Articles

Wanted a Liberal Party

Liberals of all persuasion should come together under the banner of rule of law and fair, transparent, and accountable governance, says Parth J Shah After all is said and done, nothing much has improved in Gujarat. In Parliament, opposition parties howled, staged walk-outs, even got a resolution passed in one of the Houses, though largely of symbolic value. Symbolism is what we got from the main instrument of democracy. Politicians took tours of the affected areas, visited relief camps, walked in peace marches, a few went on a relay fast. Yes, relay-fast, an invention of the symbolic times. Nothing much is really heard from or about opposition parties and politicians in Gujarat. Secular NGOs conducted fact-finding missions, issued reports, held seminars and press conferences, filed PILs. Some NGOs are doing relief work in the background. Hardly anyone from the civil society really stood upto the raucous voices of rage and revenge. Industry

Read More »

Draft NEP Accurately Diagnoses The Systemic Pathology In Education

In 2016 we, at Centre for Civil Society, argued that India needs an education policy that will keep children in school and ensure consistent and high learning outcomes. To do this, we recommended that the government of the day applying new public management strategies to education, away from ‘mission mode’ to systemic transformation – building capacity, encouraging competition for quality improvement, insisting on innovative and effective delivery, monitoring accountability, and targeting resources to individual students. Such a shift would involve a rethink of the governance and regulatory frameworks guiding school operations, public or private. The 2019 Kasturirangan Committee Report tables a Draft National Education Policy, that gets us closer to this vision of an education system. Two proposals of this Draft National Education Policy are worth highlighting. The Draft policy accurately diagnoses the system pathology, and proposes correction through a paradigm shift in how all schools are governed, and not

Read More »

Critics of Modi govt’s medical education reform Act are missing these 3 points

The National Medical Commission Act, 2019 has divided India’s medical fraternity, with some vehemently opposing it and others listing its many benefits. Its proponents say the Act can reform other areas of professional education too, while its detractors believe that certain provisions “subjugate federalism at multiple levels”. The National Medical Commission Act (NMC), which replaces the Medical Council Act, demands a better understanding. We address three provisions of the Act that have invited maximum criticism. These are also the factors that can have a direct impact on other professional education domains if the NMC model of reforms is applied to them. Setting standards through National Exit Test The NMC Act proposes a common National Exit Test (NEXT) for all final-year MBBS students. Only after clearing NEXT will the students get the licence to practise medicine and admission in postgraduate courses. Opponents argue that it does away with the checks and

Read More »

Bamboo as a renewable source of energy

Times are changing. And with changing times, resources, be it of any kind, have witnessed change too. In order to keep pace with accelerating growth and development, a need for newer resources have become vital. This applies to energy too. The quest to develop renewable energy sources to their potential has seen many a research and study. One such unused potential lies in bamboo as a renewable source of energy. Why bamboo?! Well, simply because it is easy to grow, and grows fast, but, firstly, most of us need to understand even what bamboo, actually, is.  Is it a tree? Is it a shrub? Is it a weed? Is it just plain grass? Did you guess the answer? Bamboo is a grass. You never thought it would be?! Well, most of us would not. With over thousand documented uses including as a building material, as medicine and even fibre, Bamboo is

Read More »
Scroll to Top