Urban poor lack a roof over their head
Looking into what’s happening in the State of Karnataka, Kathyayini Chamaraj discusses the
housing needs and rights of the urban poor.
Looking into what’s happening in the State of Karnataka, Kathyayini Chamaraj discusses the
housing needs and rights of the urban poor.
The pristine and idyllic pictures of Ladakh do not tell the true story. In recent past Ladakh has been losing its rich cultural heritage and natural resources, and sadly there has been no sincere concentrated official effort to stop this deterioration. But hope is on its way, says Ashish Kothari who visited the region recently.
Recent statistics about the growing number of women afflicted by HIV/AIDS around the world and in India are throwing light on a different dimension of this disease. The link between inequitable gender relations and the spread of HIV is setting it apart from other communicable diseases, says
Kalpana Sharma.
The private sector Baspa II hydel power project went live over two and half years ago and has been selling power to the Himachal Pradesh State Electricity Board. Lack of regulatory approvals and determination of final wholesale tariff has not deterred the company from raising money in capital markets.
Himanshu Upadhyaya
finds out more.
The Expert Appraisal Committee reviewing plans for a large hill toursim project in Himachal Pradesh has taken a critical view of it.
Responding to petitions from locals and conservationists, the EAC called for further studies of the project's likely impacts.
Kanchi Kohli
reports.
The BioCarbon Fund promises to plant trees across a swathe of Himachal Pradesh, amidst questions about the environmental value and
fairness of the program.
Sudhirendar Sharma
reports.
In the Indian version of suburbanisation, the poor are being forced out of the cities, compelled to pay the price for the creation of the global
city. Can we not envisage an inclusive city that caters to the needs of all its citizens, asks
Kalpana Sharma.
Madhusree Mukerjee's contribution lies in establishing the link between Churchill's decisions on this score and his worldview.
Firdaus Ahmed
reviews Churchill's Secret War.
Abhijit Das
expresses concerns on the United Progressive Alliance's misplaced stress on population control targeting, taking
the case of Uttar Pradesh.
It is certainly welcome that the government now recognises unsafe motherhood as a serious development concern.
But the plans to tackle this are unimaginative, and ignore many realities of health care for women in rural areas,
especially in the poorer states, writes
Abhijit Das.
The Goan government wants to make HIV testing mandatory for marrying couples. But mandatory testing will drive some people, who are already sceptical
about the health care system, further away from it. It is also unlikely to cause the changes in behaviour necessary to prevent the spread of HIV,
writes
Neerja Vaidya-Yadav.
India is notorious for its abysmal health services leading to very high infant and maternal mortality rates.
Ila Pathak
provides a glimpse of how much effort it takes to get official health functionaries to perform their assigned duties with a minimal degree of seriousness.
38 babies died in one hospital in Thiruvananthapuram over the past four
months, shocking a state which boasts of the lowest infant mortality rate
in the country. The much discussed and extolled Kerala model of health
development is ailing, reports
P N Venugopal.
In July, 18 Nobel laureates met with over 500 young scientists from around the world in Germany.
India sent 22 researchers. The meeting threw up many questions pertaining to the practice of scientific
research in India.
Varupi Jain
has more.
The heavy rains of the south-west monsoon are a few weeks away and
malaria usually follows, in Assam. The state has 20 per cent of
malaria deaths in India, but this time, doctors say they have
taken substantive measures.
Ratna Bharali Talukdar
reports.
A new anthology AIDS Sutra has 16 renowned literary figures writing about the AIDS epidemic in India and how different communities across the country are grappling with it.
Sumita Thapar
has more.
A clear focus on protecting the interests of non-smokers has led to worldwide efforts to ban smoking in all public places, and strongly curtail
any exceptions. India too has joined this trend, writes
Ramesh Menon.
Tamilnadu leads the country in nutritional interventions and yet has alarming levels of hunger in children. Research indicates that is a very likely cause of poor schooling achievement and drop-out rates, reports
Krithika Ramalingam.
NGOs have fared better than the government in tackling iron deficiency in poor children. Activists,
policy analysts and funders want a convergence of various departments as opposed to boxing nutrition
into the health-sector alone.
Krithika Ramalingam
completes her two-part inquiry.
As India moves closer to the deadline for achievement of its Millennium Development Goals, the critical need for effective family
planning interventions and greater awareness of the same become more pronounced, writes
Anuradha Sahni.
Institutionalised delivery is encouraged as a means of reducing maternal/infant mortality, but the misbehaviour meted to pregnant women in government hospitals deters them from seeking such care. Ruhi Kandhari reports.
Unnecessary tests, forced hospitalisations to meet the targets set for employed physicians, and the infamous but real ‘sink test’: the shocking realities in the private healthcare sector are many, as Pavan Kulkarni finds out at a panel discussion on the issue. Is more regulation the need of the hour?
N G Hegde
on a Karnataka water project that is more than an innovation making water and irrigation a reality in a drought-prone area.
Karnataka's best bid at electronic governance is targeting land records, says
Keya Acharya.
A new legislation aims to bring in a rigorous process of planning, transparency and citizen participation together at the local level in Karnataka, says
Vinay Baindur.
Jacob John
reviews Of Master Plans, Laws and Illegalities in an Era of Transition, a report prepared by the Alternate Law Forum for the Bangalore Development Authority.
The
Karnataka Election Watch Committee
collected an enormous amount of data about candidates as the state
went into Assembly and Lok Sabha polls late last month. A brief report.
Neither the protections of law nor interventions by the Supreme Court have ensured adequate minimum wages
for the jobs performed by tens of millions of unorganised workers.
Kathyayini Chamaraj
reports on a recent survey by a Bangalore-based group showing how far below fair standards these workers have been pushed.
The proposed Hubli-Ankola railway line in Karnataka originally stirred up criticism because if built, it would pass through the ecologically fragile Western Ghats forests. Matters recently came to a head when evidence emerged of the Railways proceeding to construct a part of the line without forest clearance.
Kanchi Kohli
has more.
Setting himself a target of a thousand trees each year, Dr Mahantesh Tapashetti has greened his neighbourhood and surrounding areas in Hubli by
himself. Many residents appreciate his work, and the Forest Department has been happy to support him, supplying trees for his care and planting them
each year.
Shree Padre
reports.
27-year-old Ratnamma, a garment factory worker, was forced to deliver a baby on
the streets of Bangalore. 20-year-old Gayathri was run over by the bus belonging to
the Bangalore garment factory where she worked. Garment workers in Bangalore are
caught in an exploitative web, reports
Padmalatha Ravi.
No matter which way India's seed policies are heading, the underlying purpose of
Malnad's home garden programme as a community conservation initiative for the
preservation of genetic diversity, organic agriculture, health and ecologically
sensitive livelihoods remains undiluted.
Keya Acharya
reports from northern Karnataka.
The latest vocational education courses are presenting job opportunities
for high school graduates that their poor parents lacked. Institutes
conducting bilingual training are particularly helpful for students
who are very likely to have not schooled in English medium.
Padmalatha Ravi
has more.
The Karnataka state legislature's amendment to the Panchayati
Raj law has already attracted severe criticism from civil
society. The governor had also expressed his objections. There
is now an outpouring of wrath from women panchayat members
around the state as protests intensify.
Kathyayini Chamaraj
reports.
By building tanks to catch run-off in the higher reaches of the land, a Karnataka farmer reaps the benefit of a higher water table in the lower
areas. In doing so, he remembers that this was the practice for a long time in this area, and he has simply recalled an old tradition.
Shree Padre
reports.
A far-sighted educational trust is reaping the benefit of digging recharge wells long before the need for them. While its own decision is a lesson in
conservation, the institution is also going further, imbibing ecological concerns into the students too.
Shree Padre
reports.
A 3-acre pond dug in the Yenepoya Medical College 15 kms from Mangalore is catching run-off from about 15 acres
of the campus and from an equal area of their neighbourhood. It has already saved the institution a substantial
sum on getting water from outside.
Shree Padre
reports.
79-year-old Achyutha Bhat brought surangas to Manila village in
Dakshina Kannada
district of Karnataka. His passion for the water
caves - which help tap and supply water - and his commitment to
training newcomers in suranga-digging has been a boost
for local farmers, reports
Shree Padre.
This 58-year-old illiterate farm labourer has developed irrigated farming at a hilltop in the Dakshina Kannada
district of Karnataka. His hard work, vision and never-say-die attitude have turned the land around and he now advises visiting
farmers.
Shree Padre
reports.
The proposed 1000 MW coal-fired power plant at Chamalapura, Mysore, to be located on agricultural land and within 30 kilometres of the Nagarhole and Bandipur national parks, evoked strong protests last year. Recent announcements indicate that the government is going slow.
Nandini Chami
has more.
Girish Kasaravalli's latest film is a beautiful celluloid essay on the trials and tribulations of a poor Muslim woman, Gulabi, as the world around
her changes in response to apparently unconnected events.
Shoma Chatterji
reviews the film.
It's a classic headline: "Government-funded rainwater harvesting for public schools goes wrong, money wasted". However in one district, the tale is altogether different.
Shree Padre
records the positives and the lessons.
A long history of questionable practices in the mining industry catches up with its practitioners, landing the whole affair in the Supreme Court.
Kanchi Kohli
reports.
It takes more to feed the family amidst destroyed houses and ruined hopes. The flood-hit women in North Karnataka are putting up with more than what their menfolk could ever empathise with.
Savita Hiremath
has more.
With two decades of continuous research and wise management, this ex-lecturer in Karnataka's Udupi district has made a barren hillock into a model of rain harvesting.
Shrikrishna D
reports.
The unseen impact of corruption on the millions of the deserving poor does not seem to affect our collective conscience.
We are losing a great opportunity to show we care, writes
R Balasubramaniam.
How did a journalist who covered the infamous homestay attack for his employer end up in jail with serious charges leveled against him? The Mangalore Police holds the answer, finds
Vaishnavi Vittal.