrender too in this realisation that certain conditions of life in India’s peripheries, loathsome as they may be, are destiny.
Pradip Phanjoubam
An immovable law

The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, or AFSPA, is one such example. Nothing, it seems, can move the Central government to have this draconian Act repealed or moderated — not Ms. Sharmila’s hunger strike, not the periodic eruptions of violent street protests against it in Imphal or Srinagar, not even the recommendations of three high-powered panels set up by the Central government. These include the 2005 recommendations of the Justice Jeevan Reddy Commission set up to “humanise the AFSPA”, as former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said; the 2005 Veerappa Moily-led second Administrative Reforms Commission (ARC); and the2013 Justice J.S. Verma Committee set up in the wake of the December 16, 2012, Delhi rape case, looking into reforms to speed up as well as ensure conviction in rape cases.
While the Justice Jeevan Reddy Commission and the ARC had no doubt that the AFSPA had to go and that its provisions be incorporated into a civil Act, the Justice Verma report mentioned the Act as a part of a section on offences against women in conflict areas. “Sexual violence against women by members of the armed forces or uniformed personnel must be brought under the purview of ordinary criminal law,” the report said, adding that “there is an imminent need to review the continuance of AFSPA and AFSPA-like legal protocols in internal conflict areas as soon as possible.” This resonates with the ruling by the Supreme Court in July that the Army and police are not free to use excess force even under the AFSPA. However, none of these have made any real difference to the status of the AFSPA.
There is obviously a very strong lobby, not just of the military but also a prominent section of the Indian intelligentsia, which believes that the country cannot hold itself together without the use of its military. This is indeed a sad reflection on a country which calls itself a republic. What does it say about India that it does not trust, even after nearly seven decades of independence, its people or its police? If in a republic the military is an instrument of war, can it wage war on its own people?
It is true that there are many violent insurrections in India which must be met militarily, at least in the short run. But if the situation has not subsided even after so many years, isn’t there something seriously wrong with the nation itself?
Keeping internal order is the job of the police. And if the firepower of the police is felt to be inadequate sometimes, it is understandable that the military has to be called in its place. However, should not the military in such situations be seen as doing policing duty and therefore be put under the provisions of civil laws for as long as it performs these duties? If India thinks this is war, it should in all fairness allow international laws of war, such as the Geneva Conventions and Hague Conventions, to be invoked, allowing international bodies such as the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Cross to intervene and moderate. And if it doesn’t think so, then what is wrong in asking the military to be governed by civil laws while on civil policing duties? In the mistrust of its own people and in the military aggression on its own people sanctioned by the AFSPA, India has inherited the DNA of the imperialist administration. Should not this vestige of injustice from the past be purged?
Need for a martyr

This is the campaign that Ms. Sharmila has been advocating. The possible loss of focus of this campaign because of her changed stance now is what has given cause for anxiety for others in the campaign. Ms. Sharmila herself sounded exasperated last week when she spoke to the media about what she described as lack of support from the public. Here at least, in her longing for a positive outcome, she may have read too much into the public mind. The deluge of support messages and stunned responses to her decision is evidence of this. What the public could not do was emulate her. Nobody can.
The AFSPA campaign depended too much on Ms. Sharmila. This jolt should serve as a wake-up call for everyone in the campaign; they should realise how the cause must always remain greater than the leader, any leader. They must admit that there were many amongst them who were looking for a martyr in Ms. Sharmila, and are therefore now disappointed. This hunger for martyrs is a sign of Manipur’s weakness, where the cowardly try to shine in the reflected halo of those who have dared to court death. Courting death is nothing to be proud of, so there is nothing to be sad about Irom Sharmila abandoning her dance with death by starvation.
Pradip Phanjoubam is editor of Imphal Free Press and author of The Northeast Question: Conflicts and Frontiers.
Source: The Hindu, 2-08-2016

Child labour by other means

The amendments to the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act, 1986,passed by Parliament recently, demonstrate a lack of national commitment to abolishing all forms of child labour. Instead of attempting an overhaul of legislation that has proved ineffective in curbing the phenomenon, Parliament hasallowed children up to the age of 14 to be employed in ‘family enterprises’, and created a new category of ‘adolescents’ (the 14-18 age group) who can be employed in ‘non-hazardous’ occupations. In the name of acknowledging the socio-economic realities of India, the amendments tweak the law in such a way that children are in some form or other available for employment. The only concession to their educational rights is that they are permitted to work in family enterprises only outside school hours and during vacations. Curiously, the main amendment — to ban children up to the age of 14 in any occupation — is being touted as a progressive leap from the earlier ban limited to some occupations and processes. It should not be forgotten that with the passage of the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009, a statutory obligation to ensure that every child completes elementary education, is already in place. The exemption to family enterprises effectively retains conditions under which children are made to contribute economically while studying. Working outside of school hours and earning valuable income for the family will surely have a deleterious effect on the children’s health as well as their aptitude for learning.
Regulation is going to be a big challenge, as it will be difficult to determine whether a particular family is running an enterprise, or whether some faceless owner has employed a single family to circumvent the law. The fallout will be a higher dropout rate. They may go to school for some years, concurrently work with their families, and graduate to being full-time adolescent workers, without completing elementary education. The NDA government, like its predecessor that proposed the amendments, seems to be satisfied with mere compliance with International Labour Organisation Conventions 138 and 182. The former mandates compulsory schooling till the age of 15, but permits countries with inadequate education facilities to reduce it to 14, while Convention 182 prohibits employment of children “in the worst forms of labour”. Bare compliance with international norms is not enough. Children from the poor and marginalised sections, especially Dalits, are still in danger of being deprived of both the joys of childhood and their constitutional right to education. It is yet another stark reminder that the country is far from achieving the complete elimination of child labour.

The dynamic nature of poverty

We need to rethink social safety nets in India’s growing economy so that they can also focus on the accidents of life rather than solely on the accidents of birth.

Sometimes the grand narratives of the Left and the Right do not seem to have any relationship with the lived experiences of ordinary Indians. For the past two decades, the Left has tried to expand social welfare programmes for the poor in the country by highlighting the growing disparities between the rich and the poor. The Right, on the other hand, points to the growing burden of politically driven welfare policies and emphasises the need for economic growth to alleviate poverty and improve the lives of the poor. These grand narratives often obviate the fact that the concept of poverty today is fundamentally different from that of poverty three decades ago, and that safety nets need to be tailored to meet the needs of a society in transition.
Complicated data

For example, most of our anti-poverty policies rely on identifying the poor by using Below Poverty Line (BPL) Censuses conducted approximately once every 10 years. In 1993-94, when half the Indian population fell in the BPL category, it was easier to identify the poor — they lived in rural landless households in underdeveloped districts such as the Dangs and Bastar and often belonged to the Scheduled Castes (SC) or Scheduled Tribes (ST). Even if all the above identification strategies failed, we still had a 50 per cent chance of being right in identifying the poor. Today, however, when one in four rural Indians and one in six urban Indians is poor, our chances of being wrong in identifying the poor are far greater.
Data from the India Human Development Survey (IHDS) point to another trend. This survey, conducted by the University of Maryland and the National Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER) for the same households at two points in time, viz. 2004-05 and 2011-12, is the first large panel survey in India. Results from the survey show that if BPL cards had been handed out in 2004-05 on the basis of the household’s average consumption expenditure, 25 of the 38 Indians who would have received these cards in 2004-05 would have been out of poverty by 2011-12. On the other hand, of the 62 Indians who were not eligible to receive BPL cards in 2004-05, nine became newly poor in 2011-12. Thus in 2011-12, 66 per cent of the BPL card-holders would have already moved out of poverty, while 40 per cent of the poor would not have had a BPL card.
Spreading the net wide

Once we recognise that poverty is dynamic in nature, and that as per our conventional definition of poverty, poor households may move out of poverty and the non-poor may become poor over a period of time, we are forced to question the veracity of our fundamental assumptions about poverty. Perhaps poverty occurs not simply due to the accident of birth or as defined in terms of where and in which family people are born, but also due to the accident of life caused by the occurrence of disease, disability and unemployment. Achieving this recognition entails a complete transformation in our mindset.
The second concern about our approach to poverty is that we want to cover the maximum number of people, consequently diluting the support that we are able to provide the poor. Empirical data point to a strange paradox. Ironically, in spite of a decline in poverty, the proportion of the population receiving welfare benefits has risen sharply. The IHDS shows that between 2004-05 and 2011-12, the proportion of the population deemed to be poor fell from 38 per cent to 22 per cent. But the proportion of households receiving any of the benefits under different government schemes, such as old age pension, widow pension, and the Janani Suraksha Yojana, or scholarships and other benefits, grew from 13 per cent in 2004-05 to 33 per cent in 2011-12. The proportion of households buying cereals from the Public Distribution System (PDS), which was intended to provide subsidised foodgrains to the poor, grew from 27 to 52 per cent. Further, the newly initiated Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) provided employment to 17 per cent of the households, signifying a substantial increase from the almost negligible participation in erstwhile public works programmes. Thus, the proportion of households covered by all these schemes taken together grew from 35 per cent to 68 per cent of the total population over the period under study.
Despite this massive expansion in the coverage of welfare programmes, the incomes and subsidies accruing from them still account for a relatively small proportion of the overall household budget. In 2004-05, the transfers and subsidies under the above schemes accounted for an average of Rs.3,129 per recipient household per year, which had increased to Rs.6,017 in constant terms in 2011-12. This amounts to only about Rs.100 per person per month in 2011-12. Moreover, since incomes also grew over the period between the two surveys, the average proportion of the household income accruing from benefits grew only marginally from 11 per cent to 14 per cent for all the recipients. Thus, while the burden of these programmes on the public exchequer may be huge, their impact on households is relatively limited.
Today, the number of welfare schemes has proliferated beyond belief. During fieldwork in 2012, the authors discovered that 131 schemes were in operation in one of the study districts. However, most of the supposed beneficiaries had never heard of these schemes. The IHDS found that less than 2 per cent of the households had registered their daughters under the widely touted girl child-protection schemes. The more the number of schemes, the greater is the likelihood of leakage and inefficiency. Moreover, our country has the tendency to initiate schemes without setting aside enough funds to successfully implement them, thereby almost willing them to failure.
Unintended consequences
A third problem is that we often fail to think of the unintended consequences of our policies. The Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY) covers hospital costs but not outpatient services. Consequently, many patients delay treatment until the severity of their medical conditions forces them into hospitalisation, which, in turn adversely affects their health and increases public expenditure. Similarly, the focus on cereals in the PDS encourages people to obtain most of their calories from cereals and reduces dietary diversity.
This situation begs the question: Is there another way of providing social safety nets that would circumvent these problems while genuinely taking care of the people’s needs? Fundamentally restructuring social safety nets necessitates meeting three key challenges: identifying those in need of assistance in the context of rapid economic changes; efficiently delivering this assistance to prevent unintended consequences which may pervert the very purpose of social safety nets; and ensuring that this assistance is meaningful rather than simply tantamount to applying a bandage to a cancer. Each of these challenges needs to be addressed through a pragmatic approach devoid of the burden of any ideology.
One strategy could be to start with simple and limited goals while attacking the problem more potently to make a meaningful dent. It would make sense to divide social safety net policies into three categories: first, provision of back-up manual work at below market wages to those who are able to work; second, provision of insurance against catastrophic events such as health-care emergencies or crop failure that push people into poverty; third, provision of cash support, say in the form of old age pension, to people who are no longer able to work.
MGNREGA offers an excellent model for employment programmes in rural areas, which could be expanded to urban areas. High wages paid under this programme may encourage people to work for MGNREGA instead of resorting to other forms of employment, though since this is not a desirable outcome, the wages offered must be below market wages. However, for them to have a noticeable impact, these employment programmes must be universally available for the promised 100 days. The number of crop and health insurance programmes is growing but a better framework is needed to prevent cost escalation, as has been observed in the United States. While old age and disability pension schemes exist, they need to provide a greater level of benefits and offer easier access. But for all these programmes to work, we must first recognise the need for drastically revamping our traditional policies in a growing economy so that they can also focus on the accidents of life rather than solely on the accidents of birth.
Sonalde Desai is Professor of Sociology, University of Maryland and Senior Fellow, NCAER. Amit Thorat is Assistant Professor of Economics, Jawaharlal Nehru University. Views are personal.
Source: The Hindu, 2-08-2016
Planning the Key to Manage Flooding


The above-normal monsoons, though great news for the agrarian economy , have exposed the near-total absence of planning that has marked India's urbanisation process, and efforts to adapt to flooding of monsoon-fed rivers in rural areas. India cannot join the ranks of the developed nations without learning to manage, and not just cope with, floods.Managing excess water requires proper assessment, planning and appropriate engineering. Monsoon-fed rivers are prone to flooding during the rainy season, therefore planning should focus on how best to utilise the water and allow the surplus to drain away without causing damage. Build irrigation canals that capture the overflow. Do not allow construction that hinders drainage of surplus waters.
Improved river management systems can help regulate water flows, create ear ly warning systems, to prevent damage to life and property. But it is the increased incidence of urban flooding that exposes the absence of planning resulting in mal development. Excess rains are a problem in part because cities and towns are paved, hindering the natural flow of water. This problem is exacerbated by building towns without taking natural hydrology of the area into account. Developments have been allowed without any regard for the carrying capacity , and without the requisite infrastructure of sewage, drainage and roads. Town planners have to be taken seriously .
The incidence of extreme rainfall events is expected to increase with climate change. As the pace of urbanisation picks up, the country needs to build cities and towns that are resilient.Rural India's capacity to handle the extreme weather events too needs to be augmented. Planning works, as Orissa has shown, after the cyclone damage of 1999.
Source: Economic Times, 2-08-2016
To Forgive is Divine


Rishi Brighu wondered who, among the Holy Trinity of Brahma, Shiva and Vishnu, could be regarded as the greatest.Perhaps the one who showed the greatest degree of forgiveness? Reaching Brahma's abode, Brighu simply ignored him, and did not even acknowledge his presence. Brahma was incensed. Enraged, he rose to pronounce a terrible curse on the sage. He was restrained by his divine consort Saraswati who said, “Please bear with Brighu this once.There must be a reason for his strange behaviour.“Brahma relented, and Sage Brighu left for Mt Kailash, the abode of Shiva. “Look at you!“ laughed Brighu scornfully to Shiva who was in meditation.“Your body is smeared with ash and you are garlanded by snakes! You must be mad!“ Shiva would have hurled his trishul at Brighu but Parvati held him back, saying, “Let him go, just once!“ Brighu next went to Vaikunth, where Vishnu was yoganidra. Emboldened that Vishnu was asleep, Brighu kicked him in the chest, and shouted, “How can you go off to sleep, when you have to sustain life in this world?“ The moment he opened his eyes, Vishnu clutched the feet of the sage.
“Forgive me, O Holy one!“ He pleaded. “Your foot must surely have been hurt by the hardness of my chest! How can I soothe the pain that I have inadvertently caused to you -one of my greatest devotees?
You have taken a child's liberty with your Father. Your footprint shall remain imprinted on my chest, for ages to come.“