Daily Archives: November 28, 2021

A safe haven: refugee builders are being helped to a job by one of their own – The Guardian

Posted: November 28, 2021 at 10:06 pm

When a group of fellow refugees asked for help navigating the construction industry because they believed they were being exploited, Hedayat Osyun decided to go one step further.

He started his own construction company as a social enterprise, now known as CommUnity Construction, that solely hires and trains recently arrived refugees and asylum seekers. Its the kind of safe haven he would have benefited from as a teenager who escaped the Taliban in 2009 and arrived in Australia.

I decided to provide a safe platform for refugees and migrants so they can flourish, contribute to this country, and where they can work proudly.

I found that hundreds of refugees and asylum seekers were being exploited at their workplace because they didnt speak English, they dont have a strong network, and they dont know how to navigate the system.

Since it was founded in 2017, the company has employed and trained 65 refugees from a variety of backgrounds including Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia. Not only are they paid a living wage, they get support to help settle in Australia.

When they start working with me, I become like a member of their family, Osyun says. When they received documents or letters, they contact me. I help them enrol for courses, I help them sponsor their families, get their licences, everything.

They held informal English lessons on lunch breaks, before forging a partnership with Navitas to provide professional lessons for staff.

All the basic stuff we take for granted is a struggle for them, and I try and help them through the whole settlement process.

CommUnity Construction has worked on a range of projects, from commercial buildings and hospitality fit-outs to home renovations. It recently completed cultural installations at Darling Harbour and Parramatta, and renovated a five-star hotel in Manly.

Nasrat Najafi, 25, worked at CommUnity Construction for three years before recently establishing his own painting business.

I worked with [Osyun] for years, he trained me, taught me waterproofing, tiling and painting. He helped me get my licences and my paperwork in order, and now I have my own business, with four employees, Najafi said.

Before I worked with him, I worked as a mechanic, but I was an apprentice so my pay was very low. I worked like that for one year, before Nick [Osyun] told me to come work for him.

Najafi, who arrived in Australia as a 19-year-old in 2012, said he decided to work with Osyun because he offered to mentor him through the settlement process.

Hes a good man. He helped many refugees like me, just making our lives easier. He taught me the trade and how to run a business, and with all the paperwork.

He was a very good boss and a good teacher.

While his language skills and networks have helped Osyun with the business, being a refugee himself has enabled him to win the trust of his workers.

When the Taliban attacked his village in Afghanistan in 2009, Osyuns mother implored him to leave and find a future elsewhere. On the journey to Australia he thought multiple times that he would die before arriving on Christmas Island, where he was detained for three months. He says he was treated like a criminal and that his detention there affected him physically and emotionally.

It was like being in jail, it was such a traumatic experience. Its become a permanent part of my memory. Now, 11 years later, I still feel the trauma.

Newly arrived migrants and refugees have a higher unemployment rate compared with the rest of the country, although it does vary based on skill level, age, English proficiency and how long they have been in Australia.

Refugee and migrant agency Ames Australia released an analysis of employment data from the National Skills Commission (NSC) in September 2020 and found the pandemic was exacerbating a gap between the migrant unemployment rate and that of the Australian-born population.

There are twice as many migrants and refugees looking for work as Australian-born jobseekers, the analysis says.

Traditionally, newly arrived migrants and refugees have a higher unemployment rate than the general population about 5.9% compared with 4.7% for the Australian-born population, based on 2019 figures.

After he was released from Christmas Island, Osyun worked as a labourer in Sydney a job he describes as akin to modern slavery. He says his experience is not uncommon.

Some of my colleagues from refugee backgrounds told me they worked for a company for three months and were never paid. Some have been asked to do extra hours for free, some are fired without explanation or pay.

And they have no idea what to do about it. Some come from corrupt societies and think its the same here. Others are afraid they may impact their settlement process if they complain.

He says he witnessed recently arrived refugees and migrants grow hopeless and disaffected by their experiences in the industry, compounding the trauma they would have already endured trying to get to Australia.

This exploitation, its a very deep and fundamental problem. Theres no accountability, theyre just using people. I just thought this is not OK, and I can do something about it.

He is determined to grow the social enterprise.

I think it can go national, even international. If you give refugees and asylum seekers a chance, they can show you how hardworking they are. They just need equal opportunities.

The sky is the limit, he says. Im so proud of it and all the work we do, and Im very hopeful for the future.

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A safe haven: refugee builders are being helped to a job by one of their own - The Guardian

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Stephen L. Carter: In time for the season, some answers on the meaning of life – TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

Posted: at 10:06 pm

Its Thanksgiving season, and whatever your manner of celebration, chances are that youve enjoyed some time off from work. If, like most of us, you gathered with family and friends, you might even have paused to consider what exactly gives meaning to your life.

And, just in time, Pew Research Center is out with a survey of 19,000 people in 17 developed countries on exactly that question. Respondents were given 17 possible sources of meaning and asked to rank them. Whats remarkable is how consistent the answers are but also how the U.S. is different.

Family dominated. In 14 of the 17 countries, family ranked first; in another it was tied for first. In the other two, family ranked third. Nearly everywhere, occupation or material well-being occupied the second spot. And although friends made the top five in 13 of the surveyed countries, the U.S. was one of two countries where friends ranked second.

Families and friends: the people who sit around the Thanksgiving table.

The U.S. was also unique in being the only developed economy where religious faith made the top five sources of meaning. Nowhere else did faith make even the top 10. The nations degree of religious belief continues to distinguish us from other developed countries a truth many seem to find disagreeable, but which some of us consider valuable and important.

All of which brings us back to work: the thing Thanksgiving gives most of us time off from.

We dont know how many people like their jobs. In the U.S., job satisfaction is as high as 85% in some surveys, and under 50% in others. A recent survey by Goodhire found Generation Z to be most unhappy with their jobs. (Its not clear how greatly that last result is influenced by pandemic conditions.)

But whether or not were happy with our work, in the Pew survey, occupation ranked as the fourth-most important source of meaning in the U.S., just behind material well-being, for which work is the typical source, unless you inherit wealth (or become well-off through some less savory means).

This being Thanksgiving season, however, perhaps we should all be giving thanks for the existence of work itself.

Seriously.

The historian Jan Lucassen, in his splendid new volume The Story of Work, reminds us that although slavery has been a dominant form of labor throughout history and in every culture, where labor has been freer, workers for millennia have taken pride in a job well done. For many, it seems, work was a source of meaning in life long before we set about the conscious search for meaning in life.

Its common these days for even well-salaried professionals to complain about the drudgery of work, but Lucassen suggests that weve never had it so good. Even as enslavement faded as a source of labor worldwide, wage-work was harsh: Around 1830, earning a living in Britain required, on average, more than 300 11-hour days, or 3,300 hours net per year.

True, the early hunter-gatherers worked less than many of todays professionals do an estimated eight hours a day for men and 10 hours a day for women but they also had a life expectancy of perhaps 30 years, not least because their existence was ravaged by predators and disease.

The 19th-century utopians imagined that by now the human race, buoyed by mechanization, would lead lives of leisure, but that fantasy still lies somewhere in the misty future.

Like other theorists, Lucassen points to the rising standard of living: Some people work hard because they like their work but others work hard to live up to the standard. He quotes an unemployed English miner from the 1960s: Frankly, I hate work. Of course, I could also say with equal truth that I love work.

Is our problem, then, that we like too many nice things?

Turns out, the desire for nice things also isnt new. Lucassen points to evidence, for example, that already in the eighth or ninth centuries B.C., the development of tools was hastened by the desire to cut and polish precious stones.

Yet leisure does matter, and relatively speaking, we enjoy a lot of it. The rise of free labor, alongside improving technology and a burgeoning welfare state, has led to lives where we start our careers later (all that schooling first), work fewer hours (difficult to believe but true), and generally have the option, at some point, of deciding to lay down the burden of work and enjoy our relatively extended life spans.

Thats more time for family and friends the things that give life meaning than at any time in recorded history. And if thats not reason enough to enjoy a happy Thanksgiving, I dont know what is.

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Stephen L. Carter: In time for the season, some answers on the meaning of life - TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

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GI-TOC Uncovers the Scope of Contract Killings Linked to Organized Crime – OCCRP

Posted: at 10:05 pm

At least 2,700 contract killings took place in 2019 and 2020 in more than 80 countries, enabling criminals to silence those who oppose them and dissuade efforts into investigating their activities, according to a Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime (GI-TOC) report.

At least 2,700 contract killings took place in 2019 and 2020 in more than 80 countries, enabling criminals to silence those who oppose them and dissuade efforts into investigating their activities. (Photo: Tumisu, Pixabay, License)The negative impacts are severe. Assassinations weaken society and the economy, they undermine democratic processes, and they create great fear in many societies, said GI-TOC Director Mark Shaw.

There are a variety of motives for why one might seek out the services of an assassin, but the four overarching ones are: political, economic, organized crime, and personal.

While contract killings occur across all corners of the globe, GI-TOC has discovered that they cluster around geographic hotspots for organized crime activity.

In the Americas, for instance, which accounted for 37% of recorded contract killings, 74% of all cases therein took place in Colombia and Mexico, where the transnational drug trade has historically run strong.

As for the victims, GI-TOCs report highlights how the local community is far more prone to being targeted than other demographics such as the private sector.

Global activists and community leaders make up the bulk of victims because, in most cases, the point of a contract killing is to send the people a message that no one is safe if they interfere in criminal activities.

When these threats are made to a community member, they are clearly intended to intimidate and impose a culture of widespread fear within that community, said Senior GI-TOC Analyst Nina Kaysser.

For example, in the Americas, land and natural resources are of great value to drug trafficking organizations, who also engage in illegal logging, land theft, and deforestation.

Therefore, any efforts against illegal logging, or in support of protected areas, are met with deadly consequences to local community members and indigenous peoples.

Some organized crime groups show extreme and public displays of violence such as beheadings and the dismembering of bodies. Messages left on bodies, including the claiming of responsibility, along with evidence of extreme violence, carry a high degree of symbolism, according to Kaysser.

Enough fear generated by assassinations can even undermine a societys democracy; voters will begin to vote corrupt officials who will not oppose organized crime groups, or simply not vote at all, thereby perpetuating the cycle of violence and impunity.

Those who seek to expose criminal activity naturally find themselves in the crosshairs of contract killings as well. Journalists, for instance, accounted for just under 10% of all victims in 2019 and 2020, according to GI-TOC.

Andrew Caruana Galizia is a Co-Founder of the Daphne Caruana Galizia Foundation, an organization whose mission is to ensure that journalists can carry out their investigations into assassinations and support them from any external forces seeking to derail their efforts.

His mother, Daphne Caruana Galizia, was investigating how organized crime was turning Malta into a Mafia-state and was assassinated for it in 2017. The foundation is named in her honor.

Andrew attributes his mothers assassination to the Mafias rising influence in Maltese affairs, arguing that journalists only become targets when state agencies have already failed.

The foundation also highlights how important it is for a democracy that journalists be able to investigate organized crime and corruption unhindered.

When a prominent journalist is assassinated, it destroys the pipeline of future leaders in journalism, in politics, and that leaves society or a democracy permanently handicapped, Andrew said.

Another notable contract killing victim was Derk Wiersum, a well known Dutch criminal lawyer, who in 2019 represented a state witness against a group accused of several murders.

Two of the accused, Ridouan Taghi and Said Razzouki, are believed to be part of a drug trafficking organization responsible for one-third of Europes cocaine trade and were amongst Europols most wanted fugitives until their arrest in 2019.

One early September morning, Wiersum was gunned down by an unknown assailant; his assassination was widely interpreted as a message to any who might work to oppose the transnational organized drug trade.

Contract killings are closely linked to the prevalence of organized crime and the strength of criminal groups, Kaysser says. They show ways in which organized crime is embedded in political and economic institutions.

The Daphne Caruana Galizia and Derk Wiersums cases show how contract killings occur everywhere, even in places considered safe, where democracies are consolidated and stable, and the rule of law is really strong, according to GI-TOC Analyst Ana Paula Oliveira.

In response to such cases, Andrew Caruana Galizia suggests that police investigate the root cause behind the assassination, not just the killing itself, especially in instances where a journalist was murdered for investigating criminal activity.

He further argues that investigating the corruption that might have motivated the murder can do more to reduce levels of violence than simply arresting the perpetrator.

Increased police attention to perceived victimless crimes such as corruption and money laundering, which are vital to transnational organized crime, can have a significant impact on their businesses and help reduce violent crime levels, he notes.

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Joe Rogan’s Insta Post on "The Age of Conflict" Garners Over 600K Likes – We Got This Covered

Posted: at 10:05 pm

An Instagram post by popular podcaster Joe Rogan, host of The Joe Rogan Experience, that referred to authoritarian and libertarian political theory, has received over 600,000 likes since it was posted to the site. In it, Rogan refers to the Hindu fourth world age, aka the Kali Yuma, and urges his followers and others to elevate themselves from the madness that is in the air.

Rogan is often at the center of controversy due to his often esoteric political philosophy, his many clashes over free speech issues, as well as his personal stance in regards to the COVID-19 virus. His iconoclasm has earned him over 13 million followers on Instagram but has also led to clashes with people across the political spectrum.

Kali Yuga is a reference to the Hindu concept of the four great Yugas, or ages, of the world. The Kali Yuga is the fourth and last of these and is associated with great strife, deprivation, and contention. The Kali Yuga derives its name from the demon (not the goddess) Kali, and Kali Yuga can be roughly translated as Age of Darkness, Age of Vice and Misery, and Age of Quarrel and Hypocrisy.

It is not known where Rogan sourced the graphic from, but he seems to be implying that, as times grow harder, those on the left of the political spectrum tend to drift towards more authoritarian ideals while those on the right tend towards the center or right forms of libertarianism. Although the Hindu idea of the Kali Yuga does purport it to be a time of spiritual and moral degeneration it does not mention specific political ideologies.

According to the Puranic sources, the Kali Yuga began on February 18th, 3102 BCE with the departure of the Avatar, Krishna from the world. The sources also suggest it will be a long wait for the Kali Yuga to come to an end. It is not scheduled to do so until the year 428,899 CE.

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Dear panicking civil libertarians isn’t a pandemic the reason you have urgency? – thedailyblog.co.nz

Posted: at 10:05 pm

A lot of angry and frightened civil libertarians (many of whom I admire ) were rattled last week by the use of urgency to pass the traffic light vaccination passport scheme.

On any other day of the week, I would be alongside them demanding to know what the bloody hell was going on too, but this aint one of them.

Firstly the entire breathless denunciation of what Labour did had a whiff of the hysterical about it from people who were making arguments of due process which seemed to miss the urgency of the reality.

There is a pandemic going on! Urgency to ram through urgent law in a truncated democratic process is what is required!

We have urgency powers for issues of immense urgency! We are looking at limiting peoples liberty and that demands oversight and obligations WHICH HAVE BEEN BUILT INTO THE LEGISLATION!

This is not the same as when Key misused urgency to ram through the mass surveillance powers! This legislation must be voted back in using the basic majority of Parliament every few months while there is a sunset clause built into the law that removes all these powers altogether once the pandemic is over!

This is hardly the civil liberties crushing Nazi Germany framework its being sold as.

Of course Government should be challenged every day over its use of power over us but this traffic light system is a hurried response to an ongoing public health emergency of course there will be stupid anomalies and counter productive outcomes because of the haste and those will be cleaned up in whatever omnibus package is passed to do that, but all in all this is a Government moving as fast as it can to treat a novel virus in the middle of a pandemic.

There are legitimate reasons to use urgency a fucking plague is one of them!

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Justice system reform is a wedge partisan issue. It doesn’t have to be. – Savannah Morning News

Posted: at 10:05 pm

Charlie Harper| Savannah Morning News

Stores ransacked in NYC shopping district

Early Monday morning in Manhattan's Soho neighborhood, mobs of people rampaged down the sidewalks, smashing into numerous luxury shops to steal merchandise. (June 1)

AP

This is a column by Charlie Harper,an Atlanta-based public policy expert and a longtime contributor.

Five or so years ago I attended a one-day session in Washington DC hosted by FreedomWorks. The libertarian leaning conservative advocacy group brought together a couple dozen writers and grassroots leaders to discuss the topic of criminal justice reform.

What still strikes me most about the day was the uniqueness of the afternoon session. We left the FreedomWorks conference room and went down the street to the offices of the Center for American Progress. CAP can be considered about as far left down the spectrum as FreedomWorks is on the right.

It wasnt that long ago that working across the ideological divide on issues was considered common. It actually still happens regularly, in Washington, Atlanta, and in local counties and cities. Its how routine issues and even occasionally some much bigger problems get solved.

More from Charlie Harper: Economic literacy is at a low in America. Political leaders will exploit that ignorance.

Where it doesnt happen is on cable news and in other forms of entertainment that mask as parts of the political process. Too many have learned that enraging the base makes for a good business model.

The common ground the members of the left and right found that day on criminal justice reform was that we had to understand that violent criminals needed to be punished, but those committing singular minor offenses needed a full pathway back into American citizenship and worker productivity.

It just so happened at that time that Georgia had been a leader in this issue for several years, allowing me to engage in translating talking points between the left and the right. It continues to surprise many that a bright red state had taken the lead when tough on crime slogans are a better sell to the GOP base.

Unfortunately, too many running with the banner of criminal justice reform have continued to expand their efforts without remembering the basic compact that violent criminals must be held accountable and society must be protected from them. Municipalities have begun eliminating bail bonds and have created revolving doors at our police stations and our courts.

More from Charlie Harper: Cargo ships stuck at Port of Savannah a symptom of more complex problems in supply chain

Last week an organized ring of approximately 80 people descended on a Nordstrom store in Walnut Creek California, an upscale suburb of San Francisco. Two store employees were maced while a flash mob looting occurred.

I thought this was a one-off California kind of thing until I watched the CEO of Best Buy detail her quarterly earnings report on CNBC a few days later. Despite beating estimates for both revenue and profit, the stock got hammered after releasing earnings because margins were squeezed. The reason for the increasing cost of doing business that stood out was shrink, or loss of inventory. The CEO sounded the alarm that across retail, organized mobs that steal inventory are a problem both for store owners as well as increasing anxiety among store employees.

Its easy to see that justice delayed, as it was by the original D.A. in the Ahmaud Arbery case, causes a loss in faith in the judicial system. It should be just as plain to see that those who are supposed to be enforcing laws on theft but ignore them, and judges that routinely establish bail policies equivalent to a revolving door at the courthouse are doing the same.

Last week Darrel Brooks fled a domestic dispute and killed at least six people during a Christmas parade in Waukesha Wisconsin. He had been set free on bail just days earlier facing five counts including battery and domestic abuse. The D.A. in his case called the bail recommendation inappropriately low.

There are still many of us considered on the conservative side of the political spectrum willing to fight for criminal justice reform. For that discussion to have any hope of continuing, were going to need to hear more voices demanding that laws on the books actually be enforced, and the concept of justice include holding those who commit violent crimes be held accountable.

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Justice system reform is a wedge partisan issue. It doesn't have to be. - Savannah Morning News

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Poll: Dunleavy ranks high in popularity, compared to all other governors – Must Read Alaska

Posted: at 10:05 pm

Maybe the Recall Dunleavy people saw the writing on the wall when they laid down their cannons this past summer and quit: Gov. Mike Dunleavy is, in fact, popular.

Dunleavy is the 16th most popular governor among the 50 states, according to Morning Consult, a survey firm that seasonally ranks the popularity of elected officials.

Dunleavy ranked higher than Gov. Gavin Newsom of California, a Democrat who recently beat a recall attempt at the ballot box. Dunleavy also ranked higher than Gov. Brad Little, of Idaho, a Republican who is being challenged for governor by his own Republican Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin in the May, 2022 primary.

At 57% approval rating, Dunleavy is just one point below South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem in the survey.

The most popular governor in the survey was Gov. Phil Scott, a Republican serving in Vermont, who has a 79% approval.

Of the top 20 governors in the approval rankings, 15 are Republicans, while five are Democrats.

Dunleavy, who faced a recall campaign that started only three months after he took office, has seen his approval rating go up and down and up again. In the fourth quarter of 2019, Morning Consult had him at a dead even, with 42% approving, and 42% disapproving of him, and he was ranked 9 among all 50 governors for popularity. At that same time, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis had a 58% approval rating.

Morning Consult successfully predicted the free-fall of former Gov. Bill Walker in 2018. The polling firm named him the least popular governor running for re-election in 2018, with net approval of -26%. He ended up with just 2 percent of the vote 5,757 Alaskan voters to Dunleavys 51.4% or 145,631 votes.

Walker posted the largest net slide in approval of any governor in the fourth quarter, falling 19 points compared to the previous quarter, the survey firm reported.

In this final quarter of 2021, a reputable Alaska survey firm showed the same results as Morning Consult did for Dunleavy, who will face off against non-party candidate Walker, Democrat Les Gara, and Libertarian Joe Miller, who is set to announce his candidacy on Monday morning.

Republican DeSantis, although much lauded by conservatives around the country this year for his battle with President Joe Biden, has a 52% approval in his state, and Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott is at 50%.

The least popular governor in the country is Oregon Democrat Kate Brown, who has a 43% approval rating. That is up slightly from the fourth quarter of 2019, when 37% of Oregonians approved of her.

Read the analysis at this link.

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How Modis lack of federalism led to failure of farm laws and three other weekend reads – Scroll.in

Posted: at 10:05 pm

Farmers for federalism

In Bloomberg Quint, Yamini Aiyer argues that Modis failure to pass agricultural reforms makes the case for greater consensus building with states on broad national policy.

More needs to be done to invest in institutions that enable better centre-state coordination. Our frameworks for economic policymaking have to recognise that sustainable long-term reform cannot be achieved by undermining federalism. Rather it requires strengthening federal institutions.

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Is the constitution of India a promissory note? Or was it, to reprise a famous comment of the Mahatmas on another British effort at constitutional founding in India, a post-dated cheque drawn on a crashing bank?

In the Global Intellectual History journal, historian Faisal Devji argued that Indias Constituent Assembly actually ended up entrenching the dominance of caste and community in newly independent India. The Congress single-party status in the aftermath of Partition meant the party was able to deploy a confessional and upper caste majority in the Constituent Assembly to dismantle the long-standing constitutional privileges, however undesirable, of a religious minority in the grip of severe discrimination.

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In the United States, the transportation debate as it usually plays out today amounts to a fight between cars and transit writ large. Like so much else in American life, argues Addison Del Mastro in The New Atlantis, that fight often seems to be just another front in the culture war.

On one side are those who hold to the dream of the Eisenhower era, of being able to make a single, convenient trip from any one point to another meaning ever more roads and bigger highways must be built. On the other side are lovers of the rail, spoke, and shoe, who bemoan how cars emit carbon, highways and parking lots disrupt walkable urban centers, and the high costs of car ownership create yet another barrier for low-income people to live a normal life

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Today, glass is ordinary, on-the-kitchen-shelf stuff. But, explains Carolyn Wilke in The Smithsonian, early in its history, glass was a thing meant for kings.

In a world filled with the buff, brown and sand hues of more utilitarian Late Bronze Age materials, glass saturated with blue, purple, turquoise, yellow, red and white would have afforded the most striking colors other than gemstones. In a hierarchy of materials, glass would have sat slightly beneath silver and gold and would have been valued as much as precious stones were.

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Shoaib Daniyal writes on politics for Scroll.in.

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Success of NEP 2020 Hinges on Cooperative Federalism, States Taking Ownership of Reforms – News18

Posted: at 10:05 pm

In July last year, India unveiled its first and most comprehensive education policy of the 21st century. As the first omnibus policy since 1986, the New Education Policy (NEP) 2020 has the onerous task of addressing multiple crises facing Indias education system. Addressing the completion of one year of the NEP, Prime Minister Narendra Modi remarked, We are entering the 75th year of Independence. In a way, implementation of NEP has become a vital part of this occasion. This will play a key role in creating a new India and future-ready youth. The Education Minister, Dharmendra Pradhan, called NEP 2020 a visionary education policy for the 21st century through which India is harnessing the capabilities of each student, universalising education, building capacities, and transforming the learning landscape in the country. He stressed that the NEP would make education holistic, affordable, accessible, and equitable. What has been the progress so far? Is the NEP roll-out on track? What are the major challenges facing this mega education policy in the coming decades?

Major Milestones

In the last 16 months since its eventful launch, the NEP has moved some ground in terms of meeting key milestones, notwithstanding the challenges from the global health pandemic. To begin with, the government has done well in terms of building awareness and interests amongst diverse stakeholders on the mission and vision of the NEP. This was marked in a 10-day long Shikshak Parv that saw a series of national-level events featuring the Prime Minister and other key officials. Further, to make the intent more pronounced, the government has renamed the Ministry of Human Resources Development (MHRD) to the Ministry of Education. Significantly, this key ministry has been infused with doses of energy and dynamisms by bringing in Dharmendra Pradhan, the man who brought major transformations in the critical energy ministry. Mr Pradhans proven implementation ability and his diplomatic negotiating skills will come in handy in pushing the mega initiatives that would likely face opposition in Opposition-ruled states.

In terms of roll-out of key NEP activities, the school curriculum has been changed to include artificial intelligence (AI) and financial literary. Given that the mother tongue or regional language received primacy in the NEP, the same has been introduced in several states, albeit on a pilot basis. Further, the ministry has launched the much-talked-about Academic Bank of Credita programme that will provide multiple entry and exit options for students in higher education. These apart, a number of key initiatives, such as NIPUN Bharat Missionimproving childrens learning competencies in reading, writing, and numeracy by the end of Grade III; Vidya Pravesha three-month school preparation module for Grade I children; DIKSHAa teaching-learning repository of e-content; and NISHTHAteachers training programme for the secondary-level teachers. As far as roll-out amongst the states are concerned, only a handful of states, mainly under the ruling party have launched the programme. Karnataka became the first state to implement NEP on August 24.

Recently, Madhya Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh launched a series of NEP initiatives giving a much needed push to this mega policy. On the whole, NEP has started gathering pace.

Five Major Challenges

While the NEP has begun gathering a fair degree of momentum, the road to its realisation is filled with endless potholes. First, the sheer size and diversity of Indias education sector makes implementation an uphill task. For example, sample the size of the school education system alone. With more than 15 lakh schools, 25 crore students, and 89 lakh teachers, India remains the second largest education system in the world. The size of the higher education system is massive too. As per the AISHE 2019 report, Indias higher education sector consists of 3.74 crore students in nearly 1,000 universities, 39,931 colleges, and 10,725 stand-alone institutions. Thus, a countrywide implementation of this mega education policy is going to be a mammoth exercise involving multiple stakeholders at the state, district, sub-district, and block levels. Creating a shared responsibility and ownership amongst key stakeholders, including the private sector, at the state and district levels that have extraordinary diversity is going to be a major challenge for the education leadership.

Second, the NEPs eventual realisation is critically linked to state capacity. As rightly pointed out by the NEP Drafting Committee led by K. Kasturirangan, Indias education system is underfunded, heavily bureaucratised, and lacks capacity for innovation and scale up. The internal capacities within the education ministries (centre and states) and other regulatory bodies are grossly inadequate to steer the magnitude of transformations envisaged in the NEP. For instance, moving away from a rigid content-driven rote learning system to experiential learning and critical thinking would require nothing short of a revolutionary change in the attitudes of the people running the education system, let alone the attitudinal changes amongst the teachers, students, and parents.

This means that thousands of schools and colleges would need capacity building and reorientation with regards to the operational aspects of implementing a mega programme with many experiential goals. In short, the existing organisational structure of the ministry and its ecosystems will have to undergo a massive overhaul. While it is heartening is that the NEP document has laid out a comprehensive roadmap for overhauling the existing regulatory system, and the education ministry is in the process of bringing out a legislation that would facilitate the setting up of a Higher Education Commission of India (in the place of existing regulatory bodies, mainly the UGC, AICTE, and National Council for Teachers Education), one has to wait for the new institutional architecture emerging out of legislative initiatives.

Third, the NEP would largely hinge on the extent of cooperation between the Centre and states. While the NEP has been drafted by the Union government (with inputs from multiple stakeholders including the state governments), its implementation largely depends on the active cooperation of the states. This is because most services-related education are performed by the state governments. In short, the Centre has to skillfully navigate the principles of cooperative federalism and decentralisation while rolling out key initiatives. And this is not an easy act to perform given the sharpening of political polarisation in the recent years and visible breakdown of trust between the Centre and states. A number of Opposition-ruled states have been raising strong objections to several key provisions of the NEP and the manner in which they are being rolled out. The more worrying development is that the Tamil Nadu governments recent decision to not implement the NEP can encourage other Opposition-ruled states to follow a similar path. Thus, managing federal math is critical to the realisation of the NEP.

Fourth, the role of the private sector, particularly in dealing with the higher education system, is extremely critical for translating the inclusionary vision of the NEP. It may be noted that as much as 70% of higher education institutions (colleges and universities) are run by the private sector. Significantly, roughly 65-70% students are currently enrolled in private higher education institutions. This apart, the private sector brings much needed financial resources and innovation. Therefore, it is imperative for the government and regulatory bodies to create workable institutional mechanisms that would harness the contribution of the private sector and recognise them as equal partner in the NEP process.

Finally, the successful execution of key initiatives requires availability of adequate financial resources for decades. In this regard, the NEP has stated that to realise the goals of the new policy, the country has to raise public spending on education to 6% of GDP. This is a daunting task if one considers the past promises and their actual realisation. For instance, the 1968 National Education policy had recommended 6% of GDP be allocated towards education. However, in all these decades, the public spending on education has not gone beyond 3%. Ironically, the union budget allocation for education in the NEP launching year has taken a dip. The education budget was reduced by 6% from INR 99,311 crore in 2020-21 to INR 93,224 crore in 2021-22. While this is understandable given the governments priorities are divided in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic and economic distress that large sections of populations are facing, there is no clear roadmap yet how such enormous sums of financial resources can be augmented.

To sum up, the NEP 2020 is truly a path-breaking document in every sense. The policy, amongst others, aims to address pedagogical issues, structural inequities, broadening of access apart from making the learners future ready while meeting the demands of a 21st century India. Simultaneously, the NEP has the most challenging task of addressing multiple crises in the education system. Its effective implementation is critical if India wants to reap the demographic dividends and capitalise the opportunities from a rapidly growing knowledge economy. Given its transformative potentials, the Centre has shown urgency and a sense of purpose by launching a series of initiatives in the recent months notwithstanding the challenges of the pandemic. A number of states have officially launched the policy and many others are in the process to do the same. Yet, there is a long road ahead of the NEP. Given its scale and the kind of complexity involved in its execution, particularly securing coordination and cooperation amongst diverse stakeholders at state, district, private sector amongst others, makes it a daunting exercise.

Apart from this, one has to deal with weak state capacity, availability of financial resources and, most importantly, the education ecosystem that acts as a drag on new ideas and innovation. Yet, the most critical challenge before NEP is building consensus and getting states to own the first omnibus programme after 1986. In short, the success of the NEP largely hinges on cooperative federalism and states taking ownership of the reforms.

The article was first published in ORF

Niranjan Sahoo, PhD, is a Senior Fellow with ORFs Governance and Politics Initiative. The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent the stand of this publication.

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What the COVID-19 Omicron variant potentially means for Las Vegas – KTNV Las Vegas

Posted: at 10:04 pm

LAS VEGAS (KTNV) The United States and a number of other countries are again imposing some travel restrictions with the news of another COVID-19 variant.

Im not surprised, said Dr. Jeffrey Ng, a physician at Ng Family Health Care. This is a virus and viruses mutate. And so, this is kind of the natural process.

The pandemic is nearly two years old and the most recent COVID-19 variant is called Omicron.

The most susceptible are still the younger population who are not vaccinated, said Ng. And thats how they detected this new variant.

RELATED: Omicron variant: WHO says new strain of COVID-19 is a 'variant of concern'

The World Health Organization says it is still being studied and has been found in travelers to Belgium, China, Israel, and several countries in southern Africa. The CDC says no cases have been reported in the US as of now.

"CDC is continuously monitoring variants and the U.S. variant surveillance system has reliably detected new variants in this country," a statement says. "We expect Omicron to be identified quickly if it emerges in the U.S."

Im concerned about it, said Ng. I will keep an eye on it. But Im not going to let it interfere with my daily routine.

Stocks also took a hit, with the S&P 500 recording its worst day since February over a fear of the unknown.

Investors like certainty, said Jason Baucom, a financial advisor with Budin Group. And this presents an opportunity for there not to be certainty immediately. So, the reactive approach is to take your money off the table and put it back when youre comfortable.

Local gaming also reporting losses -- Boyd, MGM, Caesars, Las Vegas, Wynn and Red Rock Resorts all were down between $1-$5.

Economically, Baucom says it could amount to a blip on the radar. But it is better to be safe than sorry.

Were better prepared for it going forward, but still, any minor setback could turn into a major one, he said.

To date, Johns Hopkins data says there have been 776,321 COVID-19 deaths in the US.

There are places in the world this is going to happen, said Ng. The only thing we can do as doctors is hope that patients get vaccinated as soon as possible.

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