BANKING SECTOR REFORMS: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES
By DR . SASIKALA PUSHPA AND DR B. RAMASWAMY
Banks are the lifelines of the economy and they play a crucial role in activating and sustaining economic growth, especially in developing countries like India.
Product Innovation: Making Sanitation Accessible to All
By Sarthak Akshay
Today, sanitation in India has become a revolution in the wake of Swachh Bharat Mission launched by the Prime Minister almost three years ago. Sanitation assumes a great role when the impact on people is concerned.Lack of sanitation leads to physical and cognitive stunting in children, leading to a less potent and productive workforce.
Economic Risk and Uncertainty
by Ravindra D. Nandeppanavar
Market risk assessment is a very uncertain aspect of economic transactions. When people want to get profit in spite of this uncertainty there is always be risk.
The Millennium Development Goals, an Analysis of the Achievements
by Nandini Sahay
The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are the eight international development
goals, which were set following the Millennium Summit of the United Nations in 2000,
as a sequel to adoption of the United Nations Millennium Declaration.
RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES-EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES
by Dr Manas Ranjan Senapati
Mankind is using up energy resources of mother earth in a way no other animal has
ever done. The largest contributions to current energy sources in the world come
from oil (31per cent), coal (26per cent) and natural gas (19per cent).
Role of Business Continuity Plan (BCP) to Manage Disaster
by Dibakar Lenka
It may be Government, non government, non -profit organization, NGOs, Banks, or
private business entities - those who are providing goods and services to the customers
or stake holders with different goals and objectives
ROLE OF TEXTILE IN MANUFACTURING AND SERVICE SECTOR
by Dibakar Lenka
Textile industry of our country is one of the oldest industries. This sector is
one of the largest contributors to exports. It contributes around 11 per cent of
total exports.
MICROBIAL INFECTIONS : COMING FULL CIRCLE
by Varun Dhamija, Ruchi Juneja
The most significant breakthrough of the medical sciences, antimicrobial drugs,
the compounds used for growth inhibition of disease causing microrganisms, or for
their killing, has started faltering. Many disease causing micro organisms no longer
respond to the currently known antimicrobials.
Scientific Policies and Sustainable Development
by P. Srivatsa
Science coupled with Technology and Innovation is acknowledged to be essential components
of social and economic development. Science is critical to help meet the challenges
for sustainable development as it lays the foundation for new approaches, solutions
and technologies to identify, clarify and tackle global challenges for the future.
Political Empowerment of Women and Panchayat Raj
by P. SRIVATSA
Woman is the builder of nation’s destiny. Though delicate and soft as lily, she
has a heart, far stronger and bolder than of man. She is the supreme inspiration
of man’s onward march
E-Governance: A Tool for Curbing Corruption in Indian Higher Education System
by Prateek Bhanti
Information and Communication Technology (ICT) is used in many countries across
the world to bring in transparency and operational efficiency in the working of
government machinery. The concept of E-Governance encourages the use of modern information
and communication technologies (ICTs) in order to improve service delivery to the
citizens and promote transparency in functional procedures. Higher education is
one of the most complex structures and thus quite cumbersome to be governed.
Goods and Service Tax-The ‘flawless’ paradigm and thereafter
by Dr. Debdulal Thakur
The voters must be informed voters, and not all read economics. Therefore, from
a citizen’s perspective it is important to understand about such critical public
policies. It is well understood by all, that the 122nd Constitutional Amendment
Bill is certainly the most sought after subject in Indian economy- at least as of
date.?
Biofuels as Promising Substitutes for high Carbon Energy Sources
by Mayanglambam Ojit Kumar Singh
“Nature Runs on Sunlight.
Nature uses only the energy it needs.
Nature fits form to function.
Nature recycles everything.
Nature rewards cooperation.
Nature banks on Diversity.
Nature
demands local expertise.
Nature curbs exercises from within.
Nature taps the power
of limits.”
Energy at threshold – Imminent role of Infrastructure as energy carriers.
by Megha Jain
E conomic growth, increasing prosperity, a growing rate of urbanization and rising
per capita energy consumption has widened access to energy in the country. One common
cognizance is that 85% of the total energy requirements are met by fossil fuel (non-renewable
energy sources) in India despite of unlimited growth potential for the solar photovoltaic
industry. Energy consumption is closely correlated with the size of a country’s
economy. Transport predominantly relies on fossil fuel based energy resources. Fossil
fuels account for over 79% of the primary energy consumed in the world, and 57.7%
of that amount is used in the transport sector and are diminishing rapidly . The
World Energy Forum has predicted that fossil-based oil, coal and gas energy reserves
will be exhausted in less than another ten decades (et al. 2010). Figure-1 provides
energy usage (kg of oil equivalent per capita) for India from 1991 to 2012.
Addressing the challenges of water: A perspective from Sustainable Development
Goals.
by Mayanglambam Ojit Kumar Singh
Theoretical biologists and the experimental ones have proven time and again that
living organisms evolved in the watery medium. Every metabolic activities in living
organisms take place in a watery medium which again proves that living organisms
cannot do any of the living process in the absence of water whether in the poles
or in the equator, tropic or the sub tropical, mountains or the oceans..
Water Availability Crisis and Ways to Check the Depletion
Dr. Harender Raj Gautam
Water is the lifeline of human lives and the world needs to wake up to the ground
reality that one day this nature's gift may dry up from this planet unless we take
good care to nurture and replenish its sources. Water consumption of the world is
doubling every 20 years, which is more than twice the rate of increase of our population.
The United Nation predicts that by 2025, two thirds of us will experience water
shortage, with severe lack of water affecting the lives and livelihoods of 1.8 billion.
Central Water Commission estimated that only about 1,123 km3,
Disaster Management in India and Differently Abled
by Dr Dr. Sanjay Sharma
Disaster is generally understood as an event causing loss of life, destruction of
infrastructure and creating social stress. Disaster renders people disabled in large
numbers. But what about the person who are already disabled? Disaster management
is expected to recognise that differently able cannot respond to disaster as quickly
as other can. Therefore, disaster preparedness, mitigation, response, recovery,
rehabilitation should be inclusive of needs of differently abled. This paper deconstructs
the various dimensions of policy framework and institutional structure of disaster
management in India from the hitherto under researched perspective of differently
abled. It also suggests potential reforms in this direction.
The Trouble With Being SMART
by Professor Amit S. Mukherjee
2016 is here. Worldwide, managers are setting SMART (Specific, Measureable, Achievable,
Relevant, and Timely) goals, expecting these to make this 'the year' to revitalize
or transform their businesses. Instead, most of these professionals should retire
SMART – or at least rescind its standard operating procedure status.
Oral Health Status in India
by Dr Varun Kumar, Dr Ruchi Juneja
Oral health is critical but underserved and overlooked component of the overall
health and well-being of an individual. It has always received step motherly treatment
by health policy- makers. Lack of information about the actual burden of oral diseases
and inadequate understanding of the connection between oral diseases and systemic
diseases are some of the reasons why oral health has not been on a priority list
of the health policy makers. Worse, oral health is not a priority for the individuals
either. Neglect on the part of individuals and attitude to defer the treatment until
it becomes urgent, is also a reason that it has not received the attention it deserves.
All these factors have led to an appalling oral health status in India.
The Trouble With Being SMART
by Professor Amit S. Mukherjee
2016 is here. Worldwide, managers are setting SMART (Specific, Measureable, Achievable,
Relevant, and Timely) goals, expecting these to make this 'the year' to revitalize
or transform their businesses. Instead, most of these professionals should retire
SMART – or at least rescind its standard operating procedure status.
FINANCIAL INCLUSION Vs. PAYMENT BANKS
CMA Dr. P. Siva Rama Prasad
The Reserve Bank of India’s latest initiative of introducing ‘Payment Banks’ finds
resonance with Economist Adam Smith’s Theory* of employing Division of Labour to
exponentially increase productivity. The new Business Model adopted will create
a revolutionary trend in the Indian Banking Industry and will accelerate Government’s
Mission of improving Financial Literacy and achieving Total Financial Inclusion
(TFI), both vital for a country’s Economic Development.
Relevance of Human Rights Education in Indian Society
Dr. Kamlesh Kumar
Since the dawn of human civilization, education has been playing a significant role
in awakening, educating and empowering human beings for imparting multiple tasks
in society. Thus, education is widely acknowledged an indicator for human development
and seen as a way to enable people to improve their quality of life, leading to
desired transformation in the social, cultural and economic policies and practices.
The conceptual core of human rights education is human dignity, its rec¬ognition,
fulfillment, and universalization. As human rights are most readily adaptable to
the study of positive peace, the social, political, and economic conditions most
likely to provide the environment and process for social cohesion and nonviolent
conflict resolution. Further more, The Vienna Declaration (2001) affirms that States
should strive to eradicate illiteracy and should direct education towards the full
development of the human personality and to the strengthening of respect for human
rights and fundamental freedoms. The World Conference on Human Rights calls on all
States and institutions to include human rights, humanitarian law, democracy and
rule of law as subjects in the curricula of all learning institutions in formal
and non-formal settings.
India pledges for non-fossil fuel-based energy
R.C. Sundriyal, S.K. Nandi & P.P. Dhyani
G.B.
Pant Institute of Himalayan Environment and Development, Kosi-Katarmal, Almora-
263 643, Uttarakhand, India
Well ahead of the twenty-first session of the Conference of the Parties (COP) that
is scheduled from 30 November to 11 December 2015 in Paris, France, India has voluntarily
placed its Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) for climate justice
that vowed its commitment in energy sector as well. It campaigns to increase non-fossil
fuel-based energy resources by up to 40% by the end of 2030,
STOCK MARKET VOLATILITY IN INDIA
Dr.V.Pankunni
Indian stock market has been showing trends of volatility over years. The press
media and the general public are showing greater amount of anxiety over it. The
perceived volatility based on the changes in the stock indices and individual stock
prices is considerably higher which has scared off the domestic retail investors
from the market. The small and retail investors are still panicky and shy due to
the felt volatility of the stock market.he market indices and the prices of individual
stocks listed in the stock markets are subject to frequent fluctuations. The fluctuations
in prices and returns are a greater concern for the investors. The changes in prices
are the sources of return from stocks, if it is positive. If the prices change negatively,
stockholders interest will be adversely affected. The predominant interest of the
stockholders in the price change is the direction of change, whether it is negative
or positive.
Sustainable indicators of food, nutritional and health outcomes in India
A Amarender Reddy
United Nations Sustainable Development Goals 2030 aimed at transforming the world
by 2030 with 17 specific goals of which the second goal i.e. end hunger through
achieveing food security and improving nutrition and promotingsustainable agriculture
is specifically focused on food and nutrition. It aims at ending and ensure access
by all people to food security, end of all forms of malnutrition, double the agricultural
productivity and income of small scale food producers, ensure sustainable food production
systems and maintain genetic diversity of seeds.
Public Account – A Continuing Aberration in Our Financial System
Govind Bhattacharjee
Abstract: Public Account funds being managed by the Government is a perpetual source
of distortion in our public finances. It is time to separate all Public Account
funds from the cash balances of the Government and entrust their management to professional
trusts free from Government control. Apart from making these funds self-sustaining,
this will also enforce much greater discipline in the management of fiscal deficits
and public debt. .
Development Evaluation in India
Dr. S. Chandrasekar
The system of evaluation in India was almost simultaneously conceived at the time,
when the country was gearing itself for a planned economy. During the post independence
period, with huge resource constraints, government had intended to take development
initiatives through the system of Five Year Plans. The planning exercises were geared
to address the extreme socio-economic inequity and to bring in maximum welfare to
the people at large. When the First Five Year Plan was launched in July 1951, the
importance of creating of a systematic evaluation was felt and as such the central
government proposed to establish an evaluation organization. The First Five Year
Plan document highlighted the necessity as “Systematic evaluation should become
a normal administrative practice in all branches of public activity. With the object
of developing the techniques of evaluation a beginning has now been made with the
establishment of an independent evaluation organization under the Planning Commission
for community projects and other intensive area development programmes”.
Skilling for Life and Livelihood through Basic Education: Old Approach in Need
of Revival
Khyati Srivastava - Research Fellow at Public Policy
Research Centre, New Delhi
Education in India has always been a symbol of pride and heritage. Delivery of quality
education to all has been prolonged effort post independence. Presently, India is
one of the world’s fastest growing economies in terms of GDP share (PPP), only behind
China and US (World Bank Report 2011). The ‘Global Economic Prospects’ report published
by World Bank in January’2015 forecasted that by 2017 , India will out-pace China
in terms of GDP growth rate. The country sits on the most advantageous situation
with 65per cent of its population being under the age of 35 and approximately 12
million individuals on an average are expected to join the workforce every year.
With these demographics, it happens to be world’s youngest nation of median age
27years.
Government Vision On Skill Development
Utsav Kumar Singh - ICSSR Doctoral Fellow at Department
of African Studies, university of Delhi.
Email: [email protected]
Prime Minister, in his Independence Day speech spoke of his Skill India Mission
to promote holistic development, showing very intent on placing renewed emphasis
on skill development in the services and manufacturing sectors. Skill development
plays a-vital role in improving labour market outcomes and economic growth. World
leaders understand the emergent need of skilled development. At the G20 Summit in
Brisbane, ILO Director-General Guy Ryder urged G20 leaders to focus on policies
that drive growth through more and better jobs.
Promoting Growth and Fighting Poverty or Reducing Greenhouse Gases: The Conundrum
for Developing Countries?
Saumya Umashankar
October 01, 2014 | Saumya Umashankar Web Exclusives,Poverty , Greenhouse Gases
There is a popular emotional appeal in favour of the environment while positing
a trade-off with growth–development comes from the consumption of scarce natural
resources that release greenhouse gases and damage the environment for centuries
to come; green is clean and economic growth is dirty. But when the same issue is
queried as a trade-off between fighting poverty and preserving the environment,
the response is not as easy.
Addressing Pharmaceuticals Patent Monopolies through Compulsory Licensing in
India
Amit Singh
Patents in India are granted to encourage inventions and to secure that it is worked
on a commercial scale. The Indian Patent Act ensures that a Patentee should not
be able to enjoy a monopoly for the importation of the patented article. The Patent
Act provides measures by way of compulsory licensing (CL) to ensure that the patents
do not impede the protection of public health and nutrition and the patent rights
are not abused by the patentee. The CL therefore serves to strike balance between
two disparate objectives- rewarding patentees for their invention and making the
patented products, particularly pharmaceutical products, available to large population
in developing and under developed countries at cheaper and affordable cost.
Rural Post offices as the Linking Bridge for Unreached Farmers of India
S. K. Dubey,
R. R. Burman,
J. P. Sharma,
K. Vijairaghavan,
V. Sangeetha
H. S. Gupta
Linking the agricultural farmers of India with technology and institution has always
been the priority since the planned development of the country. In this direction,
several experiments using different methods and means of communication have been
done. Since sixties, a large number of studies were conducted on farmers and extension
interaction, and it was mostly focused on the communication behaviour of these two
important elements. Most of the Indian reports reveal diverse communication channels/sources
utilized in the different stages of the innovation decision process. It was found
that personal cosmopolite channels were more important and followed by personal
localite channel at the knowledge stage. Similarly, importance of these channels/sources
was also recognized at persuasion stage and at decision making stage in the innovation
decision process.
From 74th CAA to SMART cities
Bhanu Joshi
From 2001 to 2011, India’s urban population increased by 9 million. According to
2011 Census, 31per cent of India is urbanised, the first time since independence
where the absolute population growth of urban is higher than the rural. The pace
of India’s urbanisation, though argued by many scholars as slow, is bound to increase
the stress on our already overstretched cities.
National Food Security Act: Way Forward to Success
Deepti Goel
Mantosh Kumar
December 01, 2013 | Deepti Goel, Mantosh Kumar Web Exclusives,Food Security
Despite ensuring ample availability of food, existence of food insecurity at the
micro-level in the country has remained a formidable challenge for India. The recently
introduced National Food Security Act (NFSA) aims to address this and marks a paradigm
shift in addressing the problem of food security—from the current welfare approach
to a rights based approach.
The Performance of Khadi and Village Industries (KVIs) in India
Dr. Kandarpa Kumar Barman
Biswajit Das
December 01, 2013 | Dr. Kandarpa Kumar Barman, Biswajit Das Web Exclusives,KVIC
The paper is based on secondary data, collected from Board of Industrial and Financial
Reconstruction (BIFR), Govt. Of India and attempts to explore the performance of
Khadi and Village Industries (KVIs) in India during the period 1994-2010 with respects
to the performance variables like production, employment and sales. The statistical
tools like percentage, compound growth rate and correlation coefficient has been
used to study the association between the variables. Also, the projection has been
made in respect of the performance variables through the use of least square principles.
Housing Credit Led Growth in India during the Period 2000-2012*
Dr S.S. Sangwan
The contribution of housing & construction sector in the GDP of India has almost
doubled during 2000-2011 with synchronisation in growth rates of the two. The modern
housing in India has mainly been confined to urban areas as revealed by census.
The policy changes since 1998 with rebate on interest and repayment of principal
of housing loans. As a result , the share of credit for housing in GDP increased
from 2 % as on March in 2000 to about 8% as on 2008 and thereafter. The comparison
between the annual growth rates of housing loans from SCBs and GDP clearly depicts
the former as a pull factor for the growth of the economy during the study period.
Public Private Partnership
Garima Wahi
According to the United Kingdom Commission on Public Private Partnerships, ‘A Public
Private Partnership (PPP) is a risk-sharing relationship between the public and
private sectors based upon a shared aspiration to bring about a desired public policy
outcome’. In the case of infrastructure, PPP generally refers to the Concession
or Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) contracts, or any variant of them, i.e., contracts
where risks and responsibilities transferred to the private sector are much wider
than in traditional public projects. Concession (BOT) is an exclusive right granted
by the Government Authority, under which private sector builds an infrastructure
project, operates it and eventually transfers the project to the government. Company
continues to run the facility, and the government acts as the regulator, while being
the owner of the facility.
Role of the State in Partnerships
Dr. Manisha Verma
An emerging feature in public policy circles around the world has been the increasing
incidence of State agencies entering into various forms of partnerships and coalitions
with non-State actors and agencies including the private sector, NGOs, civil society
organizations and academicians ostensibly to benefit from their wide and diverse
resources in fulfilment of public goals. While some analysts believe that this implies
a ‘decline of the State’ with the State ceding its powers to non-State actors, others
are of the view that this in fact indicates a transformation towards a more commanding
role of the State while benefitting from a wider knowledge base. Proponents of the
New Public Governance hold that meaning of the term ‘governance’ has also been undergoing
several changes in its interpretation and inference in response to the challenges
being posed in the present milieu.
Eurasian Integration:
Significance for India
Ehtesham Khurshid
Ever since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russian foreign policy has placed
Eurasian integration or integration of the former Soviet states on top of its agenda.
This idea has dominated most Presidential elections in Russia since 1996, not only
because of its popularity among the masses. It is important to note that President
Vladimir Putin in 2005, in his address to the federal assembly referred to the disintegration
of the Soviet Union, and introduced the concept of a new integration project for
Eurasia, stressing the need for greater economic cooperation amongst the post Soviet
states. However, this idea championed by Putin was essentially the brainchild of
the Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev who in his speech at the Moscow University
in 1994, suggested the creation of an Eurasian Union. In a nut shell, he talked
about a political and economic union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
Tajikistan, and other post-Soviet states. The idea was based upon the integration
of the European Union
Surrogacy Laws In India
Sanjeev Sirohi
Since last few years the use of surrogacy has gained currency in not only India
but the world over. Yet we must not forget that India along with Russia , Ukraine
and certain states of the US are among the few countries that allow commercial surrogacy.
It is imperative to understand first what exactly it means . Surrogacy basically
refers to a mutually agreed contract in which a woman carries a pregnancy in lieu
of money or anything else agreed upon for another couple who want a child but the
woman is either infertile or physically incapable of carrying a developed foetus
. Let me bring out here that the word surrogate is derived from Latin term “surrogatus”
( substituted ) which basically means “appointed to act in the place of” .
Disinvestment and
Indian Public Sector Enterprises
Gagan Singh
The growth story of India during the last two decades has been exhilarating barring
a period of economic slowdown which persisted from 2008-10. The inclusive growth
model-adopted by the government during the 11th Plan strives for educational, financial,
technological and political inclusion of masses which are being termed as ‘demographic
dividend’ by economists of the world-may take the credit for persistent growth of
Indian economy even in the global slowdown phase. The emergence of civil society
and NGOs during the recent past and the passage of important bills like Food Security,
RTI, RTE and Pension Funds Regulatory Authority bills are live manifestation of
inclusive growth philosophy of the government at centre. Some states are growing
but not developing as far as other social parameters are concerned while others
may not seem to be growing but on parallel have good governance. There is a need
to compare and analyse the growth and development performance of the states and
how governance has an impact on these variables.
Growth and Development Dynamics
of Indian States: A Comparison
Dr. Sanjay Tiwari
The growth story of India during the last two decades has been exhilarating barring
a period of economic slowdown which persisted from 2008-10. The inclusive growth
model-adopted by the government during the 11th Plan strives for educational, financial,
technological and political inclusion of masses which are being termed as ‘demographic
dividend’ by economists of the world-may take the credit for persistent growth of
Indian economy even in the global slowdown phase. The emergence of civil society
and NGOs during the recent past and the passage of important bills like Food Security,
RTI, RTE and Pension Funds Regulatory Authority bills are live manifestation of
inclusive growth philosophy of the government at centre. Some states are growing
but not developing as far as other social parameters are concerned while others
may not seem to be growing but on parallel have good governance. There is a need
to compare and analyse the growth and development performance of the states and
how governance has an impact on these variables.
CPRs in Everyday Life of Rural People in Assam
Dr Gautam Purkayastha
Common Property Resources (CPRs) provide a regular source of income and employment
to a large section of society across age groups. It acts as a safety net for the
poor, particularly during the lean season, drought or floods. It is a vital and
reliable source of livelihood for elderly people who cannot work as wage earners.
It offers equal opportunities to different members of a disadvantaged family to
supplement the family income. In addition to main earning members, children, women,
elderly people and even the partially disabled find opportunities to collect non-timber
forest products. CPRs help to improve economic efficiency by providing alternative
income generating activities, direct inputs to the home for daily needs and agriculture
and acts as a safety measure to carry on during the calamities.
The Collegium Syndrome: A Critical Appraisal
Saurabh Sinha
“Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely” Lord Acton
The above statement by Lord Acton needs to be reframed and expanded in the present
context of governance as follows:-
“Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely-Financially, Intellectually,
and Morally”.
Commercialization of Agriculture in Arunachal Pradesh
Dr. Rajesh Verma
Arunachal Pradesh is situated on the eastern most corner of India having international
borders with Bhutan, China and Burma. It is the largest state among all the north
eastern states, namely Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Tripura and
Sikkim. Its total geographical area is 83743 sq km with the population density just
over 17. Total population of the state, according to the Census of India 2011 is
1, 382,611, among which the tribal population is about 64 percent. The size of rural
population is 10, 69,165 while the urban population is 3, 13, 446 which is 77.33
percent and 22.67 percent respectively.
Tribal Land Rights and Education
Dr. L. Rathakrishnan & K. Ravi Kumar
September 01, 2013 | Dr. L. Rathakrishnan & K. Ravi Kumar Web Exclusives, Tribal Rights
Basic education is the primary agent either to improve the immediate living condition
or to increase the potential for future living. The Millennium Development Goals
has emphasized to ensure that all girls and boys must complete a full course of
primary education and that gender disparity is eliminated at all levels of education
by 2015. As a natural follow-up action, the Parliament of India enacted The Child
Right to Free and Compulsory Education Act 2009 (RTE Act 2009) and it came into
force in April 1, 2010. This study attempts to explain how methods adopted in fifth
schedule of Constitution of India based on colonial tribal policy of isolation and
status quo to guarantee right to land repressed right to education of present day
tribal and non-tribal students of Santhal Parganas division of Jharkhand State.
Fighting“Classroom Hunger”- Achievements of
“Mid Day Meal Scheme”
Dr.Gracious James
The National Programme of Nutritional Support to Primary Education (NP-NSPE) which
is popularly known as the Mid-day Meal Scheme was launched by the Government of
India in 1995. NP-NSPE states that it aims to address “classroom hunger” and encourage
poor children, belonging to disadvantaged sections, to attend school regularly and
help them concentrate on classroom activities. The mid-day meal programme is a multi-faceted
programme of the Government of India that, among other things, also seeks to address
issues of food security, lack of nutrition and access to education on a nationwide
scale. The Scheme is the world’s largest school feeding programme reaching out to
about 12 crore children in over 12.65 lakh schools/EGS centres across the country.
Challenges in Slum Upgradation: Need Innovative Approaches
Dr. Adesh Chaturvedi
India’s economy has grown by an average of 8 % annually over the past few years,
and yet a quarter of its population of 1.1 billion still lives on less than a dollar
per day. The number of people living in slums in India has grown up rapidly in recent
past and more than the population of Britain. Besides health, education and wedges,
housing to the urban poor is a big challenge and cause of concern for the governments.
Central and State Governments are trying to provide housing to the people from low-income-groups/slums
of urban areas.
Human Development Thought: Enhancing Relevance in the Present Era
Dr Rahul Gupta,Dr Nikhil Zaveri
September 01, 2013 | Dr Rahul Gupta,Dr Nikhil Zaveri Web Exclusives,Education
The roots of Human Development thought are found in “Swasti mantra” (a prayer seeking
Blessings for all) by Adi Shankaracharya who shows great concern for human well
being in the following prayer -
Problems of Aged in Changing Indian Scenario
Dr.(Smt) Shakuntala.C. Shettar
August 01, 2013 | Dr.Shakuntala.C. Shettar Web Exclusives, Social issues
Population ageing is a global issue, which has been recognized to have implications
on the health care and social welfare systems. The process whereby the proportion
of children in the population decreases and those of old persons increases is known
as the “ageing of population”. The global population of elderly has constantly been
increasing during the second half of the last century. This has been possible due
to easy availability of life saving drugs, control of famines, and various communicable
diseases, better awareness and supply of nutrition and health facilities and comparatively
better overall standard of living.
State, Democracy and Development: Institutional Perspectives
B.Chandrasekaran
The evolution of any civilisation depends on the formations and functioning of its
institutional systems, the interplay of which allows the constituents of the society
to pursue prosperity and happiness. The nature of these institutional systems and
structures provide the fountainhead for ideas like democracy to germinate and flourish.
However, as witnessed all over the world especially after the World War-II, preaching
and eulogising about democracy as the ideal political system is much easier than
practising and adopting it with all its limitations-political and otherwise.
Inclusive Planning in Context of Urban Poor
Dr. Ambey Kumar Srivastava
There can be few ways to get success and many reasons of failure. But unfortunately,
human being has the tendency to exaggerate success and read failures as ‘gaps’.
The same thing has happened with the ‘planning’ of our country, which is guided
through five year planning pattern. How the situation of different sectors is visualized,
conceptualized and planned can be best understood through the Five Year Plans (FYPs)
of India, which gives an account of the post independence development of the country.
Ethnic Fratricide and the Autonomous Councils of Assam
Navaneeta Deori
August 01, 2013 | Navaneeta Deori Web Exclusives, Fratricide, Bodoland
Assam is idyllically located as an entry point to Northeast India. It has a blend
of population belonging from diverse cultures and beliefs. However troubled relations
have emerged between different communities (tribes and non-tribes) of the region
which have been exacerbated by various militant activities.
Public TV Broadcasting in Asia-Pacific
K P Madhu
TV broadcasting in India is about 54 years old. UNESCO promoted it as a great tool
for education and so it was primarily school television telecast by All India Radio.
It was initially limited to Delhi. Teachers and, at times, students in the studio
beamed in black and white to the few TV sets on an experimental basis. Regular telecast
started only in 1965.
Dynamics of world diamond trade change following shortage of gemstones
Africa’s beneficiation programme chokes supplies to India, China gets upper
hand
TN Ashok
The fast changing patterns in global diamond trade caused by the acute shortage
of the gem stone has considerably altered the position of India and China as the
major cutting and polishing centres besides hitting them in trade revenues.
The spot-fixing scandal 2013- Are we short-changing change?
Anujaya Krishna
Howard Cosell hit the nail on the head when he stated, “Sports is human life in
microcosm”. Have you ever witnessed the ebb and flow of the Mexican wave in a stadium?
The crests and troughs of a graph charting heartbeats during a game? The shrill
yet inebriating sound of the vuvuzela? The sheer passion that is enthused in all
who watch the game even though they may not be playing it?
Adaptation and Mitigation strategies of Climate change: A Serious Concern
Dr. K. P. Vipin Chandran & SandhyaP
Climate change is a global environmental problem which has been receiving intense
political attention both at domestic and international levels. The United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) defines ‘climate change’ as a change
of climate which is attributed directly or indirectly to human activity that alters
the composition of the global atmosphere and which is in addition to natural climate
variability observed over comparable time periods.
Citizen Voices to Promote Environmental Governance: Towards an Equitable and
Inclusive Development
Arvind L Sha & J Jangal
Environmental Governance is the means by which society determines and acts on goals
and priorities related to the management of natural resources. This includes the
rules, both formal and informal, that govern human behaviour in decision-making
processes as well as the decisions themselves. Appropriate legal frameworks on the
global, regional, national and local level are a prerequisite for good environmental
governance.
Reaping the Information Dividend through Social Media
Dr. Sanjay Tiwari
India is on a threshold of becoming a lead economy of the world as her demographic
dividend will be the highest-i.e. the largest population between the age group 18-59
years - within not so distant future. While talking of the return from this vast
working human resource known as demographic dividend, it would be pertinent to look
into another big opportunity which has recently emerged and likely to grow in what
is termed as information driven economy.
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