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🔵 India, disability inclusion and the power of ‘by’ - The Hindu
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/india-disability-inclusion-and-the-power-of-by/article67601986.ece
The goal of social justice cannot be achieved without the inclusion of persons with disabilities in all spheres of development, starting with rural areas and rural resilience. Evidence shows a bi-directional link to poverty, nutrition, and hunger, and as a consequence, there needs to be more inclusive opportunities and employment in rural areas. Given the historic marginalisation of persons with disabilities and the backsliding of the progress on the Sustainable Development Goals, a fundamental shift in commitment, solidarity, financing and action is critical. It is about time that the voices and needs of persons with disabilities be prioritised at the centre of the global development agenda.
#Social_Justice #Differently_Abled #Inclusion
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/india-disability-inclusion-and-the-power-of-by/article67601986.ece
According to the English dictionary, “For” is often used when a person is receiving something and “By” is to “identify the agent performing an action”. This difference is crucial when it comes to disability inclusion, as the approach is completely different if it is “by” persons with disabilities being a part of the process and not “for” them, without them in the process.
The goal of social justice cannot be achieved without the inclusion of persons with disabilities in all spheres of development, starting with rural areas and rural resilience. Evidence shows a bi-directional link to poverty, nutrition, and hunger, and as a consequence, there needs to be more inclusive opportunities and employment in rural areas. Given the historic marginalisation of persons with disabilities and the backsliding of the progress on the Sustainable Development Goals, a fundamental shift in commitment, solidarity, financing and action is critical. It is about time that the voices and needs of persons with disabilities be prioritised at the centre of the global development agenda.
#Social_Justice #Differently_Abled #Inclusion
The Hindu
India, disability inclusion and the power of ‘by’
A bottom-up approach to disability inclusion is crucial to build productive pathways out of poverty and ensure that persons with disabilities are recognised as active members of society
🔵 Re-criminalising adultery as a gender-neutral offence
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/re-criminalising-adultery-as-a-gender-neutral-offence/article67565680.ece
In its 350-page report, the Committee suggested that adultery be reinstated as a criminal offence, but be made gender-neutral, thereby making both men and women equally culpable under the law. Highlighting the need to protect the institution of marriage, the report stipulates, “..
”
The Committee also pointed out that the revoked Section 497 of the IPC “only penalised the married man, and reduced the married woman to be a property of her husband”. The proposed change also seeks to address this deficiency.
#Social_Institution #Marriage
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/re-criminalising-adultery-as-a-gender-neutral-offence/article67565680.ece
In its 350-page report, the Committee suggested that adultery be reinstated as a criminal offence, but be made gender-neutral, thereby making both men and women equally culpable under the law. Highlighting the need to protect the institution of marriage, the report stipulates, “..
the Committee is of the view that the institution of marriage is considered sacred in Indian society and there is a need to safeguard its sanctity. For the sake of protecting the institution of marriage, this section should be retained in the Sanhita (Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita) by making it gender neutral.
”
The Committee also pointed out that the revoked Section 497 of the IPC “only penalised the married man, and reduced the married woman to be a property of her husband”. The proposed change also seeks to address this deficiency.
#Social_Institution #Marriage
The Hindu
Re-criminalising adultery as a gender-neutral offence | Explained
The Hindu decodes the history of the adultery provision and what impact making it gender-neutral may have
🔵 PressReader.com | One-third of all 2022 suicides were of daily wage earners, farmers, says NCRB report
https://www.pressreader.com/india/the-hindu-kolkata-9WW9/20231205/281638194973740
#Suicide #Durkheim
https://www.pressreader.com/india/the-hindu-kolkata-9WW9/20231205/281638194973740
#Suicide #Durkheim
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🔵 Mapping the socio-economic changes in the lower Cauvery delta - The Hindu
https://www.thehindu.com/specials/text-and-context/mapping-the-socio-economic-changes-in-the-lower-cauvery-delta/article67604474.ece
Why has the lower Cauvery delta declined as a hub of rice cultivation? What has been the economic impact of this drop? Why does inequality persist in the agrarian sector despite the fact that “old forms of tyrannical landlordism” and economic oppression of Dalits do not exist today? How have changes in the agriculture sector affected employment and income, education, sanitation and housing? Why is it important to push for fundamental structural change to ensure that the gains achieved in both economic performance and human development in rural Tamil Nadu are not in vain? In 2018, the Foundation for Agrarian Studies launched a project to study agrarian relations in the lower Cauvery delta with a special focus on two villages.
#Economy #Villages
https://www.thehindu.com/specials/text-and-context/mapping-the-socio-economic-changes-in-the-lower-cauvery-delta/article67604474.ece
Why has the lower Cauvery delta declined as a hub of rice cultivation? What has been the economic impact of this drop? Why does inequality persist in the agrarian sector despite the fact that “old forms of tyrannical landlordism” and economic oppression of Dalits do not exist today? How have changes in the agriculture sector affected employment and income, education, sanitation and housing? Why is it important to push for fundamental structural change to ensure that the gains achieved in both economic performance and human development in rural Tamil Nadu are not in vain? In 2018, the Foundation for Agrarian Studies launched a project to study agrarian relations in the lower Cauvery delta with a special focus on two villages.
#Economy #Villages
The Hindu
Mapping the socio-economic changes in the lower Cauvery delta
Lower Cauvery delta's decline in rice cultivation has had economic impact & inequality persists despite absence of old forms of oppression. This volume attempts to answer why, mapping changes from surveys in Palakurichi & Venmani, TN. Findings: water supply…
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🔵 Women’s extreme seclusion during menstruation and children’s health in Nepal - PMC
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Abstract
There is limited empirical evidence from low-income countries on the effects of women’s seclusion during menstruation on children’s health. The objective of the current study was to examine the association between women’s extreme seclusion during menstruation and their children’s nutritional status and health in Nepal. Using nationally representative data from the 2019 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, we examined the relationship between mother’s exposure to extreme forms of seclusion during menstruation and anthropometric measures of nutritional status and health outcomes among children ages 5–59 months (n = 6,301). We analyzed the data in a regression framework, controlling for potential confounders, including province fixed effects. We assessed extreme seclusion during menstruation based on women’s exposure to chhaupadi, a practice in which women are forced to stay away from home—in separate huts or animal sheds—during menstruation and childbirth. Mothers’ exposure to extreme seclusion during menstruation was associated with 0.18 standard deviation lower height-for-age z-scores (HAZ) (p = 0.046) and 0.20 standard deviation lower weight-for-age z-scores (WAZ) (p = 0.007) among children. Analysis by the place of seclusion showed that the negative association was stronger when women stayed in animal sheds—0.28 SD for HAZ (p = 0.007) and 0.32 SD for WAZ (p<0.001)—than when they stayed in separate huts. Extreme seclusion was associated with higher incidence of acute respiratory symptoms but not with incidence of diarrhea, irrespective of the place of seclusion. Women’s extreme seclusion during menstruation in Nepal has profound implications on the physical health of their children. Additional research is needed to ascertain potential mechanisms.
Go to:
Introduction
Women all over the world undergo some forms of menstruation-related discrimination [1–3]. One such form of menstruation discrimination, called chhaupadi, is practiced in the western part of Nepal. Chhaupadi is a practice in which women are secluded and forced to stay separately in makeshift huts or animal sheds during menstruation and, in some cases, during child-birth [4].
In addition to having to eat and sleep separately, women are not allowed to touch other individuals, eat certain types of food items, visit temples, or worship. The huts where women stay during their menstruation are often small, dark, and without ventilation [5]. Women are exposed directly to animal feces and associated pathogens when they are forced to stay in animal sheds.
#Women #Isolation #Menstruation
P. S. Even in Abrahamic scriptures, women are considered impure during menstruation and child birth. (Eg. Old Testament)
Link
Go to:
Abstract
There is limited empirical evidence from low-income countries on the effects of women’s seclusion during menstruation on children’s health. The objective of the current study was to examine the association between women’s extreme seclusion during menstruation and their children’s nutritional status and health in Nepal. Using nationally representative data from the 2019 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, we examined the relationship between mother’s exposure to extreme forms of seclusion during menstruation and anthropometric measures of nutritional status and health outcomes among children ages 5–59 months (n = 6,301). We analyzed the data in a regression framework, controlling for potential confounders, including province fixed effects. We assessed extreme seclusion during menstruation based on women’s exposure to chhaupadi, a practice in which women are forced to stay away from home—in separate huts or animal sheds—during menstruation and childbirth. Mothers’ exposure to extreme seclusion during menstruation was associated with 0.18 standard deviation lower height-for-age z-scores (HAZ) (p = 0.046) and 0.20 standard deviation lower weight-for-age z-scores (WAZ) (p = 0.007) among children. Analysis by the place of seclusion showed that the negative association was stronger when women stayed in animal sheds—0.28 SD for HAZ (p = 0.007) and 0.32 SD for WAZ (p<0.001)—than when they stayed in separate huts. Extreme seclusion was associated with higher incidence of acute respiratory symptoms but not with incidence of diarrhea, irrespective of the place of seclusion. Women’s extreme seclusion during menstruation in Nepal has profound implications on the physical health of their children. Additional research is needed to ascertain potential mechanisms.
Go to:
Introduction
Women all over the world undergo some forms of menstruation-related discrimination [1–3]. One such form of menstruation discrimination, called chhaupadi, is practiced in the western part of Nepal. Chhaupadi is a practice in which women are secluded and forced to stay separately in makeshift huts or animal sheds during menstruation and, in some cases, during child-birth [4].
The practice is rooted in patriarchy and Hindu mythology that considers women impure, thus untouchable, during menstruation and childbirth.
In addition to having to eat and sleep separately, women are not allowed to touch other individuals, eat certain types of food items, visit temples, or worship. The huts where women stay during their menstruation are often small, dark, and without ventilation [5]. Women are exposed directly to animal feces and associated pathogens when they are forced to stay in animal sheds.
#Women #Isolation #Menstruation
P. S. Even in Abrahamic scriptures, women are considered impure during menstruation and child birth. (Eg. Old Testament)
PubMed Central (PMC)
Women’s extreme seclusion during menstruation and children’s health in Nepal
There is limited empirical evidence from low-income countries on the effects of women’s seclusion during menstruation on children’s health. The objective of the current study was to examine the association between women’s extreme ...
🔵 The Ambedkar touch in rethinking social justice policies - The Hindu
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/the-ambedkar-touch-in-rethinking-social-justice-policies/article67608373.ece
Modern democracy is synonymous with both the values of social harmony and reforms that ensure dignity and self-respect to its participants, especially the historically deprived and socially marginalised people. Further, democratic institutions are mandated to engage with the worst-off social groups and ensure their substantive participation as a significant governing class in political affairs. The socially oppressed groups in India, especially Dalits, adored and celebrated such modern virtues because of their liberative potential and egalitarian goals. Babasaheb Ambedkar emerged as a torchbearer of liberal enlightened ideas and expected that post-colonial India would be distinct from the exploitative Brahmanical past and invite Dalits and other marginalised communities to be equal shareholders in the nation’s economic and political development. Ironically, the modernist objectives have been partially achieved only today. With the ascent of neo-liberal economic development, the conventional support that Dalits and Adivasis have received from state institutions, has derailed.
#Dalits #Social_Justice
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/the-ambedkar-touch-in-rethinking-social-justice-policies/article67608373.ece
Modern democracy is synonymous with both the values of social harmony and reforms that ensure dignity and self-respect to its participants, especially the historically deprived and socially marginalised people. Further, democratic institutions are mandated to engage with the worst-off social groups and ensure their substantive participation as a significant governing class in political affairs. The socially oppressed groups in India, especially Dalits, adored and celebrated such modern virtues because of their liberative potential and egalitarian goals. Babasaheb Ambedkar emerged as a torchbearer of liberal enlightened ideas and expected that post-colonial India would be distinct from the exploitative Brahmanical past and invite Dalits and other marginalised communities to be equal shareholders in the nation’s economic and political development. Ironically, the modernist objectives have been partially achieved only today. With the ascent of neo-liberal economic development, the conventional support that Dalits and Adivasis have received from state institutions, has derailed.
#Dalits #Social_Justice
The Hindu
The Ambedkar touch in rethinking social justice policies
It is an appropriate time to imagine how the worst-off social groups can become an integral and substantive part of the new economic order
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🔵 Move away from colonial mindset, encourage use of Bharatiya languages, NCERT says - The Hindu
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/move-away-from-colonial-mindset-encourage-use-of-bharatiya-languages-ncert-says/article67611758.ece
#Education #Colonial
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/move-away-from-colonial-mindset-encourage-use-of-bharatiya-languages-ncert-says/article67611758.ece
#Education #Colonial
The Hindu
Move away from colonial mindset, encourage use of Bharatiya languages, NCERT says
Govt. acknowledges India & Bharat as interchangeable names in Constitution; NCERT to use both in textbooks. CPI MP Santhosh Kumar says India vs Bharat debate is artificially created to divide people; Govt. intent on dividing country exposed.
🔵 Gender Gaps and Gajras in a Women’s World of Science - The Hindu
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/gender-gaps-and-gajras-in-a-womens-world-of-science/article67608310.ece
Motherhood
Other key issues which cropped up during the discussion included a lack of support systems within the industry, how motherhood and family impact women’s science careers, and the gender stereotypes in the industry, among other things. “
,” points out Shekhar.
#Women #Science #Barriers
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/gender-gaps-and-gajras-in-a-womens-world-of-science/article67608310.ece
Motherhood
Other key issues which cropped up during the discussion included a lack of support systems within the industry, how motherhood and family impact women’s science careers, and the gender stereotypes in the industry, among other things. “
I think the patriarchy and the prejudice can sometimes lead to people not being understood, and lead to people feeling that they are not being heard
,” points out Shekhar.
#Women #Science #Barriers
The Hindu
Gender Gaps and Gajras in a Women’s World of Science
There is a tendency to see science as being above society, untouched by the regular society’s biases, points out independent science journalist Nandita Jayaraj, the co-author of Lab Hopping: A Journey to Find India’s Women In Science. “But in contrast, it…
🔵 Concealed Scars Beyond The Frontlines: Women's Health In Conflict Zones
https://www.orfonline.org/expert-speak/concealed-scars-beyond-the-frontlines-women-s-health-in-conflict-zones?s=35
Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is one of the most constant, prevalent, and ruinous breaches of basic human rights. For example, in Vietnam, the financial repercussions of such violence were believed to account for 1.4 percent of its GDP. Similarly, in Morocco, it is reckoned that about US$308 million is forfeited each year owing to physical and sexual violence. Women and girls in conflict areas grapple with an array of tribulations that imperil their physical and psychological health. The unremitting menace of hostility shatters their everyday existence, curtailing access to vital necessities like medical care. This precarious landscape hems their prospects for economic advancement, fuelling a relentless spiral into impoverishment. Moreover, women find themselves disproportionately afflicted by acts of violence, which encompass sexual abuse, familial aggression, and being sold into coercion against their will. For instance, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, and Sudan, it was reported that the army and armed groups continued to abduct women for sexual exploitation, while Yemen, Somalia, and Syria reported cases of sexual slavery and forced marriages to fighters.
#Women #Violence
https://www.orfonline.org/expert-speak/concealed-scars-beyond-the-frontlines-women-s-health-in-conflict-zones?s=35
Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is one of the most constant, prevalent, and ruinous breaches of basic human rights. For example, in Vietnam, the financial repercussions of such violence were believed to account for 1.4 percent of its GDP. Similarly, in Morocco, it is reckoned that about US$308 million is forfeited each year owing to physical and sexual violence. Women and girls in conflict areas grapple with an array of tribulations that imperil their physical and psychological health. The unremitting menace of hostility shatters their everyday existence, curtailing access to vital necessities like medical care. This precarious landscape hems their prospects for economic advancement, fuelling a relentless spiral into impoverishment. Moreover, women find themselves disproportionately afflicted by acts of violence, which encompass sexual abuse, familial aggression, and being sold into coercion against their will. For instance, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, and Sudan, it was reported that the army and armed groups continued to abduct women for sexual exploitation, while Yemen, Somalia, and Syria reported cases of sexual slavery and forced marriages to fighters.
#Women #Violence
orfonline.org
Concealed scars beyond the frontlines: Women’s health in conflict zones