October 2020
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Women empowerment issues – Jobs,Reservation and education

What India can learn from Kenya about women’s representation

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Women's representation

Asymmetric representation in India and Kenya has given rise to complex debate in both countries. The article analyses the similarities and difference.

Issue of women’s representation in Parliament

  • Many political promises have been made in seven decades of the working of the Indian Constitution regarding 33 per cent reservation in Parliament.
  • But the two bills, introduced in 1996 and 2010, have been allowed to lapse.

What are the hurdles?

  • Every political party endorses the idea but the battle within political classes has been over “quota within a quota”.
  • Some have argued that ways should be found to ensure that this reservation should contain 33 per cent reservation within for SC and ST women.
  • Some have championed a systemic practice of reservation at the stage of distributing party tickets.
  • Some continue to fight for underprivileged and rural women.
  • Some maintain that a constitutional convention mandating increased representation for women by parties will be more appropriate than a constitutional amendment.

Comparison with Kenya

  • While both fall short in equitable representation, Kenya has secured about 22 per cent women in the present National Assembly.
  • India peaked to its highest number in the 2019 elections with 62 women (around 14.58 per cent),out of a total of 542 Lok Sabha seats.
  • In the Kenyan Senate women number only 21 (or 31 per cent) of the 67-member House are female; in the Indian Rajya Sabha women comprise 25 out of 243 elected members.
  •  In both societies, women’s representation has always been “pyramidical”, most women remain below the constitutional radar at the bottom, even when a few scale national heights.
  • Asymmetric representation in both societies has generated a long and complex debate concerning women’s representation.

Difference in constitutional histories and judicial actions

  • India has nothing like the two-thirds rule in Kenya’s new constitution.
  • Kenya’s Constitution requires that not more than two-thirds of the members of elective or appointive bodies shall be of the same gender.
  • But the 2010 constitutional norm of a “two-thirds gender rule”, buttressed by the requirement that the electoral system shall comply with this rule has been breached.
  • The judicial orders (from 2012) giving various timeframes to enact legislation to implement gender parity have found Parliament unresponsive.
  •  The stage was thus set for the exercise of constitutional power and function by the chief justice to advise the president to dissolve Parliament.
  • This was a great victory for the Kenyan women.

Conclusion

Indian sisterhood can yearn wistfully, but valiantly, for another Vishakha moment in the demosprudential leadership of the nation by the apex court.

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Social Media: Prospect and Challenges

Tackling the challenge of Big Tech

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 3- Social media and challenges

The article discusses the threat posed by the spread of misinformation on the internet and suggests the steps to tackle it.

Warning for India

  • The U.S.’s experience with the Internet should serve as a stark warning to India.
  • Most Americans now get their news from dubious Internet sources.
  • This resulted in hardening of political stances and the acute polarisation of the average American’s viewpoint.
  • For India, the danger is that like the U.S., such extreme polarisation can happen in a few short years.
  • There are anywhere between 500 million and 700 million people are now newly online, almost all from towns and rural areas.

Use of targeted algorithm

  • Social networks such as Facebook, WhatsApp, and Twitter have become the source of news for the people, but these have no journalistic norms.
  • The spread of the misinformation or news has been greatly enhanced by the highly targeted algorithms that these companies use.
  • They are likely to bombard users with information that serves to reinforce what the algorithm thinks the searcher needs to know.
  • As they familiarise themselves with the Internet, newly online Indians are bound to fall prey to algorithms that social network firms use.

Steps to control the misinformation on the internet

  • 1) Tech firms are already under fire from all quarters,  nonetheless, we need to act.
  • They are struggling to meet calls to contain the online spread of misinformation and hate speech.
  • 2) Unlike the U.S., India might need to chart its own path by regulating these firm before they proliferate.
  • In the U.S., these issues were not sufficiently legislated for and have existed for over a decade.
  • Free speech is inherent in the Constitution of many democracies, including India’s.
  • This means that new Indian legislation needs to preserve free speech while still applying pressure to make sure that Internet content is filtered for accuracy, and sometimes, plain decency.
  • 3) The third issue is corporate responsibility.
  • Facebook, for instance, has started to address this matter by publishing ‘transparency reports’ and setting up an ‘oversight board’.
  • But we cannot ignore the fact that these numbers reflect judgements that are made behind closed doors.
  • What should be regulatory attempts to influence the transparency are instead being converted into secret corporate processes.
  • We have no way of knowing the extent of biases that may be inherent inside each firm.
  • The fact that their main algorithms target advertising and hyper-personalisation of content makes them further suspect as arbiters of balanced news.
  • This means that those who use social media platforms must pull in another direction to maintain access to a range of sources and views.

Consider the question “What are the factors responsible for the spread of misinformation on social media and suggest the measures to tackle it.”

Conclusion

We need strong intervention now. Else, in addition to the media, which has largely been the responsible fourth estate, we may well witness the creation of an unmanageable fifth estate in the form of Big Tech.

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Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities

‘Pagri Sambhal Jatta’ Movement

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Ajit Singh , Pagri Sambhal Movement

Mains level: Peasants movements in colonial India

Sardar Ajit Singh Sandhu,  the brain behind the ‘Pagri Sambhal Jatta’ movement is now being remembered in the ongoing agrarian resentments in Punjab.

Try this PYQ:

Q.What was the immediate cause for the launch of the Swadeshi movement?

(a) The partition of Bengal done by Lord Curzon.

(b) A sentence of 18 months rigorous imprisonment imposed on Lokmanya Tilak.

(c) The arrest and deportation of Lala Lajpat Rai and Ajit Singh; and passing of the Punjab Colonization Bill.

(d) Death sentence pronounced on the Chapekar brothers.

‘Pagri Sambhal Jatta’ Movement

  • In 1879, the British constructed the Upper Bari Doab canal to draw water from the Chenab river and take it to Lyallpur (now in Pakistan and renamed Faisalabad) to set up settlements in uninhabited areas.
  • Promising to allot free land with several amenities, the government persuaded peasants and ex-servicemen from Jalandhar, Amritsar and Hoshiarpur to settle there.
  • In 1907, in Lyallpur, Ajit Singh Sandhu also Bhagat Singh’s uncle headed the movement that articulated this discontent.
  • The catchy slogan, Pagdi Sambhal Jatta, the name of the movement, was inspired by the song by Banke Lal, the editor of the Jang Sayal newspaper.
  • The agitated protestors ransacked government buildings, post offices, banks, overturning telephone poles and pulling down telephone wires.

Who was Ajit Singh?

  • He was a revolutionary and a nationalist during the time of British rule in India.
  • With compatriots, he organised agitation by Punjabi peasants against anti-farmer laws known as the Punjab Colonization Act (Amendment) 1906 and administrative orders increasing water rate charges.
  • He was an early protester in the Punjab region of India who challenged British rule and openly criticized the Indian colonial government.
  • In May 1907, with Lala Lajpat Rai, he was exiled to Mandalay in Burma.
  • Due to great public pressure and apprehension of unrest in the Indian Army, the bills of exile were withdrawn and both men were released in November 1907.

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Industrial Sector Updates – Industrial Policy, Ease of Doing Business, etc.

Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Production Linked Incentive Scheme (PLI)

Mains level: Not Much

The Ministry of Electronics and IT had approved some proposals by electronics manufacturers under its Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme.

Try this MCQ:

Q.The Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme often seen in news is related to-

a) Electronics manufacture

b) Khadi and Village Industries

c) MSMEs

d) None of these

What is the PLI scheme?

  • As a part of the National Policy on Electronics, the IT ministry had notified the PLI scheme on April 1 this year.
  • The scheme will, on one hand, attract big foreign investment in the sector, while also encouraging domestic mobile phone makers to expand their units and presence in India.
  • It would give incentives of 4-6 per cent to electronics companies which manufacture mobile phones and other electronic components.
  • A/c to the scheme, companies that make mobile phones which sell for Rs 15,000 or more will get an incentive of up to 6 per cent on incremental sales of all such mobile phones made in India.
  • In the same category, companies which are owned by Indian nationals and make such mobile phones, the incentive has been kept at Rs 200 crore for the next four years.

Tenure of the scheme

  • The PLI scheme will be active for five years with financial year (FY) 2019-20 considered as the base year for calculation of incentives.
  • This means that all investments and incremental sales registered after FY20 shall be taken into account while computing the incentive to be given to each company.

Which companies and what kind of investments are considered?

  • All electronic manufacturing companies which are either Indian or have a registered unit in India will be eligible to apply for the scheme.
  • These companies can either create a new unit or seek incentives for their existing units from one or more locations in India.
  • Any additional expenditure incurred on the plant, machinery, equipment, research and development and transfer of technology for the manufacture of mobile phones and related electronic items will be eligible for the incentive.
  • However, all investment done by companies on land and buildings for the project will not be considered for any incentives or determine the eligibility of the scheme.

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Gravitational Wave Observations

Physics Nobel for discoveries about Black Holes

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Black Holes

Mains level: Black holes and gravitation waves

Three scientists won this year’s Nobel Prize in Physics for advancing our understanding of black holes, the all-consuming monsters that lurk in the darkest parts of the universe.

Try this PYQ:

Q.Recently, scientists observed the merger of giant ‘blackholes’ billions of light-years away from the Earth. What is the significance of this observation?

(a) ‘Higgs boson particles’ were detected.

(b) ‘Gravitational waves’ were detected.

(c) Possibility of inter-galactic space travel through ‘wormhole’ was confirmed.

(d) It enabled the scientists to understand ‘singularity’.

Who are these laureates?

  • Briton Roger Penrose received half of this year’s prize for the discovery that black hole formation is a robust prediction of the general theory of relativity.
  • German Reinhard Genzel and American Andrea Ghez received the second half of the prize for the discovery of a supermassive compact object at the centre of our galaxy.

What are black holes?

  • A black hole is formed when stars collapse and can be defined as a space in the universe with an escape velocity so strong that even light cannot escape it.
  • Escape velocity is the speed at which an object must travel to override a planet or an object’s gravitational force.
  • For instance, for a spacecraft to leave the surface of the Earth, it needs to be travelling at a speed of about 40,000 km per hour.
  • Since light cannot get out, black holes are invisible and can only be tracked with the help of a space telescope or other special tools.
  • And the reason light cannot escape is mainly that the gravity inside a black hole is very strong as a result of a lot of matter being squeezed into a small space.

Their contributions

  • Penrose has been awarded the prize for the discovery that black hole formation is a robust prediction of the general theory of relativity.
  • Genzel and Ghez have been awarded the prize for the discovery of a supermassive compact object at the centre of our galaxy.
  • Penrose’s work has shown that black holes are a direct consequence of Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity.
  • Einstein himself did not believe that black holes exist and presented his theory in November 1915, providing a new way to look at and understand the gravity that shapes the universe “at the largest scale”.
  • Penrose used Einstein’s general theory of relativity in order to prove that the process of formation of black holes is a stable one.
  • Genzel and Ghez, on the other hand, have discovered that an invisible and an extremely heavy object governs the stars’ orbit at the centre of the Milky Way.

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Indian Missile Program Updates

Supersonic Missile Assisted Release of Torpedo (SMART) System

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: SMART

Mains level: Indian navy's arsenal

DRDO successfully conducted the flight test of its Supersonic Missile Assisted Release of Torpedo (SMART) system.

Try this MCQ:

Q.The SMART system recently tested by the DRDO is essentially a-

a)Radar

b)Torpedo

c)UAV

d)Missile

What is the SMART system?

  • Torpedoes are self-propelled weapons that travel underwater to hit a target but are limited by their range.
  • In the mid-2010s, DRDO undertook a project to build capacity to launch torpedoes assisted by missiles; Monday’s was the first known flight test of the system.
  • This SMART system comprises a mechanism by which the torpedo is launched from a supersonic missile system with modifications that would take the torpedo to a far longer range than its own.
  • For example, a torpedo with a range of a few kilometres can be sent a distance to the tune of 1000 km by the missile system from where the torpedo is launched.

Why is it significant?

  • SMART is a game-changing technology demonstration in anti-submarine warfare.
  • India’s anti-submarine warfare capacity building is crucial in light of China’s growing influence in the Indian Ocean region.
  • Assets of such warfare consist of the deployment of submarines, specialised anti-submarine ships, air assets and state-of-the-art reconnaissance and detection mechanisms.
  • The Navy’s anti-submarine warfare capability got a boost in June after the conclusion of a contract for Advanced Torpedo Decoy System Maareech, capable of being fired from all frontline warships.
  • India has been indigenously developing and building several anti-submarine systems and vessels in the recent past.

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Roads, Highways, Cargo, Air-Cargo and Logistics infrastructure – Bharatmala, LEEP, SetuBharatam, etc.

Kozhikode-Wayanad Tunnel Project

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: About the Tunnel, EIA

Mains level: NA

Kerala CM has launched a tunnel road project that would connect Kozhikode with Wayanad.

Try this PYQ:

Q.From the ecological point of view, which one of the following assumes importance in being a good link between the Eastern Ghats and the Western Ghats?

(a) Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve

(b) Nallamala Forest

(c) Nagarhole National Park

(d) Seshachalam Biosphere Reserve

Kozhikode-Wayanad Tunnel Project

  • The 7-km tunnel, being described as the third-longest in the country, is part of an 8-km road cutting through sensitive forests and hills of the Western Ghats.
  • Its endpoints are at Maripuzha in Thiruvambady village panchayat (Kozhikode) and Kalladi in Meppadi panchayat (Wayanad).
  • The tunnel is an outcome of a decades-long campaign for an alternative road as the Thamarassery Ghat Road is congested and gets blocked by landslides during heavy monsoon.

How will the road impact the ecology?

  • The Forest Department has identified the proposed route as a highly sensitive patch comprising evergreen and semi-evergreen forests, marshlands and shola tracts.
  • This region is part of an elephant corridor spread between Wayanad and Nilgiri Hills in Tamil Nadu.
  • Two major rivers, Chaliyar and Kabani that flows to Karnataka, originate from these hills in Wayanad.
  • Eruvazhanjipuzha, a tributary of Chaliyar and the lifeline of settlements in Malappuram and Kozhikode, begins in the other side of the hills.
  • The region, known for torrential rain during the monsoon, has witnessed several landslides, including in 2019 at Kavalappura near Nilambur and at Puthumala, Meppadi in Wayanad.

Environmental clearance issues

  • Proponents of the project have been stressing that the tunnel will not destroy forest (trees).
  • The MoEFCC guidelines state that the Forest Act would apply not only to surface area but the entire underground area beneath the trees.
  • For tunnel projects, conditions relating to underground mining would be applicable.
  • As the proposed tunnel is 7 km long, it will require emergency exit points and air ventilation wells among other measures, which would impact the forest further.

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Labour, Jobs and Employment – Harmonization of labour laws, gender gap, unemployment, etc.

Labour code reforms address basic needs

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Various provisions of labour code

Mains level: Paper 2- Labour code reforms

The article highlights the key provision of the labour code and how it will help in removing the various hurdles faced by the key stakeholders.

Increase in the threshold for closure/lay-off and its impact

  • The Industrial Relations Code 2020 increased the threshold for retrenchment/closure or lay-off without requiring government approval, from 100 to 300 workers.
  • This will help in addressing the matter of expansion of the firms.
  • In 2014, Rajasthan had increased the threshold of taking prior permission of the government before retrenchment.
  • The reform has helped firms to set up larger operations in Rajasthan, and the same amendment was followed by 15 states.

Fixed Term Employment(FTE): Ensuring flexibility and tackling exploitation

  • In many jobs employees are required for a few months such as infrastructure projects, textiles and garments, food and agro-processing, etc.
  • However, the contractual employment workforce is quite often exploited with respect to wages, social security, and working conditions as well as welfare facilities.
  • Fixed Term Employment is an intervention to enable the hiring of employees directly instead of hiring through contractors, which will ensure flexibility.
  • For employees, all statutory entitlements and service conditions equivalent to those of a regular employee have now been made applicable.
  • The Code on Industrial Relations also extends the benefit of gratuity even for an FTE contract of one year, which is five years in the case of regular employees.

Strengthening the formal economy

  • The inclusion of the gig and platform workers in the Social Security Code 2020 is a step towards strengthening the formal economy.
  • The provision for insurance coverage has been extended to plantation workers, and free annual health check-ups and a bipartite safety committee has been introduced for establishments such as factories, mines and plantation sectors in place of hazardous factories.
  • The ESIC and EPFO requirements will now apply to establishments employing less than 10 and 20 workers respectively on a volunteer basis.

Ensuring female labour force participation

  • Falling women’s workforce participation in India has been a matter of concern for a long time.
  • Female labour force participation is a driver of growth and, therefore, participation rates indicate the potential for a country to grow more rapidly.
  • The new Code ensures the employment of women in night shifts for all types of work.

Expansions of the provisions for migrant workers

  • The Occupational Health, Safety & Working Conditions Code expands the definition of a migrant worker.
  • The expanded definition includes workers who would be directly employed by the employer besides those employed through a contractor.
  • Also a migrant, who comes on his own to the destination state, can declare himself a migrant worker by registering on an electronic portal.
  • Registration on the portal has been simplified and there is no requirement of any other document except Aadhaar.
  • For de-licencing/de-registration, it is mandated to notify registering officers about the closure of their establishment and certify payment of dues to all employed workers.
  • This will ensure that workers will not be exploited even during the closure of the concerned establishment.

Other provisions

  • The introduction of a concept of conducting web-based inspections can be seen as an attempt of matching corporate needs in the digital world.
  • The provision for a 14-day notice period before strikes and lockdowns would allow both workers and employers to attempt resolving the issues.
  •  The codes also promote lifelong learning mechanism to match the evolving skill sets required for technology and process changes through the introduction of a reskilling fund.

Consider the question “What are the various provision added in the three labour code and how it will help revive the economy and tackle barriers in the expansion of firms?”

Conclusion

The reform measures address basic needs — to revive the economy and tackle barriers in the expansion of firms. Moreover, they promote the employment of women as well as reskilling of the workforce for the deployment of migrants.

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