Development: March 2006 Archives

By Breffni O'Rourke
Young schoolgirl in China (epa)
Young schoolgirl in China (epa)

It is a paradox that the two most populated countries in the world -- China and India -- which together have some 2.3 billion people, are running low on young women. That's because both China and India traditionally value boys more than girls. Modern technology has made it possible to identify the sex of an unborn child and to abort it if it is a girl. Other female babies are quietly disposed of after birth. That could mean long and lonely bachelorhoods in the near future for millions of men unable to find partners.

Notes on PROUT policy on intervention

| | Comments (0)
By Dr. Sohail Inayatullah

Prout supports intervention in sovereign nation states by a duly created world body. Prof. Sohail InayatullahIt rejects intervention by particular nation-states, even broad based coalitions. This is largely as the self-interests of nation-states (geo-political control, resource and ideology control) go against the self-interests of the planet.

Ideologically, Prout rejects the UN as such a world body, as the UN is foundations are based on inequitable world order. Moreover, eligibility into the UN is based on acquiring national status, thus leaving out social movements, cooperatives, and individuals.

Ideologically Prout rejects identity politics particularly religious politics, including the hindu variety ( eg, BJP genocide in Gujrat), of the Islamic variety (terrorism globally and in Kashmir) of the Christian Vatican (the feudal politics of the Vatican) and of the Jewish variety (Zionism).

The India Bush didn't see

| | Comments (0)

The nation's liberated economy -- portrayed by globalization forces as an antidote to poverty -- has done little for nearly 300 million poor people, the most of any country

By Mike McPhate

New Delhi -- Among India's poor, survival is still won by acts of despair and cunning. It's a daily quest whose reward is a plate of rice or a simple medication.

The Local Language and Local Needs

| | Comments (0)
By Shrii P.R. Sarkar

Prout's approach is that the medium of instruction from primary to tertiary level should be in the local language. The sum total of human expression is culture, and language is the best medium to express human culture. While different groups should encourage every language, each unit should use the local language to inspire self-confidence and self-respect amongst the local people. Encouraging a positive cultural identity is an important ingredient in the development of the local area, and is an essential factor in generating a sense of affinity and unity amongst the people.

THE LANGUAGE ISSUE

| | Comments (0)
By Shrii P. R. Sarkar

Every living being has its own inherent tendency to express and symbolise. In the evolutionary process of creation, where higher species have evolved, living beings try to express their feelings by gesture, posture or by some sound. In a general sense, this acoustic expression of ideas is called language.

In New Europe - a Lingual Hodgepodge

| | Comments (0)
Old Tongues Are Flourishing in a Revival of Regional Cultures
By Marlise Simons, New York Times

QUEVEN, France -- Day and night on France's windy western coast, Radio Kerne transmits a bright mix of music sprinkled with local news. It is a new station run by young people for a young audience -- but with a difference. Most of Radio Kerne's operators are volunteers, working with the zeal of missionaries. Their preferred music comes from bagpipes and flutes. And they broadcast only in Breton, a Celtic language spoken for more than 2,000 years that until recently seemed doomed to disappear. "Saving the culture of Brittany is very much on people's minds," said Isig Flatres, who is the manager of the station. "This generation is no longer embarrassed about speaking or being Breton."

A Proutist View of the Futures of South Asia

| | Comments (0)
Steps to a Confederation
by Dr. Sohail Inayatullah, Professor, Tamkang University, Taiwan and Sunshine Coast University, Australia, www.metafuture.org

Dr. Sohail Inayatullah, Professor, Tamkang University, Taiwan and Sunshine Coast University, Australia, www.metafuture.orgWhile we are all aware why we do not have peace in south asia, there is a paucity of explorations on how to create a better future. The lack of peace defined as both individual peace (inner contentment), social-psychological peace (how we see the Other), structural peace (issues of justice, particularly territorial justice) and epistemological peace (toward a plurality of ways of knowing) are among the major factors contributing to poverty in south asia. Government expenditures in each nation, especially India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka go for military purposes and not for education or health. Every time a positive economic cycle begins, yet one more confrontation sends military expenditures higher. Few, except military leaders and a few corporations (mostly foreign), benefit from this escalation.

Pages

Powered by Movable Type 4.1

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Development category from March 2006.

Development: February 2006 is the previous archive.

Development: April 2006 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.