Archive for the 'Society & Development' Category

world community grid and more than one rupee

charukesi November 30th, 2005

I hope some good comes out of this appeal for one rupee a day for Project Why. A few popular blogs had linked to the post as well (thanks Amit, Uma, Abi, desipundit); more people have seen Anouradha’s modest appeal, will they also act on it?

No one has responded with ideas on what we can do further with blogs for fund-raising for such causes. So here is my own idea: the next time there is a blogger’s meet in any city, can each of the bloggers put aside for a good cause the money they have spent on their coffee there. If each of us spends 50 rupees on coffee there and puts aside 50 rupees, at the end of the blogger’s meet, we have not just ten (or twenty or more) happy bloggers who have their next post ready, but a bunch of happy children - who possibly have eaten a meal or receive medical tretment with the money.

I am not personally invovled in Project Why (or any such project) yet - regrets. But as a blogger, I believe in the power of many. I can make a beginning this way… I also know that bloggers in Bangalore have been thinking about doing something together this way.

What do you think?

***

May be very late in pointing out this - but I recently came across the world community grid project. In the debate of leaving computer on v/s switching it off after each use, I side with the former. The project is an effort to use your computer in its idle time. This is from the site - World Community Grid’s mission is to create the largest public computing grid benefiting humanity. Our work is built on the belief that technological innovation combined with visionary scientific research and large-scale volunteerism can change our world for the better. Our success depends on individuals - like you - collectively contributing their unused computer time to this not-for-profit endeavor.

They have a new fight AIDS @home project for which I am going to start donating my computer time. Please sign up for that right now. (And imagine having this on your CV, ‘helped find cure for AIDS). Thanks!

A rupee a day

charukesi November 24th, 2005

But what I do? What can an individul do?

Anuradha at Project Why believes that not only do individuals matter but even single rupee contributions to a cause do.

Which is why this plea for a rupee day donors.

If you have not heard of Project Why, please read about it here and here. Pwhy is about a remarkable lady Anuradha Bakshi and her commitment to making a difference to the lives of hundreds of underpriveleged children .

First check out this pledge at pledgebank.

We keep talking about the power of the blogosphere and the differene we can make. Will the blogosphere please respond to this call for help?

This is how can help :

Please start with making your one rupee a day (or more definitely) contributions towards the cause.
Please spread the word around.
Please leave your ideas and suggestions on what else Anu can do in this effort. And how bloggers can help. Ammani had run this short story competition to raise funds for the effort. Any more ideas?

And if you are wondering why one rupee, here goes

Hiv-hope news updates

charukesi October 27th, 2005

The Science blog had carried this piece recently, HIV Mortality in India Drops with Introduction of Generic Antiretroviral Therapy. The survival rate of HIV-infected patients in India has risen in response to a 20-fold drop in the price of antiretroviral therapy (ART).

The piece ends with this very important point. Making HIV-infected people aware of affordable treatment options is an important additional step toward curbing the spread of a deadly disease in a resource-poor country. True, very true.

Mzansi Afrika reports on clinical trials on the new anti-HIV gel for women (link through global voices). From the report - the trials will begin in South Africa and Uganda this week, and then extend into Tanzania and Zambia later in the year. Similar trials are being conducted in Australia by a research group.

The report also mentions, In India as well, in Tamil Nadu, similar trials are being conducted on a product called Praneem. Praneem is essentially a microbicide. These microbicides will enable women to negotiate condom use or to abandon partners who put them at risk and would also help avoid unwanted pregnancies, according to experts. With such products coming up, women empowerment will acquire new meaning in Tamil Nadu in a few months’ time when the third phase of the clinical trials for at least three candidate microbicides will begin. The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), a premier research institution, is already studying a product called “Praneem”.

Anyone heard more about Praneem?

Blog Quake Day

charukesi October 26th, 2005

aid-globeToday is Blog Quake Day, a fine blogging effort initiated by desipundit.

The best resource I can point you towards is the South Asia Quake Help blog. Reuters’ AlertNet has updated news on the relief operations and also a list of organizations to which you can contribute.

Please take the Blog Quake Day message forward. And please contribute in any way, big or small that you can to the relief efforts.

Sex ratio across rural and urban India

charukesi October 17th, 2005

Just read Harini’s post on the 60 million missing children - how to name it? Readying myself for the enlightening and amusing comments containing the “ist” words - activist and feminist - I urge you to head there right now and read it. (And no, don’t even bother mentioning Hepatitis to me).

And just today, I came across this intriguing statistic on the difference in sex ratio between urban and rural India. (It is part of a larger research on “Household Consumer Expenditure
and Employment-Unemployment Situation in India” conducted by the National Sample Survey Organisation - 2003 data).

Here it is.

Sex ratio (no. of females per 1000 males)
Rural 957 Urban 932

Sex ratio among adults
Rural 982 Urban 930

Sex ratio among children
Rural 915 Urban 939

Given the deplorable situation, overall rural India has a better sex ratio.
The sex ratio among adults (defined as persons aged 14 and more) is much better in rural India - which to me, is startling data
Among children, rural India seems worse off, but the gap is still not as large as in the case of adults.

Does this mean that female infanticide in rural areas is a newer phenomenon as compared to urban? There must be some explanation for this which eludes me now… I need to think about this a lot more before I begin to understand what is happening… What are your thoughts?

***
(There seems to be some problem adding comments to this post. Please email / leave your comment on the next post which is blank - that was a test to see if there is a problem with the blog or just this post).

Hatch your chickens and abuse bloggers

charukesi October 9th, 2005

Much has been happening in blogland - Gaurav Sabnis gets a legal notice from IIPM about his post on the institutes’s tall claims - requesting him to either back of and apologize or else…

And Rashmi Bansal gets, to put it mildly, obscene comments on her blog. And what’s so strange about that? Because these comments seem to originate from people supporting the insitution that she had earlier published an incisive - needless to add, negative - report on. And they all lead back to newly created blogs with only one or two posts, usually dealing with the same theme - a supplementary website to their original one.

Strangely enough (or maybe not) none of the comments have anything good to say about IIPM. Instead, they all attack the writer - and if it is a woman, then it is even easier… Absue her in filty language and threaten her with physical violence.

All I can say is that these responses on their blogs speak more about the quality of the institution and its students than anything Rashmi or Gaurav might have to say. Having said this, I can actually sympathise with these students - how many times have you all spent loads of money on a coveted product promising the sun and the moon and a few stars, and then found that all you have got is some mud. Post purchase dissonance. And when someone else points out to you what a fool you have been, and that a false marketer with a ponytail and a flop movie behind him is just as bad as any other, then you are bound to direct your anger towards those who pointed it out to you - considering the money has already been spent and the dream seller has moved on to his next big thing in life.

Please keep this issue alive and lend your support to Rashmi and Gaurav. Other bloggers who have already written about this : Harini, Kaps, Anshul, Press Talk, Walk with me, desipundit, The arbit council, Patrix

Update : There is one comment - actually two from the same er, person - on Rashmi’s blog that is worth a dekko. This person is doing a PhD, has done a PhD, will do a PhD, is teaching PhD students - whatever, it doesn’t muter (no typo this) - at Haas UCLA. Uh, where? Harini just googled for Haas and came up with Haas Associates - A resume writing service specializing in resume writing for the IT industry.

But more importantly, this person is proud of his alu mutter. He says it not once but several times in his comments. I quote, I’m proud of my alum mater, and where it has reached, without governemnt subsidies or interference. He also accuses Outlook editor Sandeepan Deb of writing a book on alu mutter. Sanjeev Kapoor has stiff competition.

Another Update : I found this recent post of mine on MBA institutes - where I have written And while on this, I was searching in Fabmall for some books and I noticed that Arindam Chaudhuri’s book Count Your Chickens Before They Hatch is to be found under the Humorous Section. Go check it out. Fabmall has my vote for best ecommerce site of the decade or some such thing.

Further updates as on October 12: Three days after the ugly controversy first reared its head on the blogosphere, over a hundred blogs have linked to it. Fake IIPM blogs have disappeared and other equaly fake IIPM blogs have appeared. The rants and threats from IIPM “students” have gone from bad to worse.

Legal notices are flying fast and furious across the blogosphere with Varna receiving one from the “legal cell” of IIPM.

Hindustan Times coves the story in its third page today. Mumbai Mirror mentions this in their bloggers’ park corner. And hopefully, other newspapers and TV channels will carry this soon. A no-words-minced post from Harini here on this.

Gaurav’s professor from IIML calls the IIPM bluff. No words minced here either.

For detailed updates, head to the fantastic desipundit.

Development and at a low cost?

charukesi September 30th, 2005

The developing world. And within that, rural. Children and education. And women. This is where all emerging technology seems to be headed. Politically correct noises? Or just plain marketing widsom? And is this here to last - and deliver the promise of accelerated development in these countries? Or a bubble waiting to burst?

Yahoo studying rural needs, says BusinessLine. Speaking to Business Line at his Bangalore office, Dr Prasad Ram, CTO, Yahoo! R&D India, said that `livelihood-based’ offerings for the rural market would roll out by mid-2006. Right.

And a very interesting Sub-$100 laptop design unveiled. Professor Negroponte came up with the idea for a cheap computer for all after visiting a Cambodian village. His non-profit One Laptop Per Child group plans to have up to 15 million machines in production within a year.. Such optimism is actually scary - Professor Negroponte predicts there could be 100 million to 150 million shipped every year by 2007. What I found interesting in this product idea is the thought that seems to have gone in with respect to the needs of the end users (in this case, children from the developing world) - with all the associated problems - for instance, the laptop is designed to be sturdy and will have a hand crank for charging it - which makes immense sense given the power situation in most places where this laptop is targetted. Virtually indestructible, says the report further.

Not to forget mobile phones. Mobile market shifts its focus - to surprise, surprise, the third world. It could see an increase in cheaper, data-based voice services and a rise in voice-based messaging services. The latter will be particularly popular in areas of low literacy, the report finds. However, with mobile phones, there are regulalr reports of good work happening across countries (textually is fantastic with recording these activities).

Read about village phones for farmers in Uganda and about the Bangladesh mobile help-line for women which has recently won the gender and ict awards. I had recently blogged about two similar internet-based initiatives in India, one, the NCW portal targetted at women and the other, the popular echoupal for farmers.

Update : Low-Cost PCs for the Enterprise linked by Rajesh Jain on Emergic discusses many such initiatives, including Negroponte’s sub $100 laptop.

HIV and morality in Tamilnadu

charukesi September 29th, 2005

This time targeting teenage school drop outs, UNICEF and the Nehru Yuva Kendra have roped in the Song and Drama division of the Ministry of Information and Broadasting to launch a new awareness program in Tamilnadu. This move has been driven by the UNICEF estimate that one of every two new HIV infections is in the 15-24 age group - and that young people who do not go to school have fewer points of exposure to HIV awareness and intervention programs.

This report in the Hindu says, About 1,500 of these will volunteer as peer educators and participate in a three-day long programme and work closely with non-government organisations to create awareness on sexually transmitted diseases and HIV, risk behaviour and trained on behaviour change, communication and life skills required to convince their peers back in their villages to say ‘No to pre-marital sex’ (emphasis mine).

***
Oops. Does this actually suggest that out of school teens in Tamilnadu - and young people in general - actually indulge in pre-marital sex? Is there no morality left in the world? First actress Khushboo says this and now the UNICEF. What about the honour of the Tamil people and women in general? (Of course, Khushboo did fly back in a hurry from Singapore to apologize to her beloved Tamil fans saying that she meant no slur on the good name of all the chaste Tamil girls and women - but the harm was done anyways, wasn’t it?)

Pre-marital sex. Huh!

And also drinking and dancing in hotel bars - not the Bombay Red Rose / Shabnam variety - but the Park in Chennai. I would link to the original Dinamalar piece which carried pictures from the party - but this is a clean family blog and those pictures are downright immoral - just picture this for now - girls wearing tops with spaghetti straps and actually drinking liquor from a bottle.

Shiva, shiva… I need to have a purifying bath again now.

All these dissenting voices. What do they know of Tamil culture?

I guess it is in anticipation of trouble that the Hindu article on the HIV awareness program states this inside a box right on top - There is no study to show that talk on sex have led to increased sex.

Private note : Sunil, read Ammani’s comment :)

Pardada Pardadi Education

charukesi September 20th, 2005

I had written about the saas bahu sammelan a while ago. Now read about the Pardada Pardadi Educational Society, an educational progam based in Anoopshahar in the Bulandshahar district of Uttar Pradesh. The PPES opted for a unique approach of education through academic, value-based, and skill-based education allows PPGVS to address the interrelated issues of poverty, gender-bias, and education in India. At present PPES working with girls from 46 villages of Anoopshahar in Uttar Pradesh.

To me, the following rationale make this a remarkable program…

Economic : this is one of the prime reasons for parents to not send their children to school :

- many poor people who want to educate their children cannot afford to send them to school - especially their girl children - where there is a need felt, the priority is for the boys to be educated
- and there is a clear (perceived, and maybe even real) lack of link between education and opportunities for work or economic betterment in any way. Mera beta (and much more, beti) school jaake kya karega - usko naukri to aasani se nahi milega na (what will my son / daughter do going to school - he will not get a job so easily)

PPES takes care of this with by providing free education for girl children. In fact, this report says that students, all girls, are paid Rs 10 a day for attending classes. Wisely, the money is not given in the hands of the girl or her parents on a regular basis but placed in a joint account n the name of the girl and her mother - the money can be withdrawn only after the girl completes Class X.

More on this here.
For every day a student attends school, 10 rupees (US$0.30) is put into her bank account. By the time a girl completes the program (about 7-10 years), she should have approximately 100,000 rupees (US$2,200), assuming she has attended most days of the school year. Ideally, the products produced by the students bring back Rs.30 (US$0.90) per day. Of that, 10 rupees goes in their account and 20 rupees goes back into sustaining the school.

And what is even better is that the PPES has a clear focus on prividing vocational training to the girls, along with bookish learning. The vocational school run by the Society produces fine hand embroidered linen appliqué work and block printing which can have various uses, along with table clothes, luncheon sets, bed covers and sheets, curtains, and cushion covers says this website describing the activities of the school.

Social : the school, in addition to regular education and vocational training includes training in other social aspects such as personality development, health and hygiene, leadership development, legal awareness, money management, business management, and values and ethics. Ideally, the girl comes out of school, not just educated but also confident and trained in social skills.

Apart from this, I think the money incentive is also great for making parents push the age at which they will get their daughter married off. Right now, girls in this district are married at the age of 13-14.

Cultural : and this is what I love most about this concept - the idea of drawing on the wisdom of our great grandparents. Bringing educatoin into their lives by associating it with a concept that such people know and respect - the knowledge and wisdom of the elderly. As opposed to introducing an education system completely foreign to their ideas and values - and forcing it on them.

And finally their business model : in other words, their plans for sustainability and scalability. As the students work and get trained in different skills, they also contribute towards the expenses incurred in running the school through the products they make and sell. At present ( yr-2004-2005) school has 280 girls and it costs app. Rs 2 lac10 thousand per month towards running cost of the school. Running cost of PPES is Rs. 35 per girl per day. Vocational training of the girls is planned in such a way that with a training of two years students can earn wages of Rs.35 per day through the vocational skill they learn. In the month of Jan 2005 school earned Rs.1 lac 35 thousand. Deficit of Rs. 85 thousand is because the newer batches of girls have still not reached the required levels.

Their website is called, rightly, education for change; you can sponsor the education of girls there if you wish.

****
And then this extremely heartening (but seeming to me over-optimistic in tone) article on rediff, The Quiet Revolution - that has been taking place in India’s elementary education that, if successful, will equip an entire younger generation with skills to improve productivity and reduce the burden of disease, high birth rates, hunger, and poverty, while changing societal attitudes toward gender, caste, tribe, and disability. I need to go back and read this piece again…

New links on ict and development

charukesi September 20th, 2005

Lean blogging period. Here are links to a few interesting articles I came across - ave placed them here for my future reading too…

Government Launches Two Portals For Women - via ContentSutra. Maintained by the NIC (National Informatics Centre), these sites are loaded with information and statistics (I checked out both).

The NRCW website (National Resource Centre for Women) is meant to be a one-stop information centre and resource centre on women-related issues. .

The other one is from the NCW (National Commission for Women) and is intended as a place for women to lodge their complaints - they have a system providing a daily update on the status of the complaint. Apart from promising quick olice intervention and monitoring, this cell also has these objectives -

The complaints received shows the trend of crimes against women and suggests systemic changes needed for reduction in crimes.
The complaints are analysed to understand the gaps in routine functioning of government in tackling violence against women and to suggest correctional measures.
The complaints are also used as case studies for sensitization programmes for the police, judiciary, prosecutors, forensic scientists, defence lawyers and other administrative functionaries.

Seems to me a commendable effort. However, I have this nagging thought at the back of my mind about how few women will be able to make use of this website and the complaint registration service it provides, due to : lack of awareness about such a website (or service) and equally importantly, lack of access to the internet - no computer, even no education is where I see many many women who will have the need for such a service coming from… I wonder what can be done to make this more accessible to such women…

***

ITC’s program e-choupal has been chosen as the winner for the Development Gateway Award 2005 from among 135 nominees. Connecting the Indian farmer with the world is the mission statement on the e-choupal home page. The idea is simple and powerful - to eliminate the middle men - usually greedy and unscrupulous, giving the farmer direct access to the market, enabling him to sell and buy at better prices.

From the piece in ContentSutra, Since June 2000, over 5,200 eChoupal Internet kiosks have been established to serve 3.5 million farmers in 31,000 villages. At the kiosks, farmers learn management techniques, order fertilizer and other supplies less expensively, check market prices and sell products online, with resulting increases in earnings of up to 20%. .

ITC has added health services to its network of Internet kiosks six months ago and announced the launch of a new educational services pilot in the coming months. Read more about the award and program here

« Prev - Next »