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Women Welfare / Development

‘Education will help empower women’

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The Hindu - Karnataka 19.08.2009

‘Education will help empower women’

Special Correspondent

It is more important than 33 per cent reservation in legislatures, says Selvi Das

 


Less than 6.25 p.c. of legislators are women

‘Women IAS officers get insignificant postings’


— PHOTO: M.A. SRIRAM

Capicity Building: The former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Mysore P. Selvi Das inaugurating a workshop in Mysore on Tuesday.

MYSORE: The former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Mysore P. Selvi Das has said that women’s education is more important for their empowerment than 33 per cent reservation in legislatures.

She was speaking after inaugurating a workshop on capacity building for women leaders organised by the International Centre and the Centre for Women’s Studies, University of Mysore, here on Tuesday.

Ms. Das called for measures to help women develop self-confidence within the academic curriculum, which would also help them develop a greater sense of self-respect. She said there should be greater awareness and sensitisation of both men and women to women’s issues if society were to progress.

She, however, cautioned that women’s empowerment was not about wearing Western clothes or focussing on physical attributes. Empowerment came along with enormous responsibility towards one’s family and society. Indian culture should not be done away with, she added.

She said 62 years of Independence had not resulted in much advancement in the status of women in the country. “There is a general perception and a deep-rooted belief that marriage is the summum bonum of all existence, and that a woman increases in stature if she is married,” said Ms. Das.

Social stigma

“There is social stigma attached to unmarried women, which is not good. Incidents of female infanticide and female foeticide are a direct off-shoot of this belief,” she added.

Recalling her experience of dealing with women aspirants for the IAS when she was a member of the Union Public Service Commission, Ms. Das said that although women were found to be as competent as men, even after selection and completion of probation they were being given insignificant postings.

“So even educated women in urban areas perceive discrimination,” she said and added that the situation was worse in rural areas.

Ms. Das said discrimination against women in society was deep-rooted and pointed out that less than 6.25 per cent of all legislators in the States were women. The country had had only one woman Prime Minister in 62 years, one woman President and one woman Lok Sabha Speaker so far. Also, there were only two women out of 26 Supreme Court judges.

She said that although the country had passed various laws for women’s empowerment, there was little awareness among women on their rights, such as those relating to property. Ms. Das said the Women’s Reservation Bill to reserve 33 per cent of seats in legislatures for women had been kept in abeyance for more than 10 years. This only showed the attitude of political leaders.

Vice-Chancellor of the University of Mysore V.G. Talawar, the former Director of the Madras Institute of Development Studies V.K. Nataraj, and Director of the International Centre R. Indira were present.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 August 2009 05:06
 

Improvement in human development in Bihar: Report

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The Times of India 11.08.2009

Improvement in human development in Bihar: Report

PATNA: The primary results of Bihar's first Human Development Index (HDI) indicate that there has been improvement in the human development compared to the past due to better facilities created in the education and health sector.

The HDI value has gradually increased since 1981, but Bihar has been lagging far behind among the 15 major states. The indicators used for districts in Bihar to construct composite index are per capita district domestic product, adult literacy and infant survival rate, said project head Jagdish Prasad who is a senior faculty member of A N Sinha Institute of Social Studies (ANSISS).

The ANSISS has been entrusted with the task of preparation of Human Development Report (HDR). The project, which was sponsored by the department of planning and development, Government of Bihar, is likely to be completed by next month.

A substantial difference across districts has been found. Prasad told TOI that there is a large regional disparity in the state which needs attention from development policy point of view.

He said that the indicators of HDI will certainly help Bihar to integrate human development concerns into its development strategies. He said that along with HDI, human population index and gross development index and district development index would also be prepared so that sectoral gap could be identified.

The report will consist of 14 chapters which mainly include development challenges and specifications of Bihar, human development in Bihar, health and nutrition, agrarian economy, social security, environment issues, gender equality and district development index: a comparative view and a road ahead.

Recently, the ANSISS had organized a day long workshop to introduce the theme of the HDR. It was also aimed at getting feedbacks from the experts of different fields on the coverage of the subject in the report. It was essential as the HDR would be an independent assessment of human development in the state, Prasad told TOI.

Bihar's principal secretary, planning, Rameshwar Singh said that the HDR would be marked as beginning of new developed Bihar. It would be the first step towards monitoring the process of development in a manner that directly captures the quality of life of the state, Singh said.

Singh said that a major objective of the HDR was to bring about a certain consensus on the adoption of the human development approach in Bihar. The final report is likely to be submitted to the government next month, said an official.
 

RMC to run special bus for women

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The Times of India - Rajkot 30.07.2009

RMC to run special bus for women

RAJKOT: The Rajkot Municipal Corporation is planning to run a bus exclusively for the women of the city.

The bus, the brainchild of mayor Sandhya Vyas, will be manned by women driver and conductor and will start plying on the city routes from August 15, said Vyas, adding: "This will be my gift to the women."

"I have seen that on many occasions, women avoiding travelling in a bus because it is over-crowded with men. This bus will benefit a lot of women, especially schoolgirls," she said.

The route is yet to be worked out, but the bus is expected to take a route routes passing from markets, religious centres and educational institutes.

The bus will have a different colour probably pink and design so that it can be identified from a distance. RMC may also use it to create awareness on various issues and if the idea is well received, RMC will run more buses exclusively for women, said sources.

 


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