THE ongoing negotiations with the World Bank provide an opportunity to urban policymakers to reinvent the present form of JNNURM (called v1.0). Thus far JNNURM v1.0 has focused on upgrading macro-level dimensions of city’s environment, ignoring the social and economic diversity (e.g., mixed uses and building types) prevailing in urban areas. The top-down urban ‘renewal’ model underlying the present version of JNNURM is largely founded on the planning practices of...
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Cycle rally for Bihar Flood victims, 17th to 24th November, 2009
Bihar Flood Disaster Management Committee and Delhi Young Artistes Forum are organizing a Cycle Rally from Bhagat Singh Park to Parliament of India between 17th and 24th November, 2009. The cycle rally under this event is expected to cover the entire city. The objective behind this event is to raise awareness about the huge loss to life and property caused by Kosi river Flooding and other such natural calamities in...
More »Expand and re-orient NREGA by PS Appu
The recession is a promising moment to expand NREGA with greater emphasis on building social capital in a big way. Soon after assuming office, the first UPA government took an impressive step for the alleviation of rural poverty by launching the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. It was, indeed, a wise move to insulate the programme from the vicissitudes of electoral politics by enacting the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act...
More »Man-made Floods
Unlike earthquakes, which can neither be predicted nor prevented, Floods are both predictable and, to a large extent, preventable. The country has an elaborate, country-wide Flood warning system in place, with two well-equipped central agencies — the India Meteorological Department (IMD) and the Central Water Commission — charged with this task. Despite this, the receding monsoon has caused devastating Floods in Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra, killing hundreds of people...
More »Swamped by debt, fishermen flee moneylenders in Sunderbans by Romita Datta
Fishermen have abandoned lakes in the area after seawater raised alkaline levels in the wake of Alia Kultali, West Bengal: For the past 30 years, Atal Naskar has been making enough money from his three-acre fishing lake to feed a family of 10. But three months ago, this 50-year old fisherman fled his home in Kultali in West Bengal’s Sunderbans delta, hounded by moneylenders because he couldn’t repay a loan...
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