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Empowering women

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The Business Line 23.09.2009

Empowering women


The recent move to set apart 50 per cent of elected seats in panchayats and all other local bodies for women could spell a new and more active role for women in Kerala’s sociopolitical sphere.


K.G. Kumar

For long, especially in the 20th century, women in Kerala have been accorded the status of a key pivot in the State’s social and cultural development. Their elevated status was reflected on superior social indicators such as a favourable sex ratio, high female literacy rates, late marriage, low fertility rates, high life expectancy and low infant mortality rates, to name some of the indices commonly bandied around by social scientists.

Thus, writing in The New York Review of Books more than a decade ago, Nobel laureate Amartya Sen pointed to the fact that Kerala “does not have a deficit of women—its ratio of women to men of more than 1.03 is closer to that of Europe (1.05) than those of China, West Asia, and India as a whole (0.94).

The life expectancy of women at birth in Kerala, which had already reached 68 years by the time of the last census in 1981 (and is estimated to be 72 years now), is considerably higher than men’s 64 years at that time (and 77 now). While women are generally able to find ‘gainful employment’ in Kerala — certainly much more so than in Punjab — the State is not exceptional in this regard. What is exceptional is Kerala’s remarkably high literacy rate; not only is it much higher than elsewhere in India, it is also substantially higher than in China, especially for women.”

Lack of political space

Yet, in terms of sociopolitical empowerment, women in Kerala remain hemmed in by patriarchy and male domination, and they find that avenues into the political arena remain blocked to them despite the State boasting 1,058 women per 1,000 men.

Thus it was a momentous move that the Kerala State Legislature made last fortnight when it decided to set apart 50 per cent of elected seats in panchayats and all other local bodies for women. The proposal is to amend Article 243d of the Constitution of India, which currently provides for one-third reservation to women in panchayats.

The one-third reservation for women in panchayats came through the 73rd Constitutional Amendment. States can amend their local State laws to increase women’s representation up to 50 per cent. Four States – Bihar, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh – have already done it, and another – Rajasthan – has announced that 50 per cent of seats will be reserved for women in the next panchayat election in early 2010. For its part, Kerala, which has 999 village panchayats, 152 block panchayats, 14 district panchayats, 53 municipalities and five corporations, will amend the provisions of the Kerala Panchayati Raj (second amendment) Bill 2009 and the Kerala Municipality (amendment) Bill 2009 in time for the next panchayat and civic polls in the State in 2010.

Role of education

But whether these legislative moves in themselves will pave the way for a resurgence of women power is a rather moot point. The historical roots of the relative superiority of Kerala’s women, as Amartya Sen points out, can be traced to State-funded expansion of basic education, which began nearly two centuries ago, led by the rulers of the kingdoms of Travancore and Cochin.

“It is perhaps of symbolic importance that the first public pronouncement of the need for widespread elementary education in any part of India was made in 1817 by Rani Gouri Parvathi Bai, the young queen of the princely state of Travancore, which makes up a substantial part of modern Kerala,” notes Sen.

Kerala is not quite unique in this respect, Sen points out. “Other societies, such as those of Sri Lanka, South Korea, and Thailand, which have relied on expanding education and reducing mortality rates—instead of on coercion—have also achieved sharp declines in fertility and birth rates.”

Nonetheless, recent efforts to accommodate mainstream gender concerns in local government in Kerala have been stymied by patriarchal interests in the State’s ruling classes. As a result, women as a group have remained less politically empowered in Kerala, despite their symbolic participation in political processes and rallies. With wizened old patriarchs still ruling the roost in Kerala’s political field, women have yet to make a huge mark in the State’s larger political leadership and even in local governance structures, though some experiments like the women’s self-help groups and some panchayat-based initiatives show great potential.

With patriarchy in its modern avatars serving to enforce female subjectivity, the “female agency” of Kerala’s women remains confined to domestic spaces. Where new socioeconomic spaces have been sought for women in Kerala’s public sphere and labour force – as in the traditional industries of coir, cashew and fish processing – these have hinged on women’s supposedly natural endowments such as dexterity with their hands, forbearance and lack of aggression. They have not been spawned by concerns of gender equality.

The new move to reserve half the seats in panchayats and local bodies for women could well change this situation, and lead to greater participation of women in employment and in political action. Next year’s panchayat elections could raise the role of Kerala’s women in collaborative public action and increase their presence in the public sphere.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 23 September 2009 06:32
 

Meet soon to sort out luxury bus operational issues

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The Hindu 23.09.2009

Meet soon to sort out luxury bus operational issues

Staff Reporter

KOCHI: A special meeting to sort out the operational issues of the proposed premium bus service for the city will be convened soon.

This was decided at the meeting of the government officials concerned in Thiruvananthapuram on Tuesday.

The Kochi Corporation had earlier rejected the routes proposed by the Kerala State Transport Corporation for the low-floor AC and non-AC buses for the Kochi city.

The buses are to be bought with the support of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission. A meeting involving the civic administrators will be convened to iron out the issues including the routes. The operational issues including the refuelling facility, annual maintenance contract of the buses, the bus crew, the parking bays and also the repair facilities were discussed at the meeting, officials said.

The authorities are seeking the option of entering into an agreement with the oil companies in Kochi for supplying fuel.

The existing fuel refilling stations of the KSRTC will not be sufficient to meet the demands of the new luxury buses.

The identification of parking lots is another issue that is awaiting an answer as the new buses, which are bigger than the ones used by the KSRTC, need more parking space.

The existing facilities of the KSRTC would be insufficient. The authorities are exploring the possibility of identifying new parking lots in places owned by the KSRTC, including its yard at Thevara, officials said. The meeting was convened by the Principal Secretary to the Local Administration Department.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 23 September 2009 04:40
 

IKM project wins CSI e-governance award

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The Hindu 23.09.2009

IKM project wins CSI e-governance award

 

Special Correspondent


The project was implemented in all panchayats, municipalities and corporations in 2008.


THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The ‘Sulekha’ annual Plan formulation and monitoring system for decentralised planning, developed and executed by the State-run Information Kerala Mission (IKM), has won the Computer Society of India (CSI)-Nihilent e-governance award for excellence in the government to government (G2G) project category 2008-09.

The project has been developed by the IKM, in association with the Nihilent Technologies and the National Institute for Smart Government. It was implemented in all panchayats, municipalities and corporations in 2008. It is currently being used to capture the details of over 1.5 lakh project reports created by 1,223 local self-government institutions annually under decentralised planning.

The data is used to generate reports for appraisal of the projects by the 169 Technical Advisory Groups and then for approval by the 14 District Planning Committees (DPCs). The project-wise monthly expenditure details are also captured in the software and transmitted to the State Data Centre over the network and made available publicly on the web site of the Local Self-government Department, http://www.lsg.kerala.gov.in

Over the past one decade, the IKM has been striving to develop software that could help streamline the Plan formulation and monitoring system in the local governments. The project was started in the context of democratic decentralisation implemented in the State from the 9th Five Year Plan (1997-2002). The CSI had short-listed the ‘Sulekha’ project in the G2G category from a large number of projects nominated from all over the country. A team from the CSI had visited the IKM to get a first-hand experience of the project and the software.

The team had also visited Karakulam grama panchayat and the District Planning Office here and interacted with the users about the performance of the software and the project achievements. Subsequently, a presentation of the project was done by the IKM before the award jury at Hyderabad.

The awards for 2008-09 will be given away at Pune on October 9.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 23 September 2009 04:36
 


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