Ecology: July 2006 Archives

Cultural aspirations of socio-economic units

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By Shrii P.R. Sarkar
Socio-economic movement of Amra Bangali
Socio-Economic Movement lead by Amra Bangali* draws the attention of media. Photo: AB's meeting on International Mother Language Day (21st February, 2006)

Socio-economic units will not only have to fulfill peoples social and economic needs, but also their cultural aspirations. Culture denotes all sorts of human expressions. Culture is the same for all humanity, though there are differences in cultural expression. The best means of communicating human expressions is through one's mother tongue, as this is most natural. If people's natural expression through their mother tongue is suppressed, inferiority complexes will grow in their minds, encouraging a defeatist mentality and ultimately leading to psycho-economic exploitation. Thus, no mother tongue should be suppressed.

Gotta Wear Shades

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Drop that apocalyptic vision and start imagining a positive future

By Karen Hurley, 11 Jul 2006

Back at the turn of the millennium, the local government I was working for asked community members to contribute their vision of the municipality in the year 2025. As an environmental planner, I attended the community's presentations with some interest.

One group that responded was a gifted-It doesn't have to be like this. Photo: iStockphoto students' club from an elementary school. In their envisioned future, they imagined a community with only indoor parks. Beyond these parks, there would be no trees, no plants, no birds, and no animals. Freshwater would be gone, because lakes and streams would either be dried up or too polluted to support life; drinking water would have to be created from desalinization plants on the coast. In the future these children predicted, universities and colleges would be closed because everyone would learn -- alone -- through their personal computers.

The Ministry of Mines and Minerals says it may lift the ban on asbestos mining. It is ignoring the views of exposure victims, informed recommendations of public sector medical experts, and mounting evidence of an asbestos disease epidemic emerging in developed countries. The rationale to permit mining is hollow, writes Gopal Krishna.

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This page is a archive of entries in the Ecology category from July 2006.

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