The sense of sisterhood that became evident during the rise of the contemporary feminist movement resembled the Marxist concept of
Anonymous Quiz
8%
Alienation
11%
Dialectics
70%
Class consciousness
11%
False consciousness
๐1
๐ LET'S DISCUSS ๐
How are you affected by globalization? Which aspects of globalisation do you find advantageous and which objectionable?
How are you affected by globalization? Which aspects of globalisation do you find advantageous and which objectionable?
๐ต The Invisibility of Women in Conflict Zones | Economic and Political Weekly
https://www.epw.in/engage/article/invisibility-women-conflict-zones
Wartime sexual violence is not just committed by some individuals, but rather it is often deployed as a tool to further political/military gains, to prove a point. This becomes especially challenging in the absence of justice delivery mechanisms and the lack of criminal infrastructure. To that extent, rape has also been normalised as an inevitable outcome of war.
https://www.epw.in/engage/article/invisibility-women-conflict-zones
Wartime sexual violence is not just committed by some individuals, but rather it is often deployed as a tool to further political/military gains, to prove a point. This becomes especially challenging in the absence of justice delivery mechanisms and the lack of criminal infrastructure. To that extent, rape has also been normalised as an inevitable outcome of war.
Economic and Political Weekly
The Invisibility of Women in Conflict Zones
This reading list examines womenโs complex experience in conflict zones along with their potential to emerge as equal stakeholders in conflict zones for ensuring rehabilitation and mitigation. This analysis maps the risks and vulnerabilities it exposes themโฆ
๐ USE YOUR SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION ๐
Have you ever been unaware of your true position in society -- that is, have you experienced false consciousness? Explain.
Hint: A worker with false consciousness may adopt an individualistic viewpoint toward capitalist exploitation ("I am being exploited by my boss").
In contrast, the class-conscious worker realises that all workers are being exploited by the bourgeoisie and have a common stake in revolution.
Have you ever been unaware of your true position in society -- that is, have you experienced false consciousness? Explain.
Hint: A worker with false consciousness may adopt an individualistic viewpoint toward capitalist exploitation ("I am being exploited by my boss").
In contrast, the class-conscious worker realises that all workers are being exploited by the bourgeoisie and have a common stake in revolution.
๐ค1
๐ต The Long Wait for Womenโs Representation | Economic and Political Weekly
https://www.epw.in/journal/2023/39/editorials/long-wait-womens-representation.html
It is disappointing that womenโs reservations are not being implemented immediately before the 2024 elections.
The Parliament has recently ratified the Constitution (128th Amendment) Bill, 2023 to reserve one-third or 33% of the seats in the Lok Sabha and state assemblies for women. Officially called the โNari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam,โ the bill was passed with a near unanimous support in the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha. It mandates that one-third of all seats in the Lok Sabha, state legislative assemblies, and Delhi, which is a union territory with an elected assembly, will be reserved for women.
It also proposed that women will get one-third of the seats allocated for Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs) on a periodic and rotational basis. With one-third seats being reserved for women in panchayati raj institutions, state assemblies, and the Lok Sabha, India can now boast of having guaranteed womenโs representation at almost all institutional levels of its electoral democracy.
The approval of the womenโs reservation bill in Parliament was indeed long-pending, and hence is a welcome step in the direction of ensuring womenโs political representation. A bill to reserve one-third of the seats for women was first introduced in 1996, and several attempts were made since then to get this bill passed in Parliament. The percentage of women in Parliament is still very low when compared to many other countries, despite considerable improvement over the years. In the Lok Sabha, women make up only around 15% of the members of Parliament (MPs). This is a big increase from the first elected Lok Sabha in 1952, where only 5% of the MPs were women, but it is nevertheless far from the ideal of adequate representation. Data also shows that less than 10% legislators in 20 state assemblies and union territories are women. Such data reveal the coexistence of the contradictory processes of universal adult franchise on the one hand and the sociopolitical disenfranchisement of women on the other. It could be argued that the formal existence of the right to vote proved to be inadequate in providing an equal and commensurate voice to politically disenfranchised groups like women, SCs, and STs, thereby marking the necessity of political reservations for these groups in making our electoral democracy more substantively representative in character.
The euphoria over getting the bill passed with unanimous support in Parliament is severely dampened, when it is noted that womenโs reservation will not be implemented in the 2024 general elections. According to the proยญvisions of the bill, its implementation shall commence only after the processes of the decennial census and delimitation of seats are completed. Article 82 of the Constitution stipulates that the number of seats in the Lok Sabha should be adjusted according to the population census every 10 years, so that each region can have a fair representation. However, constitutional amendments passed in 1976 and 2001 effectively froze the number of constituencies till 2026. This means that the delimitation exercise can only commence after 2026. Given that the previous delimitation commission took around five years to submit its report, most experts calculate that it is unlikely that the womenโs quota will be implemented even in the 2029 Lok Sabha elections.
https://www.epw.in/journal/2023/39/editorials/long-wait-womens-representation.html
It is disappointing that womenโs reservations are not being implemented immediately before the 2024 elections.
The Parliament has recently ratified the Constitution (128th Amendment) Bill, 2023 to reserve one-third or 33% of the seats in the Lok Sabha and state assemblies for women. Officially called the โNari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam,โ the bill was passed with a near unanimous support in the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha. It mandates that one-third of all seats in the Lok Sabha, state legislative assemblies, and Delhi, which is a union territory with an elected assembly, will be reserved for women.
It also proposed that women will get one-third of the seats allocated for Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs) on a periodic and rotational basis. With one-third seats being reserved for women in panchayati raj institutions, state assemblies, and the Lok Sabha, India can now boast of having guaranteed womenโs representation at almost all institutional levels of its electoral democracy.
The approval of the womenโs reservation bill in Parliament was indeed long-pending, and hence is a welcome step in the direction of ensuring womenโs political representation. A bill to reserve one-third of the seats for women was first introduced in 1996, and several attempts were made since then to get this bill passed in Parliament. The percentage of women in Parliament is still very low when compared to many other countries, despite considerable improvement over the years. In the Lok Sabha, women make up only around 15% of the members of Parliament (MPs). This is a big increase from the first elected Lok Sabha in 1952, where only 5% of the MPs were women, but it is nevertheless far from the ideal of adequate representation. Data also shows that less than 10% legislators in 20 state assemblies and union territories are women. Such data reveal the coexistence of the contradictory processes of universal adult franchise on the one hand and the sociopolitical disenfranchisement of women on the other. It could be argued that the formal existence of the right to vote proved to be inadequate in providing an equal and commensurate voice to politically disenfranchised groups like women, SCs, and STs, thereby marking the necessity of political reservations for these groups in making our electoral democracy more substantively representative in character.
The euphoria over getting the bill passed with unanimous support in Parliament is severely dampened, when it is noted that womenโs reservation will not be implemented in the 2024 general elections. According to the proยญvisions of the bill, its implementation shall commence only after the processes of the decennial census and delimitation of seats are completed. Article 82 of the Constitution stipulates that the number of seats in the Lok Sabha should be adjusted according to the population census every 10 years, so that each region can have a fair representation. However, constitutional amendments passed in 1976 and 2001 effectively froze the number of constituencies till 2026. This means that the delimitation exercise can only commence after 2026. Given that the previous delimitation commission took around five years to submit its report, most experts calculate that it is unlikely that the womenโs quota will be implemented even in the 2029 Lok Sabha elections.
Economic and Political Weekly
The Long Wait for Womenโs Representation
It is disappointing that womenโs reservations are not being implemented immediately before the 2024 elections.
The first step in any sociological research project is to
Anonymous Quiz
13%
Collect data
55%
Define the problem
8%
Review previous research
24%
Formulate a hypothesis
Through which type of research technique does a sociologist ensure that data are statistically representative of the population being studied?
Anonymous Quiz
71%
Sampling
9%
Experiments
16%
Ethnography
5%
Control variables
A researcher can obtain a higher response rate by using which type of survey?
Anonymous Quiz
21%
An interview
43%
A questionnaire
20%
Representative samples
16%
Ethnographic techniques
Fill in the blanks
As part of their commitment to __ neutrality, investigators have an ethical obligation to accept research findings even when the data run counter to their personal views or to widely accepted beliefs.
As part of their commitment to __ neutrality, investigators have an ethical obligation to accept research findings even when the data run counter to their personal views or to widely accepted beliefs.
Fill in the blanks
__ refers to the degree to which a measure or scale truly reflects the phenomenon under study.
__ refers to the degree to which a measure or scale truly reflects the phenomenon under study.
๐ต Watch | Why is the Hakki Pikki tribal community unhappy with the land given to them? - The Hindu
https://www.thehindu.com/videos/watch-why-is-the-hakki-pikki-tribal-community-unhappy-with-the-land-given-to-them/article67371633.ece
The Hakki Pikkis are traditionally a semi-nomadic tribe of bird catchers and hunters, who settled down in several parts of Karnataka.
In the last 20 years the community left bird catching and hunting, and have started to prepare traditional medicines, especially hair oils. The settlement on the edge of the Bannerghatta National Park has both Hakki Pikki and Iruliga tribals staying here.
In 1962, the Government of Karnataka allotted 350 acres of land for them to sustain themselves through agriculture. But for the longest time, the Forest Department claimed that the tribes were encroachers.
In 1974, the Bannerghatta wooded area was declared as a National Park. This led to the criminalisation of these communities living on the edges of the forest.
The Hindu visited the settlement of around 270 families, and spoke to them about the issues they have with the title deeds which they have received from the Karnataka government.
https://www.thehindu.com/videos/watch-why-is-the-hakki-pikki-tribal-community-unhappy-with-the-land-given-to-them/article67371633.ece
The Hakki Pikkis are traditionally a semi-nomadic tribe of bird catchers and hunters, who settled down in several parts of Karnataka.
In the last 20 years the community left bird catching and hunting, and have started to prepare traditional medicines, especially hair oils. The settlement on the edge of the Bannerghatta National Park has both Hakki Pikki and Iruliga tribals staying here.
In 1962, the Government of Karnataka allotted 350 acres of land for them to sustain themselves through agriculture. But for the longest time, the Forest Department claimed that the tribes were encroachers.
In 1974, the Bannerghatta wooded area was declared as a National Park. This led to the criminalisation of these communities living on the edges of the forest.
The Hindu visited the settlement of around 270 families, and spoke to them about the issues they have with the title deeds which they have received from the Karnataka government.
The Hindu
Watch | Why is the Hakki Pikki tribal community unhappy with the land given to them?
The Hindu visited a Hakki Pikki settlement of around 270 families at Bannerghatta National Park near Bengaluru
๐ FOOD FOR THOUGHT ๐
Why do you think most college students regard binge drinking as a normal rather than a deviant behaviour?
#FoodForThought
Why do you think most college students regard binge drinking as a normal rather than a deviant behaviour?
#FoodForThought
๐ต Margarita with a Straw: Female Sexuality, Same Sex Love, and Disability in India | Economic and Political Weekly
https://www.epw.in/engage/article/margarita-straw-female-sexuality-same-sex-love-and#:~:text=Through%20its%20frequent%20attempts%20of,within%20Margarita%20with%20a%20Straw
Do we identify women with disability as sexual beings? Have films reiterated disability and sexuality as incongruent identities, or has the trend been undergoing a transition? Margarita with a Straw (2014) raised these relevant questions about womenโs disability and sexuality in India, and further identified the extent to which Bollywood has misconstrued identities and glorified femininity by adding to the negativity associated with womenโs disability in India.
https://www.epw.in/engage/article/margarita-straw-female-sexuality-same-sex-love-and#:~:text=Through%20its%20frequent%20attempts%20of,within%20Margarita%20with%20a%20Straw
Do we identify women with disability as sexual beings? Have films reiterated disability and sexuality as incongruent identities, or has the trend been undergoing a transition? Margarita with a Straw (2014) raised these relevant questions about womenโs disability and sexuality in India, and further identified the extent to which Bollywood has misconstrued identities and glorified femininity by adding to the negativity associated with womenโs disability in India.
๐ต Gandhian concept of village development and India's development policy | Gandhi's Views | Articles on and by Mahatma Gandhi
https://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/village_development.html
Good governance demands respect for human rights, rule of law, strengthening of democracy, promoting transparency and capacity in public administration. The responsiveness of the state and its institutions to the needs and aspirations of the people, and inclusive citizenship are imperative to good governance. Democracy depends upon the equality of all human beings, their right to participate in social and political transformation and the right to development, to live in dignity. Panchayat Raj is a system and process of good governance. Villages have always been the basic units of administration in India since ancient times. The Gram Sabha can become the cornerstone of the whole Panchayat Raj institutional set-up, thereby the Indian democratic system. So in this paper focus is on Gandhian concept of Panchayat Raj. This is useful to development of India. So in 21st century this concept becomes powerful in the Nation.
Importance of Democratic Decentralization:
Gandhi's concept of democratic decentralization bears the stamp of his passionate belief in non-violence, truth and individual freedom. He calls it Panchayati Raj or village Swaraj. He wants to see each village a little republic, self-sufficient in its vital wants, organically and non-hierarchically linked with the larger spatial bodies and enjoying the maximum freedom of deciding the affairs of the locality. Gandhi wanted political power to be distributed among the villages in India. Gandhi preferred the term โSwarajโ to describe what he called true democracy. This democracy is based upon freedom. Individual freedom in Gandhiโs view, could be maintained only in autonomous, self-reliant communities that offer opportunities to the people for fullest participation.1
https://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/village_development.html
Good governance demands respect for human rights, rule of law, strengthening of democracy, promoting transparency and capacity in public administration. The responsiveness of the state and its institutions to the needs and aspirations of the people, and inclusive citizenship are imperative to good governance. Democracy depends upon the equality of all human beings, their right to participate in social and political transformation and the right to development, to live in dignity. Panchayat Raj is a system and process of good governance. Villages have always been the basic units of administration in India since ancient times. The Gram Sabha can become the cornerstone of the whole Panchayat Raj institutional set-up, thereby the Indian democratic system. So in this paper focus is on Gandhian concept of Panchayat Raj. This is useful to development of India. So in 21st century this concept becomes powerful in the Nation.
Importance of Democratic Decentralization:
Gandhi's concept of democratic decentralization bears the stamp of his passionate belief in non-violence, truth and individual freedom. He calls it Panchayati Raj or village Swaraj. He wants to see each village a little republic, self-sufficient in its vital wants, organically and non-hierarchically linked with the larger spatial bodies and enjoying the maximum freedom of deciding the affairs of the locality. Gandhi wanted political power to be distributed among the villages in India. Gandhi preferred the term โSwarajโ to describe what he called true democracy. This democracy is based upon freedom. Individual freedom in Gandhiโs view, could be maintained only in autonomous, self-reliant communities that offer opportunities to the people for fullest participation.1
๐ต 16.1 Sociological Perspectives on War and Terrorism | Social Problems
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-socialproblems/chapter/16-1-sociological-perspectives-on-war-and-terrorism/
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-socialproblems/chapter/16-1-sociological-perspectives-on-war-and-terrorism/
๐4
๐ต 4. Introduction to Queering Gender and Sexuality โ Erick Jackaman
https://transingabout.com/trans-studies/queering-gender-sexuality/
What is a queer perspective of gender?
Understanding that gender has multiple meanings eg.
Internal (gender) identity
Outward expressions (of gender)
System of how social life is structured
Gender expressions, norms and identities vary across time, space and culture
The way we experience gender and how gender functions in society is inextricably linked to other aspects of ourselves, such as race, class, disability, age etc.
Gender can be understood as something we โdoโ, rather than something we are โ Candace West and Don Zimmerman
Gender can be understood as โperformativeโ, meaning that it emerges in and through behaviours and interactions rather than those (gendered) behaviours being reflective of an inner gender core โ Judith Butler
Gender can be viewed as โbiopsychosocialโ, that is, continuously understood and (re)produced through interactions between our biological, psychological and social worlds.
Gender is not simply the social counterpart of โbiologicalโ sex.
Rather, a queer perspective would view gender and sex as intrinsically interconnected โ Judith Butler and Anne Fausto-Sterling
Gender is not a binary, but rather encompasses a wide range of expressions, including (but not limited to) femininities, masculinities and non-binary expressions of gender.
#QueerPerspective
https://transingabout.com/trans-studies/queering-gender-sexuality/
What is a queer perspective of gender?
Understanding that gender has multiple meanings eg.
Internal (gender) identity
Outward expressions (of gender)
System of how social life is structured
Gender expressions, norms and identities vary across time, space and culture
The way we experience gender and how gender functions in society is inextricably linked to other aspects of ourselves, such as race, class, disability, age etc.
Gender can be understood as something we โdoโ, rather than something we are โ Candace West and Don Zimmerman
Gender can be understood as โperformativeโ, meaning that it emerges in and through behaviours and interactions rather than those (gendered) behaviours being reflective of an inner gender core โ Judith Butler
Gender can be viewed as โbiopsychosocialโ, that is, continuously understood and (re)produced through interactions between our biological, psychological and social worlds.
Gender is not simply the social counterpart of โbiologicalโ sex.
Rather, a queer perspective would view gender and sex as intrinsically interconnected โ Judith Butler and Anne Fausto-Sterling
Gender is not a binary, but rather encompasses a wide range of expressions, including (but not limited to) femininities, masculinities and non-binary expressions of gender.
#QueerPerspective