Economic and Political Weekly of April 28, 2012

Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of  May 5, 2012 that you may find of interest.
    

 On Publicly-Financed Health Insurance Schemes

 T R Dilip

It is a methodological fl aw to conclude from data which shows a rise in the incidence of out-of-pocket medical expenses that the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana is ineffective. A response to Sakthivel Selvaraj, Anup K Karan, “Why Publicly- Financed Health Insurance Schemes Are Ineffective in Providing Financial Risk Protection” (EPW, 17 March 2012). 

 Revolutionary Movements in a Post-Marxian Era

 Sumanta Banerjee

The key to revolutionary change in today’s world lies beyond the traditional Marxist conceptual framework or the leadership of Marxist political parties. In India, four broad areas of protests constitute the major components of a new revolutionary strategy in the post-Marxian era – (i) movements by forest dwellers against both the state machinery and predatory commercial forces; (ii) protests by villagers against the establishment of industrial estates, big dams and nuclear plants that threaten to oust them from their lands and homes, and endanger the environment; (iii) civil society campaigns against corruption and crime; and (iv) secessionist struggles on the issue of self-determination in the north-east and Kashmir. How will a new generation of post-Marxian revolutionary theoreticians and practitioners invigorate these movements with a progressive ideological core and a comprehensive coordinated programme of socialist change?

Media Follies and Supreme Infallibility

 Sukumar Muralidharan

The Supreme Court has taken steps to lay down a code for media reporting. This attempt at prior restraint on the media is a dangerous move with precedent from authoritarian polities. In a context where the judiciary has been lax in defending the media from attacks which seek to curb its freedom, such unilateral moves will not remedy bad reporting but rather make conditions worse for the media to play its role. The way to cure the ills of a media corralled within corporate and political interests is to give it greater freedom from curbs.

Economic and Political Weekly of April 28, 2012

Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of  April 28, 2012 that you may find of interest.
    

 His and Hers

 Flavia Agnes

At the centre of the controversy over the government’s proposal to amend marriage laws are issues related to situations when there is an irretrievable breakdown of a marriage and to division of property at the time of divorce. The ambiguity and lack of transparency in the proposed amendment are hardly conducive to rendering a divorce easy in the event of a breakdown of a marriage and may have exactly the opposite effect. There are other allied questions regarding the woman’s right to the husband’s property as well as the rights of women belonging to the minorities. The government must address all these aspects before enacting the amendment.

 Nonadanga Eviction Questioning the Right to the City

 Swapna Banerjee-Guha

The recent eviction in Nonadanga in Kolkata can only be understood against the wider backdrop of the implementation of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission, which has been denying the poor of their right to the city, whether in Mumbai, Delhi or Kolkata.

Growing Military Assertion

What has made the country’s military top brass increasingly more forceful vis-à-vis the civilian authority?

Economic and Political Weekly of March 31 2012

Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of  March 31, 2012 that you may find of interest.
    

Judicial Control of Policymaking and Implementation

Videh Upadhyay

The Supreme Court has handed down an extraordinary decision with some extraordinary arguments directing the central government to execute the “river interlinking project”. How could the Court which says “it can hardly take unto itself tasks of making of a policy decision or planning for the country on the need for acquisition and construction of river linking channels” then go on to actually take the very same policy decision and create an implementing mechanism that cannot open the policy decision itself? Should not the judgment be reviewed?

Punjab Elections

Paramjit Singh Judge

The apparently unanticipated victory of the Shiromani Akali Dal-Bharatiya Janata Party alliance in Punjab appears less surprising if the political and social trends since the late 1990s are read carefully. The coming together of the SAD and the BJP has united the dominant castes among the Sikhs and Hindus into a stable political alliance and replicates the social structure of the Punjab village in its legislative assembly.

 The BJP Tidal Wave in Goa

 Frederick Noronha

Careful political management, built on Congress’ misdeeds, brought in a Bharatiya Janata Party tidal wave that more or less decimated the ruling party. The BJP has managed to woo the minorities as well, but what impact will soft Hindutva have on diversity in the state?

Economic and Political Weekly of March 24 2012


Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of  March 24, 2012 that you may find of interest.
 
 

 

The Koodankulam Struggle and the ‘Foreign Hand’

 S P Udayakumar

The Government of India is bent on maligning the struggle against the Koodankulam nuclear power plant in Tamil Nadu because it cannot comprehend that ordinary citizens can understand issues and wage a spirited struggle to protect their lives and livelihoods. One of the leaders of the movement writes about their struggle and addresses the allegation that the protests are being funded by foreign organisations.

Relevance of Congress’ Victory in Manipur

 Pradip Phanjoubam

The results of the Manipur elections point to an interesting theme paradox – the Congress was voted back to power despite its all-round failure in governance. The voters perhaps felt the need to vote the party back to power in the state contiguous to its reign in the centre, conditioned by incidents in history pertaining to centre-state relations. The rise of the Trinamool Congress as a force in the state and the marginal victories for the Naga People’s Front also carried important local messages.

Multinationals and Monopolies

Sudip Chaudhuri

In January 2005, drug product patent protection was reintroduced in India to comply with the agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights. How are the multinational pharmaceutical companies responding to the new policy environment? Is India likely to see monopolisation of the industry and high prices, which was the pattern before 1972 when India had product patent protection? Will the positive features of the post-1972 process patent era be diluted or negated? This study finds that the MNCS have started marketing new patented drugs in India at exorbitant prices particularly for life-threatening diseases such as cancer. The manufacturing and importing behaviour of the MNCS since the 1990s bear a close resemblance to that before the 1970s. Imports of high-priced finished formulations are expanding rapidly with manufacturing investments lagging far behind. The MNCS are also expanding vigorously in the generic segments and are trying to grow not only organically but through mergers & acquisitions and strategic alliance with Indian generic companies.

Economic and Political Weekly of February 25, 2012

Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of  February 25, 2012 that you may find of interest.

 

 

Gujarat 2002: What Justice for the Victims?

Christophe Jaffrelot

Ten years after the 2002 violence, the results of judicial proceedings have been very few in Gujarat. While the heaviest sentences have been handed down in cases where Hindus in Godhra had been victims of violence, a very large number of cases have been closed before prosecution and many others remain pending, with only a handful completed or near completion. The reasons for this failure of the rule of law – whose magnitude will have to be qualified since proceedings are still under way – lie in the grip that Hindu nationalism (as an ideology and a political movement) holds over the state machinery (including the police and the judiciary) in Gujarat and the central authority’s relative powerlessness (both at the executive and judicial level) to counteract it. This is so despite the repeated attempts that the Supreme Court has made (including the appointment of the Special Investigation Team), and the activism of non-governmental organisations and some mediapersons.

Gita Sen

 India’s steps towards universal health coverage began in the early years after Independence but they faltered because of various factors, including resource constraints. The context has vastly changed since then but the need remains as urgent as it always was. This overview to the special issue on the report of the High Level Expert Group on Universal Health Coverage notes that the report takes into account the complex nature of the health situation in the country and puts forth an integrated blueprint for achieving UHC. There may be a few shortcomings, but if the interlinked proposals are implemented in a carefully planned manner, a long-delayed promise to the country’s people could be largely fulfilled.

Corruption in the MGNREGS

 Martin Ravallion 

There is corruption in the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, no question about that. But simple indices that claim to measure corruption and make an assessment of interstate levels of corruption can end up offering us a wrong understanding.

Economic and Political Weekly of January 21, 2012

Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of January 21, 2012 that you may find of interest.
 
 


Repairing the Lokpal Bill

Sriram Panchu

There are many problems with the Lokpal Bill 2011, the most serious being the lack of independence to the anti-corruption wing of the Central Bureau of Investigation. There have been problems as well with the civil society approach to the negotiations with the government. Civil society should now put down the non-negotiable demand of a Lokpal with full control over investigation and prosecution, and for one law to operate nationally. However, it should accept differential methods of dealing with lower level corruption and citizen charters, giving the Lokpal a supervisory and advisory role in these areas.

Growth in India’s States in the First Decade of the 21st Century: Four Facts

Utsav Kumar , Arvind Subramanian

This paper is the first attempt at examining the growth performance across Indian states during 2001-09, a period also marked by the global financial crisis. We report four key findings. First, consistent with the fact that the decade was the best one for Indian macroeconomic performance, growth increased across almost all major states in 2001-09 compared to 1993-2001. Second, nevertheless, we continue to see the phenomenon of divergence or rising inequality across states: on average the richer states in 2001 grew faster in 2001-09. Third, during the crisis years of 2008 and 2009, states with the highest growth in 2001-07 suffered the largest deceleration. Since high growing states were also the most open, it seems that openness creates dynamism and vulnerability. Finally, although the demographic dividend – a young population boosting economic dynamism – was evident before 2000, there is little evidence that there was any dividend in the 2000s. Demography alone cannot be counted on for future economic growth.

Looking beyond Durban: Where To From Here?

Navroz K Dubash

The lesson for India after Durban is that it needs to formulate an approach that combines attention to industrialised countries’ historical responsibility for the problem with an embrace of its own responsibility to explore low carbon development trajectories. This is both ethically defensible and strategically wise. Ironically, India’s own domestic national approach of actively exploring “co-benefits” – policies that promote development while also yielding climate gains – suggests that it does take climate science seriously and has embraced responsibility as duty. However, by focusing on articulating rigid principles rather than building on actual policies and actions, it only weakens its own position.

Economic and Political Weekly of December 31, 2011


Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of December 31, 2011 that you may find of interest.

 Durban: Road to Nowhere

Praful Bidwai

 The biggest gainers from the new arrangement negotiated at Durban are the fossil fuel-driven industries of the North and other major polluters. The biggest losers are the cause of climate protection, besides underprivileged people, especially those who live in small island states and the least developed countries.


Durban Platform: Kyoto Negotiations Redux

 D Raghunandan

The official narrative on India’s position at the climate change talks at Durban has it that the country resisted the proposal to negotiate a new legally binding instrument until its concerns on equity had supposedly been accommodated. However, this ignores more important issues whose neglect by India has severely weakened its ability to intervene effectively in the international climate debate and shape the emerging new global climate architecture.

Regulating Internet Content

A clueless government seems to be lurching towards regressive restrictions.

Economic and Political Weekly of December 24, 2011

Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of December 24, 2011 that you may find of interest.

 

Food Security Bill: Simpler the Better

The draft Food Bill is in a mess; a simple solution is available to make it an effective legislation.

Haren Pandya’s Murder: Questions without Answers

 Shastri Ramachandaran

Gujarat’s former Home Minister Haren Pandya is long dead. What refuses to die is the speculation over who killed him, how and why. Three of the four elements that make for a murder are missing. These are: the murderer, the motive and the murder weapon. The only certain element is the murder victim.

The Information Deficit: Use of Media in a Deliberative Democracy

 Swati Bhattacharjee , Raghabendra Chattopadhyay

This study of more than 40 gram sabha proceedings in West Bengal finds that villagers use information on people’s entitlements to challenge local governments. The media is a significant source of information: out of 27 meetings in which villagers speak up, the media is cited in nine. But the “thinness” of information on entitlements in the media makes it easy for gram panchayat members to refute legitimate claims. The information deficit in the public sphere, arising from media apathy and political collusion, translates into inability of the poor to assess local governments. While the role of the media in strengthening the functioning of electoral democracy is acknowledged, media indifference to deliberative democracy limits poor people’s capacity to translate immediate demands for goods and services to aspirations for a good life.

Economic and Political Weekly of December 17, 2011

Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of December 17, 2011 that you may find of interest.

 Mullaperiyar: A Plea for Sanity

 Ramaswamy R Iyer

The safety of the Mullaperiyar dam is not a matter for judicial determination. This dispute is eminently a case for an agreed settlement by amicable talks between Kerala and Tamil Nadu. Talks at the intergovernmental level must be supplemented by civil society moves to bring the people concerned in the two states together.

FDI in Retail: Misplaced Expectations and Half-truths

 Sukhpal Singh

The central government claims that allowing foreign direct investment into India’s retail sector will benefit small farmers, expand employment and lower food inflation. What has been the experience in India with organised retail so far and what has been the global experience with FDI?

Hegemony in Contemporary Culture and Media and the Need for a Counter Initiative

 Sashi Kumar

Gramscian hegemony, more than overt imperialism, characterises contemporary mass culture and media. A paradigm shift in the way we understand, represent and experience the world subserves a new and aggressive corporate teleology. Technological convergence and digitisation, which held an initial promise of and potential for democratisation, collapse into vertical integration and monopolisation. In the process, cultural sovereignty is abstracted into a homogenised, make-believe, global marketplace, which reduces every individual to a consumer and excludes the real and abiding concerns of vast swathes of humanity. An intellectual resurgence must counter the counterfeit revolution of the information era.

Economic and Political Weekly of December 10, 2011

Please find below the titles, abstracts and links to a few articles from the Economic and Political Weekly of December 10, 2011 that you may find of interest.

Turning the Page in Forest Governance: Science and Bureaucracy

 Meghna Krishnadas , Umesh Srinivasan , Nandini Velho , Sachin Sridhara

Despite the legal provisions for the functioning of expert bodies like the National Board of Wildlife and the Forest Advisory Committee, the forest bureaucracy disdains the experts and often overrides scientific evaluations. The training course of the India Forest Service too lacks a social science component that can help new foresters understand the social ramifications of forest-related issues. It is time to create space for scientists and conservationists to liaise with the forest departments in the country.

 Urban Commons

 Vinay Gidwani , Amita Baviskar

From an understanding of the commons as a rural artefact, the concept has expanded to include urban spaces and practices. The destruction of common resources and the communities that depend upon them is a long-standing outcome of capitalist expansion. It is also a cause for concern, given the ultimate centrality of the commons to the reproduction of urban populations and ecosystems.

Hunters, Gatherers and Foragers in a Metropolis: Commonising the Private and Public in Mumbai

 D Parthasarathy

Mumbai is in reality a city of places that are not a part of the current set of fantasies that rule the minds of urban planners but are yet integrally linked to capitalist processes, to urban practices of place-making and to urbanism itself. From this perspective, this enquiry seeks not only to better understand and explain the processes that are forcing out the city’s less privileged from its commons, but also imagine how a more inclusive future could be achieved.