Friday, 24 March 2017

Prostitution in India.


According to Human Rights Watch, there are approximately 15 million prostitutes in India. There are more than 100,000 women in prostitution in Bombay, Asia's largest sex industry center. Girls in prostitution in India, Pakistan and the Middle East are tortured, held in virtual imprisonment, sexually abused, and raped. Girl prostitutes are primarily located in low-middle income areas and business districts and are known by officials. Brothel keepers regularly recruit young girls. Girl prostitutes are grouped as common prostitutes, singers and dancers, call girls, religious prostitutes or devdasi, and caged brothel prostitutes. Districts bordering Maharashtra and Karnataka, known as the "devadasi belt," have trafficking structures operating at various levels. The women here are in prostitution either because their husbands deserted them, or they are trafficked through coercion and deception. Many are devadasi dedicated into prostitution for the goddess Yellamma.
An oft-repeated cause of prostitution is poverty. But poverty is only one of the reasons. The helplessness of women forces them to sell their bodies. Many girls from villages are trapped for the trade in the pretext of love and elope from home only to find themselves sold in the city to pimps who take money from the women as commission. The other causes of prostitution include ill treatment by parents, bad company, family prostitutes, social customs, inability to arrange marriage, lack of sex education, media, prior incest and rape, early marriage and desertion, lack of recreational facilities, ignorance, and acceptance of prostitution. Economic causes include poverty and economic distress. Psychological causes include desire for physical pleasure, greed, and dejection.
Most enter involuntarily. India, along with Thailand and the Philippines, has 1.3 million children in its sex-trade centers. The children come from relatively poorer areas and are trafficked to relatively richer ones. India and Pakistan are the main destinations for children under 16 who are trafficked in south Asia. What is causing alarm both in governmental and NGO circles is the escalation in trafficking of young girls in the last decade. NGOs like STOP and MAITI in Nepal report that most trafficking in India (both trans-border and in-country) is for prostitution. And 60 per cent of those trafficked into prostitution are adolescent girls in the age group of 12 to 16 years. These figures are corroborated by a study done by the Department of Women and Children in 13 sensitive districts of Uttar Pradesh. It reveals that all sex workers who formed a part of this survey had entered the profession as young girls. Many transsexuals, called hijiras, are sex workers. The families of hijiras reject them. They face opposition from the public, and with the denial of employment they take to begging and then enter the sex market.
Globalization, professionalisation of trafficking syndicates, feminization of poverty and rise in sex tourism - all have contributed to an increase in trafficking. This problem is further compounded because of two factors: linkages of trafficking with the spread of HIV/AIDS and the clandestine nature of the activity. Studies now show that while women of all ages are more vulnerable to the infection than men, young girls are even more at risk because their genital tracts are immature. In addition, they have absolutely no control over sexual relations and sexual health. So a physical vulnerability is compounded by gender vulnerability. The study done in 13 districts of Uttar Pradesh shows that in a sample of 1,341 sex workers, brothel-based prostitution was 793 and family-based prostitution came close at 548.Since prostitution is not legal, the police can arrest sex workers at any time.
The police, whose main function is to protect and serve, turn out to be robbers stealing the little money that these workers "earn." Interventions are increasingly based on issues like combating stigma related to HIV/AIDS, developing empowering strategies for victims and involving communities in the rehabilitation of rescued women and girls. But there is a lot that still needs to be done. Involvement of communities is of the greatest significance here since it has been seen that their families and communities do not accept rescued women and girls. The situation becomes worse if someone tests positive for HIV because she is immediately labeled a prostitute - a perception that creates a complex situation in the rehabilitation programmes. Even if trafficked returnees can avoid such treatment, they have few options for survival. What is needed is a multi-pronged strategy which can help in curbing trafficking and empowering communities and which also has scope for rescue and rehabilitation processes. The task is not just daunting; given the political priorities of most governments it is not given the importance it deserves.

Child Malnutrition in India.



Child malnutrition is a biggest challenge our country is facing today even when the economy is said to surging ahead. Every second child under three in the country is malnourished.The number for under five children is 55 million which is two and half times the population of Australia.35% of the world's malnourished children live in India. Half the number of child deaths takes place due to malnutrition which could be prevented. The situation has not seen an improvement between the reports of the National Family Health Survey III in 2007 and NFHS II seven years earlier.
It is a known fact that malnutrition can affect economic productivity and the ability to make decisions. Experts say that unless the problem is addressed on a war footing it will lower the country's GDP growth rate by 2-3%.One of the reasons why the issue has remained unaddressed is because it is not high on national agenda. There has been no determined action.
The problem of child malnutrition starts long before the child is born. The age at which a woman marries has a bearing on the foetus. So does her nutritional intake during pregnancy and after she gives birth. Her educational status will decide whether she goes in for institutional deliveries which prevent infections, the importance she attaches to hygiene and to immunization of her child. Her nutrition, health and education and her status in the family and the community determine whether the child is malnourished or not. It is not possible to address the problem of child malnutrition unless the condition of the woman is improved.
The Indian figures are worse than the malnutrition rates prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa even though those countries have known for famine, poverty and political instability. In the world 40% of the low weight babies (below 2.5kg) are from India. One of the major causes of low birth weight babies in India is the high incidences of anaemia among women.
Recent studies have shown that the damage is done by the time a child reaches the age of two. The critical age-group is 0-2 and it is this group that needs the maximum attention. The governments focus needs to shift to address the nutritional and survival issues related to this group.
The issue of child malnutrition needs attention from all levels. From political will to pressure from civil societies and communities themselves.

Female Foeticide in India



The 2001 census of India reveals a decline in the overall child sex ratio for the age-group 0-6 years from 945 in 1991 to 927 in 2001.Contrary to the belief that the malaise is typical to rural ,backward areas, urban centers more literate and liberal have shown a drop from 935 in 1991 to 906 in 2001.
In Delhi, the national capital, the child sex ratio is an alarming 868.While the reasons for this vary from higher female mortality at a younger age as a result of neglect to infanticide and foeticide; the dismal numbers are a telling comment on the educated society that refuses to rid itself of its regressive male bias.
The Pre-natal Diagnostic Techniques Regulations and Prevention of Misuse Act came into force in 1994 to curb selective sex determination. With rapid improvements in diagnostic technology the Act was amended in 2003 in order that it became more comprehensive and was renamed the Preconception and Pre-natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act.
To monitor the implementation of the PC & PNDT Act, the ministry of Health and Family Welfare has set up a Central Supervisory Board as well as state-level supervisory committees. A ministry report indicates that there are 420 ongoing court/police cases for violations of the law. Of these only 65 cases relate to identification and revelation of the sex of the foetus, 43 are against people who have advertised facilities for sex selection and the rest are for non-registration of clinics/facilities.
Apart from the nature of the Act, government inaction in most cases is due to the fact that the patient, her family and the violators of the law are hand-in-glove. The Annual Report (2006) of the PC &PNDT division also identifies the non-availability of evidence or witnesses as the chief hindrance to implementing the law. The unscrupulous doctors and patients have developed their own sex determination code language to circumvent the law. For an instance if a doctor says collect the report on Monday the family is meant to infer that the unborn child is a boy. Friday connotes the girl child. Also signing a report in blue ink indicates a boy while red ink is meant for baby girls. The Annual Report mentions the fact the CMO or CS is usually not empowered enough to bring violators to book. Also abortions to limit family size add to the difficulty of nabbing guilty.
Despite the loopholes the government has exerted itself to advocate the girl child's right to live. A new website has been launched www.pndt.gov.in with the facility to file a complaint online against doctors, maternity homes and clinics. The organizations like Sonological Society of India are also supporting the government initiatives.

Khap Panchayat in India


Khap is a cluster of villages united by caste and geography.It is as old as 14th century started by upper caste jats to consolidate their power and position.The main rule is that all boys and girls within a khap are considered siblings.
Khap panchayat governs the khap formed by same gotra ( clan) families from several neighbouring villages.Khap panchayats are prevalent in Haryana,western Uttar Pradesh and Parts of Rajasthan.Love marriages are considered taboo in areas governed by Khap panchayats.Those living in a Khap are not allowed to marry in the same gotra or even in any gotra from the same village.Many young couples have been killed in the past defying khap rules.
Khap panchyat imposes its writ through social boycotts and fines and in most cases end up either killing or forcing the victims to commit suicide.All this is done in the name of brotherhood and its honour. It is due to the inherent weakness of democratically elected Panchayati Raj institutions,Khap panchayats have been powerful. Even the government has not done much to control their power.
The 10-15 men who constitute a Khap settle disputes and control the lives of young people. Many village people also defend these caste panchayats as they deliver the verdict in one sitting whereas court cases drag for years.According to them ,in many cases innocent people get harassed in the court and by police.Here as everyone is known so they cross check everything to ensure neutrality.
In some Haryana villages, the young girls are routinely threatened, abused and killed all under Khap verdicts. It is acceptable for the families to feed pesticide pills to the teenage girls and then dispose off their bodies by burning them without any police records. The entire onus of siblinghood rests on the girl. She is the keeper of village honor. Sometimes rules are bend for the boys but a girl is never allowed to bend the rules. If a couple run away then the families risk the boycott and hefty fines in lakhs of rupees.Even the other women of the house can suffer abuse.
In keeping with the khap rules ,older villages try to keep the young people apart.Some schools are also forced to have separate timings for the boys and girls.Fearing their daughters would go astray, many parents marry them off at an early age.People have unquestionable faith in the justice of khap.The question of rights for women does not exist any where in the territories ruled by Khap panchayats.

Honour Killings in India



To be young and in love has proved fatal for many young girls and boys in parts of north India as an intolerant and bigoted society refuses to accept any violation of its rigid code of decorum, especially when it comes to women. The two teenage girls who were shot dead last week by a cousin in Noida for daring to run away to meet their boyfriends are the latest victims of honour killings, a euphemism for doing away with anyone seen as spoiling the family's reputation. Many such killings are happening with regularity in Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh. These are socially sanctioned by caste panchayats and carried out by mobs with the connivance of family members.
The usual remedy to such murders is to suggest that society must be prevailed upon to be more gender-sensitive and shed prejudices of caste and class. Efforts should be made to sensitise people on the need to do away with social biases. But equally, it should be made clear that there is no escape for those who take justice into their own hands. So far, there is no specific law to deal with honour killings. The murders come under the general categories of homicide or manslaughter. When a mob has carried out such attacks, it becomes difficult to pinpoint a culprit. The collection of evidence becomes tricky and eyewitnesses are never forthcoming.
Like the case of Sati and dowry where there are specific laws with maximum and minimum terms of punishment, honour killings, too, merit a second look under the law. In many cases, the victims who run away with 'unsuitable' partners are lured back home after FIRs are filed by their families. The police cannot be unaware that in many cases they are coming back to certain death at the hands of their relatives and fellow villagers.
Yet, pre-emptive action to protect them is never taken. Undoubtedly, the virus of caste and class that affects those carrying out such crimes affects the police in the area too. But that can be no excuse to sanction murder. Active policing and serious penal sanctions is the only antidote to this most dishonourable practice.

Violence against Women


Women have been the victims of violence all through the ages in all societies, cultures, regions and religious communities of the world.
In India which claim to have apostle of people and non violence women bear the brunt of violence domestic as well as public, physical and as well as emotional. Violence against women is linked to her status as subservient to patriarchal norms dominant in the society.
From post Vedic period violence against women began to be practiced .The doors of educational, economic, social, political and cultural opportunities were gradually closed for them. The birth of the son came to be the occasion to rejoice and that of a girl of grief. Their personal freedom in respect of movement, dress, diet, marriage came to be dominated by men. Women also began to be enslaved. They were equated with cattle or commodities that could be sold and purchased. Various obligations, restrictions and regulations were imposed on them and different penalties and punishments were prescribed if a woman violated them. Thus violence against women came to have a societal sanction.
As the time progressed several ills began to creep up in the society. The widow's right to life began to be denied and practice of sati was introduced. Wife beating got religious and social sanction. Violence against women further increased when young girls began to be forced to serve as the devdasis in the temples. This also made prostitution as part of the religious life. Girls began to be married off at the tender age and in certain communities the newborn girls began to be killed by the parents themselves. Polygamy took strong roots in the society and forced marriages began common.
The colonial India did see some legislations and education that momentarily brought a halt to violence against women but largely British displayed indifference to the status of women. After Independence violence against women has only grown in all its dimensions. The violence in form of female feticide has taken new turn with the progress of science and technology when illegal screening of fetus became available at the doorstep. Most of the violence against women is related to and grows out of their position in society. Woman is perceived as weaker sex, dependent on man therefore can be treated badly. Expected to submit to every whim of the man the least sign of resistance on a woman's part invites use of violence to make her comply. If she is uneducated, unskilled and economically dependent a woman seldom has any choice but to bear all the atrocities heaped on her.
Apart from domestic violence, women are victim of public violence more often and more humiliating like gang rape etc. Rape is not just the act of individual man against a woman but also a show of patriarchal mindset. It has become an instrument and weapon to prevent women from raising their voice against atrocities. In personal or family feuds or wars rape has always been a form of humiliating the adversary. The violence continues unabated but no social action has been forthcoming. Legislations are there and recently more teeth are added to them but people seem to have no fear of law.
Violence against women is aggregated by factors such as caste, religion, communal and class. Caste wars result in rape or molestation of women. Religious fundamentalism imposes restrictions first on women and they are the ones penalized for trying to break out of blatantly unfair and unrealistic codes of behavior.
The society need to be sensitized to the fact that women are not meant to be treated as doormat of punching bag. The law enforcing machinery must be trained and made sensitive to the issue. Women must organize themselves in groups and raise a collective voice against a system that turns a blind eye towards if not actually condones violent acts against women. United efforts can create a public opinion and outcry against humiliations against women done by men in government or uniform can work as a deterrent. Women have to be aware of their rights and stand up to them. Women must help themselves and each other in the fight against violence. Attitudinal change is required right from the home to be able for women to stand with dignity in this world.

Juvenile Crimes in India

In recent years India has seen manifold increase in crimes committed by minors. While analyzing the factors responsible for the spurt in crime rate the experts believe that the rural-urban conflict is at the core of these crimes in cities especially underage crimes. The largely rural and semi urban background of most of the offenders point to that direction. According to the researchers these young people are not benefitting from the economic reforms in comparison to the educated and professional counterparts in the cities. They feel neglected, frustrated and distressed which leads to crimes such as murder etc.
An increase in number of rural people migrating to cities in search of better life opportunities however do not prepare them for the urban value system. The children are often neglected, as both parents are working and unable to spend time with them. The children do not get the attention and right values essential for upbringing.
According to the report ‘Why Children Commit Offences’ published by Delhi Commission for Protection of Child Rights (DCPCR) in June 2015 focused on children in conflict with the law in Delhi. The report looks at multiple issues like the socio-economic profile of children with a criminal record, the nature of offence that these children were accused of and analyzed the factors that push children towards deviant behavior. The report highlighted the role of the family, the community, the school and education as well the peer influence. The report after studying 182 children in observation homes, special homes found that poverty is one of the biggest contributing factor in children taken to crimes. Most of the children had undergone multiple deprivations with low economic households, uneducated parents; disrupted families. The children were dropouts and working independently to support their families.

Child marriage in India

 

Since time immemorial, child marriage has been one of the greatest evils plaguing India. Marriage is a sacred relationship between two individuals who are ready to accept each other. Child marriage is an abuse of such union and is not permitted by law in India. History has always proven child marriage detrimental for our society.
The recent statistics released by the Government of India on married Indian women show 31.3% Hindu women and 30.6% Muslim women marry before the age of 17.6% of all Hindu women married before turning 10.The corresponding figure for Muslim women was 5%. Only 6% of men were married before 18.
The legal age for marriage is 18 for women and 21 for men. Any marriage below the legal age is considered child marriage. One in three married women from Hindu and Muslim communities got married before their 18th birthday making them vulnerable to not just higher maternal mortality rates but also domestic violence. Studies show girls who give birth before turning 15 and the infants of child mothers are at greater risk. Underage marriages interrupt education and most child brides are unable to negotiate with their family members making them liable to domestic violence.
The 2001 census found 43% of women were married before 18 years of age. In 2011 the figure stood at 18%. The proportion of women married before 18 years between 2001 and 2011 was 20%.
India has been unable to enforce the law that was first enacted by the British in 1929.The Child Marriage Restraint Act fixed the age of marriage for girls at 14 and boys at 18 years. It was last raised to 18 years for girls in 2006.In 2014 police registered only 280 cases across the country under the 2006 Prohibition of Child Marriage Act. Of the 103 cases decided by courts the same year convictions were secured in only 15 or 14.6% cases.
Only laws and law enforcing agencies will not prove instrumental in reducing and eventually eradicating child-marriages. The mindset of the society has to be targeted in order to create a world free of such evils. Citizens will have to actively participate in spreading awareness regarding this practice and by abiding to the existing restrictions imposed by the government. Girl child has to be given equal opportunities and right education to safeguard themselves from such practices and rise in the society. The journey of gender equality will only be completed once practices like child marriages; female feticides violence against women are eradicated.
According to the report ‘Why Children Commit Offences’ published by Delhi Commission for Protection of Child Rights (DCPCR) in June 2015 focused on children in conflict with the law in Delhi. The report looks at multiple issues like the socio-economic profile of children with a criminal record, the nature of offence that these children were accused of and analyzed the factors that push children towards deviant behavior. The report highlighted the role of the family, the community, the school and education as well the peer influence. The report after studying 182 children in observation homes, special homes found that poverty is one of the biggest contributing factor in children taken to crimes. Most of the children had undergone multiple deprivations with low economic households, uneducated parents; disrupted families. The children were dropouts and working independently to support their families.

Unemployment in India


Money is always a matter of concern and it is the basic factor which ultimately determines the standard of living. Being employed is not only a dream but also the right of every citizen in India. The lack of employment is one of the major issues in India and when the deserving don’t get employed, the matter obviously needs apex consideration. Unemployment is the phenomenon and a problem which is to be understood from different angles. India is really rich in terms of human resources but still we are a developing country and are remaining with the same status since years. The life of people who are either fully unemployed or partially employed many times is pathetic. We cannot claim our country as a welfare state as long as the problem of unemployment remains unsolved.
Everyone knows that India is a thickly populated nation. Population is always increasing by a very large number and at a random pace. However the country is not in a position to provide jobs to all those citizens effectively. Jobs and other gainful avenues can’t be provided in the required proportion and thus a major section of the population remains unemployed. Even the education system of our country is also a major factor responsible for the problem. We have many educated persons unemployed. Only in our country such highly educated people fail to find a job. Many of the graduates who pass out every year are fit only for office work and not for any other work.
The impact of unemployment on our society is very huge. Unemployment leads to poverty, it deprives a person of all the sources for income and as a result, the person grows poor. It also causes numerous social problems such as theft, dishonesty, bribery; gambling etc. The social security of our nation is disturbed. Another major problem caused by unemployment is political instability. Unemployed persons consider the government as worthless which can’t provide them any work. Extreme effects of unemployment on the citizens of our country include drug addiction, frustration and even suicides. Disturbances and disorders increase in our society. Our country can’t be developed politically, economically or socially, unless the problem is fully solved.
Thus our country is in a great need to solve the problem of unemployment. The government should take essential steps to check the problem. We know that actually this problem is clearly an economic problem. So it is very necessary to overhaul our country’s economic policy. Labor is abundant in our country. They should be provided employment through small-scale cottage industries or any such industries. More focus should be kept on vocational and technical education. The present system of bookish education must be discouraged to some extent. Awareness classes on family planning should be also conducted. In such ways the government should check the rapid increase of population. These measures could surely help us to solve this problem of unemployment. It is the moral responsibility of any government to bestow the people with the highest possible standard of living. And the provision of a secured employment is the primary need to attain the noble goal.

Dowry in India



India is known for its culture and heritage, however, sadly enough, India has some stained customary rituals which depict a dark image of the nation. Dowry system is one such entrenched social evil prevalent in the nation. Dowry is the sum given in cash or in kind by the bride’s kin to the bridegroom’s kin besides giving away of the bride known as Kanyadaan in Indian marriage.  Kanyadanam is an imperative part of  Hindu nuptial rites. Kanya means daughter, and dana means gift. Dowry or more well-known as Dahej, is an age old custom inIndia, practiced originally by the people of the upper caste. It was given as a token of love or rather as a wedding gift to the bride from her family. It was later on given to aid with wedding expenses and turned out to be a type of indemnity lest that the in-laws battered the bride.
Marriage has been always regarded as a sacred and holy ritual in the Indian society.  However, the dismay of the dowry system has made this ritual an apprehensive institution. The stealthy atmosphere of dowry begins when this sacred tie have taken a commercial slant. The groom’s vicar persists to put forth a string of demands before the bride’s vicar. He stalwartly avows that these demands must be satisfied prior to the commencement of marriage, or else, on no account he shall give his consent to the marriage. The demands include refrigerator, color television, motor bike or car, knick-knacks of pure gold of substantial quantity, money and plots of land in the center vicinity. In some cases bride grooms demand cash for their education and for constructing buildings. It is shameful that the Bride grooms to a certain extent are procured as viable commodity.
Dowry system is a slur to the Indian society which has been in all times regarded and respected as the most cultured society around the globe. It diminishes the position of both man and woman. Scores of erudite men demand dowry, slurring the education and culture of the nation. Most of the well-cultured, beautiful and eligible girls remain unmarried as their families cannot meet the demands of dowry due to economic disparity. The practice of dowry abuse is mounting at a rapid rate inIndia.  The most severe is “bride burning”, the burning of women whose dowries were not deemed enough by their husband or in-laws.  The majorities of these unpleasant incidents are testimony as fortuitous burns in the kitchen or are camouflaged as suicide.  It is apparent that there subsists deep rooted chauvinism against women inIndia. Cultural practices such as the sum of dowry tend to lower women in Indian society.
Nevertheless, the Government has stepped forward in making laws for prohibition of dowry. The Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 has been made to prohibit people from giving and taking of dowry which is punishable under the court of law either with fine amounting to Rs. 15,000 or with imprisonment which shall not be less then 5 years or with both. Though these laws are made, it is not put into proper practice and it continues to be heating up day by day. Media can play a vital role in curbing this deep rooted social evil from the society. People should be more vigilant and should protest against this evil that is practiced in most part of India. It is an earnest request to the Government to be more vigilant by appointing agents to investigate and lending a hand in uprooting this deep rooted social evil and reducing the crime against the women folk.

Saturday, 18 March 2017

Digital Media


Digital Media.

                                  Digital Media is a blend of technology and content, and building digital media products requires teams of professionals with diverse skills, including technical skills, artistic skills, analytical and production coordination skills. All of these skills need to be balanced on a team, with all team members focused on creating the best user experience

Digital media products can be found in:
  • eCommerce
  • Games – console, online and mobile
  • Websites and mobile applications
  • Animation
  • Social media
  • Video
  • Augmented reality
  • Virtual reality
  • Data visualization
  • Location-based services
  • Interactive Storytelling
Digital media can include these industries:
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • eCommerce
  • Non-Profit
  • Health
  • Education
  • Marketing and advertising
  • Government
  • Sports
  • Environment
  • Television
  • Publishing
                        Organizations that build digital media products rely on multi-skilled teams and manage those teams with business processes designed to enhance their efficiency and effectiveness. For example, making a game requires storytellers, programmers, artists, data analysts, user experience designers, project managers and animators. 
"Throwing things over the wall" between siloed groups of experts is not an effective way to manage things. You have to ensure that they understand each other, work together creatively, and collectively pull off a result that delivers a world-class experience.