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Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Current Affairs- October 17, 2023

 

INDIA

  • The 5th edition of India STEM Summit 2023 is being organised in New Delhi.
  • Supreme Court refers pleas against electoral bond scheme to 5-judge Constitution bench.
  • India-UK 2 plus 2 Foreign and Defence Dialogue was held in New Delhi.
  • Union Minister RK Singh launches dashboard for Data on Adoption and Forecasts of Electric Vehicles.
  • Defence Ministry signs contract with Cochin Shipyard Limited for Mid Life Upgrade and Re-Powering of INS Beas.
  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurates the third edition of the Global Maritime India Summit 2023.

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

  • Guidance, the nodal agency for investment promotion of Tamil Nadu, has received the United Nations Promotion Award 2023.
  • India’s wholesale prices stayed in deflationary mode for the sixth month in a row this September, at -0.26%.

WORLD

  • Daniel Noboa, 35, became Ecuador’s youngest-ever President-elect.
  • Israel military confirms 199 hostages abducted by Hamas.
  • India’s retail inflation eased from 6.83% in August to 5.02% in September.
  • Gitex Global 2023, a five-day tech Conference with the overarching theme, ‘The year to imagine AI in everything,’ officially kicked off in Dubai.

SPORTS

  • Australia recorded its ninth win over Sri Lanka, the most by a team against a single opponent in World Cups.
  • Scotland, Spain and Turkey qualify for Euro 2024.

New Evolutionary Law Explains the Development of Living and Non-Living Entities

 In a groundbreaking study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists have put forth a novel evolutionary law that can elucidate the evolution of entities, both living and non-living, ranging from minerals to stars. This groundbreaking law reveals the underlying patterns of complexity and diversity in natural systems, shedding light on the interconnectedness of biological and mineral evolution.


Understanding the Evolutionary Law

  • Greater Patterning, Diversity, and Complexity: The study notes that natural systems, encompassing both living organisms and non-living entities, evolve towards states characterized by greater patterning, diversity, and complexity.
  • Interconnected Evolution: As life on Earth evolved from single-celled to multi-celled organisms, minerals on our planet also underwent increased complexity, leading to greater diversity. This mutual evolution between biology and minerals played a vital role in shaping life as we know it today.

Collaboration Between Scientists and Philosophers

This study stands out for its collaboration between interdisciplinary scientists and philosophers of science. The philosophers’ perspectives were instrumental in refining and developing the ideas presented in the paper.

Three Key Functions in Evolution

  • Stability: Systems with stable arrangements of atoms or molecules have a higher likelihood of survival, emphasizing the importance of stability in evolution.
  • Dynamic Systems with Energy Supply: Evolution often involves dynamic systems that receive an energy supply, allowing for adaptability and change.
  • Novelty: Evolving systems have a tendency to explore new configurations or arrangements, giving rise to new behaviors or characteristics. This concept of novelty is crucial in understanding the evolution of various entities.

Examples of Novelty

  • In the biological realm, novelty can be seen in the evolution of single-celled organisms that harnessed light to produce food, as well as the development of new behaviors in multi-cellular species such as swimming, walking, flying, and thinking.
  • Early minerals on Earth possessed stable atomic arrangements, serving as foundations for subsequent generations of minerals and their incorporation into living organisms, such as shells, teeth, and bones.

Expanding the Law’s Application

This evolutionary law extends beyond Earth and applies to the broader universe. For example, early stars primarily consisted of hydrogen and helium but went on to produce heavier chemical elements in subsequent generations, contributing to the universe’s diversity.

Implications and Future Collaborations

The proposed evolutionary law has implications for a wide range of complex evolving systems. The researchers aim to collaborate with scientists from various fields, including astrophysics, ecology, and artificial intelligence, to explore how this law may apply to different domains of science.

International Postgraduate Merit Scholarship 2024

 The University of Sheffield , UK is  delighted to offer 125 International Postgraduate Taught Merit Scholarships in 2024.

 
Each scholarship is a competitive award worth £5,000 towards the original tuition fee for a postgraduate taught programme starting in September 2024. The scholarships are available to all new international students who meet the eligibility criteria.

You must hold an offer to study at the University of Sheffield.

Key dates.

  • Scholarship applications will open in late Autumn 2023.
  • The deadline for scholarship applications is 1.00pm (UK time) on Monday 13 May 2024.
  • Scholarship results will be announced on Monday 10 June 2024.
  • If you are offered the scholarship, we’ll ask that you confirm acceptance of your scholarship and your offer by a fixed date.
 
Eligibility criteria

Your programme must commence at the University of Sheffield in autumn 2024.

  • Distance learning courses are ineligible for a merit scholarship.
  • You must receive an offer for a course studied in full at the University of Sheffield. Masters programmes split between the University of Sheffield and a partner institution are not eligible to apply for a scholarship.
  • All Crossways courses and Erasmus Mundus courses are ineligible for a merit scholarship.
  • For tuition fee purposes you must be self-funded and required to pay the overseas tuition fee.
  • You must not be a sponsored student.
 

For further terms and conditions please visit  —https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/international/fees-and-funding/scholarships/postgraduate/international-merit-postgraduate-scholarship

Silver lining

 

This should be a silver lining for activists fighting for marriage equality. Today might be a dark day for them. But the lessons from a combined reading of both these judgments are clear


The Supreme Court has just ruled that two persons of the same sex cannot marry each other in India. For a court that takes pains to appear progressive and liberal, this has come as a shock to many. But the Supreme Court has always been a conservative institution. From striking down land reform legislation at the behest of the landed gentry to upholding the rights of maharajas to their privy purses, the court has always trailed society in matters of moment. But if there is something that characterises the court more distinctly than its conservatism, it is its ability to correct itself. In that lies a glimmer of hope for the LGBTQ community.

What if this outcome is short-lived? What if another bench of the Supreme Court doubts its correctness and decides, a few years down the line, that two persons of the same sex can, in fact, marry each other? This possibility has been made more likely by an otherwise innocuous decision of the Supreme Court last week to list a matter pertaining to an issue of arbitration law.

A question of interest only to legal practitioners and companies engaging in regular arbitrations arose before the court in the case of N.N. Global Mercantile (P) Ltd. vs Indo Unique Flame Ltd and Ors — whether an arbitration agreement needed to be stamped to be valid. A three-judge bench headed by Justice D.Y. Chandrachud held that it didn’t require stamping, but a five-judge bench headed by Justice K.M. Joseph overturned it. This is beside the point of this column but relevant to understand what happens next.

So egregious was this outcome to the practitioners of arbitration law that the Chief Justice of India, when requested by a party to constitute a seven-judge bench to take a relook, promptly set up such a bench. That party, to cut a long story short, was not directly concerned with this case, but had a tangential interest in the matter. The same was the case of a new party which also had no interest in NN Global’s case but would be affected by its result. As a consequence, a seven-judge bench was constituted last week to hear this legally significant, but relatively arcane, question, at least when it comes to Constitution benches of the Supreme Court. This is a hugely consequential development with repercussions on the marriage equality judgment for three key reasons.

First, if one looks at the docket of the Supreme Court, one will find that five significant cases are awaiting the establishment of a seven-judge bench of the court. These pertain to whether Aligarh Muslim University is a minority educational institution or not, whether scheduled castes can be further sub-classified for the purpose of reservations, whether a state government is competent to impose a surcharge on sales tax, whether the certification of a bill as a money bill can be judicially reviewed, and the interplay between the freedom of the press to report legislative proceedings and the freedom of legislators to free speech. Without any disrespect to arbitration lawyers, each of these questions has at least as much at stake, if not more, than the interplay between stamp law and arbitration law. But each of these questions has had to wait anywhere between three years (scheduled caste classification) to 24 years (surcharge on sales tax). In contrast, NN Global had to wait a little over two weeks. Maybe the last word on marriage equality has yet to be spoken and another chief justice will rule differently.

Second, a key reason why a court of law is different from a court of public opinion is because there is a proper procedure for doing things. If the judgment in NN Global was egregiously wrong, then the Constitution allowed the adversely affected parties to ask for a review of the judgment. That petition would go before the same bench that delivered the judgment to persuade its members to see the folly of their ways. No review, to the best of my knowledge, was filed in this case. Instead, a plea was made before the CJI in a fresh case to refer the matter to a seven-judge bench. As master of the roster, the CJI is legally entitled to do so.

But the effect of this otherwise legal action is to bypass the constitutionally mandated and tried and tested process of review. This has the makings of an intra-court appeal — from one bench of the Supreme Court to another — something that has no basis in law or conventional practice. One will not be surprised to see chancy pleas of this kind being made before future chief justices. This is a consequence of allowing any single individual as CJI to serve as an absolute master of the roster with no requirement to justify his actions. The actions may be moved by the noblest of intentions. But its impact will be felt when a differently-minded chief justice sets up a differently-minded bench to deliver a different judgment.

Finally, this judgment strikes a blow to the cause of finality in the Supreme Court. The Indian judicial system is notorious for giving an individual litigant excessive bites at the cherry in the interest of fairness and at the cost of systemic efficiency. From a trial court to the Supreme Court through the district court and the high court, a rich litigant who can afford lawyers at all levels is certainly indulged by India’s judiciary. This judgment provides yet another ladder to climb before a decision attains finality.

This will not only exacerbate delays in the Supreme Court, it will also affect the institutional image of the court as an authoritative dispenser of justice. Judges of the court have often repeated the cliché that the Supreme Court is not infallible, but it is final. Decisions like the one to revisit NN Global will make the court neither infallible nor final.

This should be a silver lining for activists fighting for marriage equality. Today might be a dark day for them. But the lessons from a combined reading of both these judgments are clear. Getting relief in the Supreme Court is a matter of chance. While one should never stop hoping, equally one can never count on just having a good case. There is always more at play, and that is not always the letter of the law.

Arghya Sengupta

Source: The Telegraph, 18/10/23


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Monday, October 09, 2023

Quote of the Day October 9, 2023

 

“No legacy is as rich as honesty.”
William Shakespeare
“ईमानदारी से बड़ी कोई विरासत नहीं है।”
विलियम शेक्सपियर

“Children Displaced in a Changing Climate” Report

 


A recent study conducted by Unicef and the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) has uncovered a startling trend: at least 43 million child displacements have occurred in the past six years due to extreme weather events. This equates to an alarming average of 20,000 children forced to leave their homes and schools every day. The research highlights the profound impact of floods, storms, wildfires, and droughts on children and the urgent need for climate action.

Overwhelming Impact of Floods and Storms

Between 2016 and 2021, floods and storms accounted for a staggering 95% of recorded child displacements. The traumatic experience of displacement can have profound consequences for children, including disruptions to their education, access to life-saving vaccines, and social networks.

Displacement Hotspots

China, the Philippines, and India collectively witnessed 22.3 million child displacements, over half of the total number. This is attributed to their geographical vulnerability to extreme weather events and large child populations. Small island states and the Horn of Africa, grappling with the climate crisis and overlapping challenges, also experienced significant child displacements.

Vulnerable Regions

Small Caribbean islands, such as Dominica and Saint Martin, were severely impacted by storms, with 76% of children displaced in Dominica due to Hurricane Maria. Somalia and South Sudan recorded substantial child displacements due to floods, affecting 12% and 11% of their child populations, respectively.

The Climate Crisis Connection

The report underscores the role of climate change in intensifying extreme weather events, making them more destructive and unpredictable. Climate-related disasters are the fastest-growing driver of child displacement, yet they are often overlooked in climate policies and discussions.

Hidden Dangers: Drought and Slow Onset Climate Impacts

While the study focused on immediate weather-related disasters, it acknowledged the underreporting of slow-onset climate impacts such as rising sea levels, desertification, and increasing temperatures. Drought-related child displacements, particularly in Somalia, Ethiopia, and Afghanistan, remain largely unreported.

Wildfires in the United States

Wildfires were responsible for three-quarters of child displacements in the United States, with additional occurrences in Canada, Israel, Turkey, and Australia. The expansion of the wildland-urban interface has contributed to these displacements.

Bleak Future Outlook

Children accounted for one in three of the 135 million global internal displacements linked to weather-related disasters between 2016 and 2021. The study predicts a worsening trend, with riverine floods posing the most significant future risk, potentially displacing 96 million children over the next 30 years. Urgent action, including the phase-out of fossil fuels, is required to address this impending crisis.

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents

 

Vol. 58, Issue No. 40, 07 Oct, 2023

Editorials

Comment

From 25 Years Ago

From 50 Years Ago

Alternative Standpoint

Commentary

Book Reviews

Perspectives

Special Articles

Current Statistics

Postscript

Letters