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May 29, 2006

The Reservation Debate Summarised

[This post is actually from the blog Zoo Station. After i read the arguments in the letter, i felt that i HAD to post it here!!! Read on....]

Before you begin reading this, I must warn you that it is a long post, but one that I believe is justified in its verbosity, given the seriousness of the issue at hand. Thus far, the reservation debate in India has had a range of voices fuelling it: protesting doctors facing water cannons, the Prime Minister in his usually tentative manner, backing the move to introduce reservation for Other Backward Classes (OBCs) in central govenment aided educational institutions, IITians going on hunger strikes, CPM general secretary Prakash Karat calling for consensus, (via Poornima Hatti) Union HRD minister Arjun Singh's increasingly idiotic press statements (his choice of the word 'anonymity' when he actually meant 'unanimity' is telling), and just about every broadcast news maven drooling over the issue during talk shows and from OB vans.

While I think the issue is too complex for stark, cut-and-dry solutions, I think this letter of resignation, from Pratap Bhanu Mehta, the member-convener of the National Knowledge Commission, is the clearest voice of them all. I have reproduced the entire letter here.

I write to resign as Member-Convener of the National Knowledge Commission. I believe the Commission’s mandate is extremely important, and I am deeply grateful that you gave me the opportunity to serve on it. But many of the recent announcements made by your government with respect to higher education lead me to the conclusion that my continuation on the commission will serve no useful purpose.

The Knowledge Commission was given an ambitious mandate to strengthen India’s knowledge potential at all levels. We had agreed that if all sections of Indian society were to participate in and make use of the knowledge economy, we would need a radical paradigm shift in the way we thought of the production, dissemination and use of knowledge. In some ways this paradigm shift would have to be at least as radical as the economic reforms you helped usher in more than a decade ago. The sense of intellectual excitement that the commission generated stemmed from the fact that it represented an opportunity to think boldly, honestly and with an eye to posterity. But the government’s recent decision (announced by Honorable Minister of Human Resource Development on the floor of Parliament) to extend quotas for OBCs in central institutions, the palliative measures the government is contemplating to defuse the resulting agitation, and the process employed to arrive at these measures are steps in the wrong direction. They violate four cardinal principles that institutions in a knowledge based society will have to follow: they are not based on assessment of effectiveness, they are incompatible with the freedom and diversity of institutions, they more thoroughly politicise the education process, and they inject an insidious poison that will harm the nation’s long-term interest.

These measures will not achieve social justice. I am as committed as anyone to two propositions. Every student must be enabled to realise his/her full potential regardless of financial or social circumstances. Achieving this aim requires radical forms of affirmative action. But the numerically mandated quotas your government is proposing are deeply disappointing, for the following reasons. First, these measures foreclose any possibility of more intelligent targeting that any sensible programme should require. For one thing, the historical claims of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and the nature of the deprivations they face are qualitatively of a different order than those faced by Other Backward Castes, at least in North India. It is plainly disingenuous to lump them together in the same narrative of social injustice and assume that the same instruments should apply to both. It is for this reason that I advocated status quo for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes until such time as better and more effective measures can be found to achieve affirmative action for them.

Some have proposed the inclusion of economic criterion: this is something of an improvement, but does not go far enough. What we needed, Honorable Prime Minister, was space to design more effective mechanisms of targeting groups that need to be targeted for affirmative action. For instance, there are a couple of well-designed deprivation indexes that do a much better job of targeting the relevant social deprivations and picking out merit. The government’s action is disappointing, because you have prematurely foreclosed these possibilities. In foreclosing these possibilities the government has revealed that it cares about tokenism more than social justice. It has sent the signal that there is no room for thinking about social justice in a new paradigm.

As a society we focus on reservations largely because it is a way of avoiding doing the things that really create access. Increasing the supply of good quality institutions at all levels (not to be confused with numerical increases), more robust scholarship and support programmes will go much further than numerically mandated quotas. When you assumed office, you had sketched out a vision of combining economic reform with social justice. Increased public investment is going to be central to creating access opportunities. It would be presumptuous for me to suggest where this increased public investment is going to come from, but there are ample possibilities: for instance, earmarking proceeds from genuine disinvestment for education will do far more for access than quotas. We are not doing enough to genuinely empower marginalised groups, but are offering condescending palliatives like quotas as substitute. All the measures currently under discussion are to defuse the agitation, not to lay the foundations for a vibrant education system. If I may borrow a phrase of Tom Paine’s, we pity the plumage, but forget the dying bird.

Second, the measures your government is contemplating violate the diversity principle. Why should all institutions in a country the size of India adopt the same admissions quotas? Is there no room at all for different institutions experimenting with different kinds of affirmative action policies that are most appropriate for their pedagogical mission? How will institutions feel empowered? How will creativity in social justice programmes be fostered, if we continue with a “one size fits all” approach? Could it not be that some state institutions follow numerically mandated quotas, while others are left free to devise their own programmes? The government’s announcement is deeply disappointing because it reinforces the cardinal weakness of the Indian system: all institutions have to be reduced to the same level.

Third, and related to diversity, is the question of freedom. As an academic I find it to be an appalling spectacle when a group of ministers is empowered to come up with admissions policies, seat formulas for institutions across the country. While institutions have responsibilities and are accountable to society, how will they ever achieve excellence and autonomy if basic decisions like who they should teach, what they should teach, how much they should charge are uniformly mandated by government diktat? As you know, more than anyone else, the bane of our education institutions is that politicians feel free to hoist any purpose they wish upon them: their favourite ideology, their preferred conception of social justice, their idea of representativeness, or their own men and women. Everything else germane to a healthy academic life and effective pedagogy becomes subordinate to these purposes. Concerned academics risked a good deal, battling the previous government’s instrumental use of educational institutions for ideological purposes.

Though your objectives are different, your government is sending a similar message about our institutions: in the final analysis, they are playthings for politicians to mess around with. Nations are not built by specific programmes, they are built by healthy institutions, and the process by which your government is arriving at its decisions suggests contempt for the autonomy and integrity of academic life. Your government has reinforced the very paradigm of the state’s relations with educational institutions that has weakened us.

In this process, the arguments that have been coming from your government are plainly disingenuous. It is true that a constitutional amendment was hastily passed to overturn the effects of the Inamdar decision. At the time I had written that the decision was property rights decision that was trying to unshackle private institutions from an overbearing state. But since the state had already displaced its responsibilities to the private sector it decided that the ramifications of Inamdar would be too onerous and passed a constitutional amendment. One can quibble over whether this amendment was justified or not. But even in its present form it is only an enabling legislation. It does not require that every public institution has numerically mandated quotas for OBCs. To hear your government consistently hiding behind the pretext of the constitutional amendment is yet another example of how we are foreclosing the fine distinctions that any rigorous approach to access and excellence requires.

Finally, I believe that the proposed measures will harm the nation’s vital interests. It is often said that caste is a reality in India. I could not agree more. But your government is in the process of making caste the only reality in India. Instead of finding imaginative solutions to allow us to transcend our own despicable history of inequity, your government is ensuring that we remain entrapped in the caste paradigm. Except that now by talking of OBCs and SC/STs in the same narrative we are licensing new forms of inequity and arbitrariness.

The Knowledge Economy of the twenty-first century will require participation of all sections of society. When we deprive any single child, of any caste, of relevant opportunities, we mutilate ourselves as a society and diminish our own possibilities. But, as you understand more than most, globalisation requires us to think of old objectives in new paradigms: the market and competition for talent is global, institutions need to be more agile and nimble, and there has to be creativity and diversity of institutional forms if a society is to position itself to take advantage the Knowledge Economy. I believe that the measures your government is proposing will inhibit achieving both social justice and economic well-being.

I write this letter with a great deal of regret. In my colleagues on the Knowledge Commission you will find a group that is unrivalled in its dedication, commitment and creativity, and I hope you will back them in full measure so that they can accomplish their mission in other areas. I assure you that the commission’s functioning will suffer no logistical harm on account of my departure.

I recognise that in a democracy one has to respectfully accede to the decisions of elected representatives. But I also believe that democracies are ill-served if individuals do not frankly and publicly point out the perils that certain decisions may pose for posterity. I owe it to public reason to make my reasons for resigning public. I may be wrong in my judgment about the consequences of your government’s decisions, but at this juncture I cannot help concluding that what your government is proposing poses grave dangers for India as a nation.

On this occasion I cannot help thinking about the anxieties of a man who knew a thing or two about constitutional values, who was more rooted in politics than any of us can hope to be, and who understood the distinction between statesmanship and mere politics: Jawaharlal Nehru. He wrote, “So these external props, as I may call them, the reservations of seats and the rest, may possibly be helpful occasionally, but they produce a false sense of political relation, a false sense of strength, and, ultimately therefore, they are not so nearly important as real educational, cultural and economic advance which gives them inner strength to face any difficulty or opponent.” Since your government continues to abet a politics of illusion, I cannot serve any useful purpose by continuing on the Knowledge Commission under such circumstances.

With warmest personal regards,

pratapbmehta@yahoo.co.in

May 28, 2006

My World View

You scored as Idealist.

Idealism centers around the belief that we are moving towards something greater. An odd mix of evolutionist and spiritualist, you see the divine within ourselves, waiting to emerge over time. Many religious traditions express how the divine spirit lost its identity, thus creating our world of turmoil, but in time it will find itself and all things will again become one.

Idealist- 100%
Cultural Creative- 94%
Postmodernist- 75%
Existentialist- 69%
Modernist- 69%
Materialist- 38%
Romanticist- 25%
Fundamentalist- 25%

Well, whats YOUR world view??? Click here to find out...

May 25, 2006

Series Review ( till date): Harry Potter in Hogwarts by J K Rowling

Kanjisheik at your service. I feel restless nowadays, I dunno why. Fingers itching to type something, SOMETHING!!! All you budding doctors out there, please diagnose me and please treat me! I dont wanna spend the rest of my life with 'Itching Fingers Syndrome'...

So lets come back to one of my favourite topics: what else, you guessed it right! Its HARRY POTTER. Yeah, I'm gonna say something about the literary phenomenon that took the world by storm and revolutionised reading in a way that avid bibliophiles had never imagined.

Book 1: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone
Book 2: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Book 3: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
Book 4: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Book 5: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Book 6: Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince
Book 7: not released as yet...

book 1.jpg book 2.jpg book 3.jpg book 4.jpg book 5.jpg book 6.jpg

The writer being a certain Joanne Kenneth Rowling, a single woman with a child, who dint have a job and took to writing the manuscript of book one on napkin paper in a nearby café- and now barely nine years later after the copies of book one hit the streets of London, she is perhaps one of the most successful novelists around, earning millions from merchandise and the films of the Harry Potter series. Seems quite the fairy tale success story, right? Makes me wonder if someone might be writing a story of her now..

But then, I'm digressing again- it seems to be my favourite strategy; to play the fiddle while everything burns around me, a la Nero, but I hear someone say 'Hem,Hem' in my ears and so I'll go on with my quest of Harry Potter.. Harry Potter, a eleven year old orphan, with "ordinary bloke" written all over him, is in for a surprise on his birthday when a giant informs him that he is actually a wizard and supposed to go to Hogwarts to learn magic- and thus starts one of the finest yarns ever spun in English literature.

Rowling has a really vivid imagination and an equally good knack for creating an iron clad background. This really helps her, cos she is able to blend both the Muggle and the wizarding worlds in the unlikeliest of places. Her writing is fluid, usually very fast paced and keeps the reader hooked on a never ending roller coaster ride. It seems to reach into the child in all of us and the details in the fantasy makes it much more easier for our rational selves to accept.

Throughout the series, Harry Potter has several adventures and miraculous escapes, but in reality, he is engaged on a quest: he has to find the reason why his parents were murdered by Lord Voldemort, and how he himself managed to escape the Avada Kedavra spell, while You Know Who's magical powers were obliterated..

When I read the series, I was struck by the degree of similarity in the first two books. The third book does introduce a host of new characters and tells a lot about Harry's parents, and the series starts to become more interesting.Rowling's language really shines through in part four. And in the books since then, Harry is different- a much more mature person, probably due to the shock of seeing Cedric die and Voldemort reborn, and later see Sirius meet the same tragic end.

He is no longer the eleven year old orphan unsure of his place in the wizarding world, he has now matured into a confident young man, capable of thwarting Voldemort time and again.. And kudos to Rowling for this. The most interesting aspect for me in this series other than the incredible fantasy and stunning use of language, is this gradual change in Harry Potter. So many stories and their sequels have bitten the dust cos the authors were too afraid to change the formula.

The series has proved to be an engrossing read, capturing the imagination of both young and old alike. As the series draws to its inevitable end, rumours are rife that Harry will meet his gory end.. Will Rowling be forced to bring back Harry to life some time later, a la Sherlock Holmes? Only time will tell..

But the truth is- even if Rowling doesn't write a single book after book seven, no matter what happens, she is assured a place in the history books, as the wonderful creator of the one and only Harry Potter.

May 02, 2006

The Anti Reservation Movement

The “Honourable” Union Minister Arjun Singh’s proposal of 27% reservation quota for Other Backward Castes [OBC’s] in Central Government institutions of higher education has been one of the major issues over the last couple of weeks. As a result, the total quota for reservation has risen to a staggering 49.5%, i.e. nearly half of the seats in the IITs, IIMs and the 113 Central Government run medical colleges will be occupied on the basis of factors other than merit. This issue has grabbed the attention of all and sundry, giving rise to a plethora of views that range across the entire spectrum of opinion.

So, in order to understand something about this, lets go back to the core issue here- RESERVATION. Sixty odd years ago, when our founding fathers drafted the Constitution, they felt that some sort of measures were required in order to uplift those sections of society who had been oppressed for centuries, and denied their basic rights. And they hit upon the solution- reservation. Laudable sentiments, but the burning question is: has reservation actually served its purpose??? The answer is NO- it has benefited a considerably narrow strata of the SC/ST community, which has been termed as the “creamy layer”. Certainly, reservation has not lived up to the promise of emancipating the people. Hence, we conclude that it is definitely NOT the solution. So increasing the reservation quota simply is pointless.

Furthermore, reservation was meant to be a temporary measure. Dr Ambedkar had specifically said,"Reservation is not a crutch for the scheduled castes and tribes" and had suggested a ten year timeframe, after which it was to be progressively decreased and ultimately eliminated. However, it hasn’t been done so by the Machiavellian politicians, who sensed the prospect to create vote banks, at the cost of national unity. Therefore, a further raise in reservation simply exacerbates the issue, further fragmenting Indian society. In fact, I would go on to say that the polarized situation today bears an eerie resemblance to that of the British Raj, when the concept of “communal electorates” was introduced, and special constituencies were reserved for Muslims.

Consider the irony- reservation was meant to create a sense of equality, but now it’s become a cause of inequality among the people. There is a popular misconception that the reservation quota is the only mode of entry for the backward castes, but it is not so- a considerable number of these students enter on the basis of merit too, further decreasing the chances of the students who belong to the general category. Is it right to ‘punish’ the so-called forward castes for crimes committed by their forefathers??? In my humble opinion, this is just one more opportunity for the political parties to play “divide and rule”. That this proposal came just before the elections is clear testament to the fact that Mr Arjun Singh’s statement was a carefully orchestrated event to grab maximum mileage.

Reservation of such a substantial number of seats will only decrease the level of excellence of the educational institutions. Rather than raising quotas in higher education, strengthening the primary and secondary tiers of education to prevent dropouts among the backward castes would be the more appropriate mode of action.

This matter is of extraordinary relevance for medical students, as more than 10,000 seats are at stake. Hence, the resolution taken by the medical students of New Delhi to vehemently protest against this proposal under the forum “Youth for Equality” ought to be appreciated. The students have been boycotting classes for several days and organizing peaceful demonstrations. The anti-reservation movement has spread to almost all parts of India, with similar protests occurring in places like Amritsar, Jalandhar, Jaipur, Rajkot, Kolkatta, Patna, Mumbai, Pune, Bangalore, Chennai, Mysore, etc… and more and more colleges are joining by the day.

And the movement has been brought into cyberspace too, with numerous online petitions arising that oppose reservations. The “Youth for Equality” forum has launched a site, where colleges can declare their support for the forum, and explain their stand on reservation. Its gonna be an uphill task, but the battle has just begun. We hope you’ll support our efforts to eliminate the ever increasing malignancy of reservation from our educational system.