Workshop on ‘Forest-based Communities and Climate Change Adaptation’
Date: 29-30 September 2010
Venue: Fireflies Intercultural Centre, Bangalore
Forests have a great impact on climate change. Land use changes affect the carbon cycle and this in turn causes climate change. Climate change impacts the growth and productivity of forests and affects the ecological services forests provide.
The current preoccupation in international policy discourses is on mitigation. Policy discourse often forgets that communities inhabit these eco-systems. This adds to the already existing pressures of displacement, land alienation, migration, and increasingly reduced community rights to land, water, and forest produce.
There is very little official discourse on how these communities need to adapt to the changing climate. Often treated as part of the problem, these communities are, in fact, part of the solution. But not enough attention is given to this dimension. Our understanding of the regional and micro impacts is inadequate. Whatever information is available on this is not accessible to the affected communities, not even to the civil society organisations involved with them.
It is in this context that we organise this workshop with the following objectives.
- Understand the impact of climate change on the livelihood, culture and identity of forest-based communities.
- Assess risks and indications of vulnerabilities
- Understand the capabilities of these communities to deal with the changing weather patterns and consequent effects on the local flora and fauna.
- Strategize methods to make accessible regional and micro climate change impacts data and information on the traditional and scientific adaptation practices to the affected communities and civil society organisations.
- Develop strategies to initiate policy level debates and negotiations on climate change adaptation at the local level.
The workshop is organised by Pipal Tree, Bangalore. The participants of this workshop will be from the affected communities, civil society organisations and the media.
The workshop will begin on 29th September at 9:00 am and will end on 30th September at 4:30 pm.
For more information, contact:
Pipal Tree
Fireflies Intercultural Centre
Dinnepalya, Kaggalipura P.O.
Bangalore – 82 India
Email: pipaltree.prog@gmail.com
Commissioning articles on NREGS
Dear Friends,
Pipal Tree through its print-media programme, The Transforming Word, is inviting Kannada journalists (working or freelancers) to write on the following aspects of National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS):
1. Food security and Nregs:
The focus on regenerating the water bodies, improving the lakes and ponds, creation of check dams and repair of canals will directly help the farmers in improving their agricultural production. The development of the small holdings of dalits, tribals and other marginal farmers will add to increased food production among the poorest sections of the rural population.
2. Impact on livelihood:
By providing employment opportunities during the lean summer season the Nregs has offered a lifeline to the rural poor. The provision for developing the agricultural lands of dalit, tribal and other marginal farmers has provided a tool to these poor sections to improve their livelihood status. On the one hand, they can improve productivity in their own small holdings, on the other, they can earn extra income in their own locality, thereby minimising the need to migrate. Since women get equal wages there is more income in the household.
Moreover, the emphasis on improving the water bodies in the villages increases water security, without which life in many rural areas becomes insufferable.
3. Climate change and Nregs
Nregs aims at regenerating the environment through creation of productive assets such as water tanks, ponds, bunds, check dams and through aforestation programmes.
So far the relationship of Nregs to climate change has not been sufficiently underscored, but it is clear that the aforestation (which also serves as a carbon sink) and water conservation efforts of Nregs will have a significant effect on food, water and livelihood security.
The media can highlight the contribution of Nregs to the development of mitigation and adaptation strategies in the context of climate change. This is an important aspect that has been left out of government policy.
4. Stumbling blocks
The disconnect between the locally elected PRIs and the fractured bureaucracies (forest department, agriculture and irrigation departments.etc) has excluded the possibility of holistic planning at the village level, resulting in most schemes failing. Government bodies also see Nregs as a mere wage-employment programme, ignoring the participatory planning processes.
Local government is apathetic towards the scheme and often takes advantage of the ignorance of people to ignore implementation. In addition, corrupt local officials siphon off a part of the wages meant for the poor beneficiaries and even falsify muster roles with illegitimate or fictitious names.
Only the effective involvement of people’s organizations can overcome some of these shortcomings.
5. Success stories of Nregs
Success stories warm the heart and fill the mind with hope in a context where government initiated poverty alleviation programmes are viewed with cynicism.
The success stories being reported can include the participation of women, dalits and tribals in the planning and implementation of the scheme. In addition, it can also show how the effective implementation of the scheme has led to the socio-economic and political empowerment of the villagers.
Application Procedure:
If you are interested in writing on any of the above topics please send your bio-data and an article written by you in Kannada on any social or environmental issues to pipaltree.prog@gmail.com by 15 September 2010. The selected people will be notified by the end of September, and they will be requested to write an article on the proposed theme (3000 words) and to publish a shorter version of the article in any newspaper or magazine by the end of November. Pipal Tree will commission these articles.
The Media: Crisis and Candyfloss
SIDDHARTHA
For some the millennium is the year 2000, for others 2001. The 2000 celebrations were extravagant. Millions of champagne bottles popped in celebration, while billions of others woke up to their usual worries about food, health, education and shelter. Worries that the poor are fairly accustomed to, as Auden would have said. Yet we are witnessing a world of extraordinary advances in communication technology and unparalleled wealth for a few. Somebody recently stated that Bill Gates is rich enough to buy up 40 of the poorest countries in the world. Ward Morehouse, the president of the Council for International Relations in New York, says that a single corporation like Mitsubishi has an annual turnover equivalent to the GNP of India, a country with almost a million people.
In response to the precarious nature of globalisation a Latin American friend offered his paradox. Half the people of his country, he said, could not sleep because they were hungry and the other half did not sleep because they were afraid. The rich are now barricading themselves against the ‘criminal’ activities of the poor. The expression gated cities has gained currency to denote the security systems in place to ward off potential invasions by the disinherited.
On the ecological front things have reached their limits. A United Nations report says that the per capita availability of water has gone down by 50 per cent in the last 20 years and will go down a further 50 per cent in the next 20. From all accounts we are already on the brink or hurtling towards it.
It is always difficult to know what words, what feelings and what interventions are relevant in a world where most of us feel increasingly powerless, where liberal democratic institutions are used to hasten the concentration of power and wealth in fewer and fewer hands. If old-style social analysis is not fashionable anymore, what tools do we use to analyse the present situation? At least things seemed clear earlier on, where we knew that the ruling elites needed to manufacture ideological consent to keep the system going. Where we knew that the coercive mechanisms of the state, like the military, the police and the legal system, were to be used in case the ideological apparatus floundered and was unable to contain the tensions. But today there is a massive effort worldwide to justify market-driven democracy with little space provided for critical rethinking. The big peddlers of globe-baloney like Rupert Murdoch, Ted Turner and their smaller counterparts in South Asia see the media as another economic enterprise with rich pickings, provided the content and the packaging are seductively displayed. To grow and prosper further they cannot afford to side-step the predicament on the grounds that we are not sure if there is anything to be done. Sadanand Menon has referred to this phenomenon as candyfloss journalism and Sasi Kumar, in one of his papers, cites Jon Tusa, the former head of BBC, to show the narrowing down of freedoms. Tusa points out that today’s journalism has “more choice, but less diversity; more information but less knowledge; more action but less news; more gratification but less satisfaction; more viewers but fewer audiences; more entertainment but less engagement; more immediacy but less depth,” and so on.
Objective, responsible and compassionate journalism is now rare, and journalists with integrity are sidelined or forced to quit. Yet there are valiant exceptions. The Hindu newspaper is a case in point. The presence of Nirmala Lakshman, joint editor of The Hindu, at the workshop underscores the paper’s commitment to responsible journalism. Whether it be issues related to women or dalits or communalism The Hindu has shown that it is possible to comment on the facts as they are and still matter on the circulation graphs. Rajib Sarkar of the Indian Express group has turned glossy like Gentleman into a socially sensitive one, without giving up the niche of a men’s magazine. An alternative magazine like Humanscape is remarkable for both its seriousness and professionalism. It offers us the best and the brightest of alternative comment.
To return to the manufactured consent that we find ourselves in, what tools do we have to demystify this reality? Is it enough to state that we have no alternatives to globalisation and therefore the best we can do is to make the process more humane through struggles to defend human rights? Or do we insist that we are witnessing behavioural and attitudinal mutations that make the human being less compassionate and more lonely, manipulated by the information and consumer society? Not everybody is equally enmeshed in this phenomenon, however. Large sections of people are busy keeping their heads above water to meet the basic requirements of food, clothing and shelter to worry too much about the hidden persuaders. But even the poor are fed dreams of becoming rich, and in the absence of meaningful political discourse and social movements, they often resort to bravado acts of violence, that the system is more than happy to classify as ‘criminal’. This is certainly the case in cities like Rio and Sao Paulo in Brazil, and the trend is likely to engulf South Asia as well unless the media and other agents educate people to critically reflect on the real structural causes of their poverty and cultural alienation. In reality the media is doing much less of all this now compared to previous times. Rocking the boat is not what the media wishes if the cost is losing government and corporate revenue. The NGO community, which in earlier times promoted critical awareness and interacted creatively with the media, is now largely immersed in pragmatic approaches like micro-credit and other development activities. Much of NGO work is donor-driven. With the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Eastern bloc, communism has ceased to be a threat and donors do not anymore see the need to shore up alternatives by supporting soft radical approaches like, for example, paulo Freire’s conscientisation.
Is class analysis dead? Is social democracy the way out to bring a measure of justice and decency to public life? Going by the performance of Tony Blair, the current icon of social democracy, there is little cause for hope, for he has made social democracy the motor of neo-liberalism. Civil society is today another buzzword in many quarters. The way ahead, the argument goes, is for citizens to empower themselves through local associations and pressure groups. The more groups and associations there are the more vibrant the democratic process. Upto now too much attention has been placed on political leadership, governments and the private sector for the development and the functioning of our social institutions. It is time that civil society came to the fore, for without that democracy would hardly mean much. Or so the reasoning goes. While there is considerable truth in this line of reasoning, the de-emphasising of the state may unwittingly play into the hands of the transnational corporations who are bent on weakening the state and grabbing unbridled power. In many parts of the world the nation-state exists only in name. The media has already blurred cultural distinctions by creating a homogenised ‘global culture’ that has further served to weaken the nation-state, just what the WTO and transnational corporations need to allow unfetted access to markets. The nation-state must eventually go, but not at the behest of the transnationals. (The 21st century is left with no choice but to cautiously move towards some form of global governance which simultaneously respects diversities.)
In the more prosperous countries ‘ deep ecological’ movements are emerging which insist that the root of all problems lies in giving primacy to the human species. According to them, human beings are only ten seconds old on the geological clock, far far younger than even the despised cockroaches. More to the point they insist that there must be a balance in nature between all species, and that human beings have far exceeded their limit. The radical ecologists insist that vast areas of the earth must be left as wilderness if we are to have a future at all. While there is some truth in this argument, it comes primarily from the richer countries, which in any case have small populations.
The grand old anarchist of this century, Mahatma Gandhi, seems increasingly relevant for 2000 and beyond for his advocacy of simple sustainable lifestyles. But Gandhism succeeds only if inner spiritual spaces are nurtured. These spiritual spaces may serve to powerfully resist the external world of consumer seduction. Sadly, the shrinking of these inner spaces is a disease of late modernity.
Most of us present at the media workshop were, in one way or other, concerned with shaping public opinion on social issues. Despite the odds against a more open media, we still continued with our particular crusades. Speaking for myself, I have often asked why I persist with it. The answer is clear: I am in it not because I do not know what else to do, but because I believe that, with all my contradictions, I am doing things I largely believe in; or, should I say, somewhat believe in. I think this would probably be true of many of us. I am certainly doing things without hugely oppressing myself and without an entirely altruistic purpose in mind. For I also matter and my convictions cannot flourish without my creative well-being. As Chief Seattle said, all things are connected. And the well-being of others must somehow be connected with our own well-being. Words, the use of language and the visual image have the potential to take me to big highs and incredible lows. I am grateful for the highs and lows. When one likes doing what one is doing it is easier to keep going, whether or not one sees light at the end of the tunnel. Nishkama Karma, as Gandhi would put it. Action without attachment to the fruits of one’s action. The workshop partly dwelt on this personal side of resistance, which is both dissenting and celebratory in nature. This was important, for we are all human beings motivated by the convictions and ambiguities we experience around us. It is not only ideology that motivates us, but compassion as well. And life in all its adventure and paradox. Which is why we don’t crumble when our ideologies do.
If we all met in Bangalore through the Transforming Word-Pipal Tree programme it was in the hope that we could modestly, and collectively, help each other out. Perhaps we would hear words and experiences that might resonate within us, both personally and socially. We had hoped to mine a few nuggets that could give us some clarity, at least provisional. Thankfully, we were not disappointed and the modest expectations were reached. Even if we did not go away with certainties we had enriched ourselves with stories of personal struggles and creativity. We were comforted that the struggles that took shape through our writings, films and other efforts at communication were not only social but also personal. For even the least of our efforts, when they carried some conviction, led us from one small hope to another. This was the era of small hopes and little nirvanas where the effort and fulfilment were as important as the intended results. In hindsight the century did not close with a whimper as far as we were concerned. The WTO fiasco in Seattle showed that things were far from being lost. As the French philosopher Edgar Morin put it, the 21st century began with Seattle. Thomas Kocherry of the fishworkers federation was in Seattle during the protests. He said, “if the 20th century will be remembered for de-colonisation then the 21st century bids fair to free us from the shackles of the transnational corporations.” We look ahead with hope. The human spirit cannot be overpowered by the might of the transnationals or by the sophistry of the candyfloss media.
Based on discussions with the participants the workshop considered the following areas:
1. Understanding the present trends of commercialisation in the media.
2. The implications of these trends to the democratic process.
3. The interventions we make in fighting communalism, supporting environmental issues, human rights, etc.
4. What ‘intervention’ means to us in a personal and creative sense.
5. The spaces available in the mainstream media, in alternative possibilities, on the Net, etc.
December 1999.
Pipal Tree through its print-media programme, The Transforming Word, organised a workshop in December 1999 to discuss the effects of a media that obfuscates the real issues and to discuss the role of the alternative media. Many of the essays in this category were presented at, or are the outcome of, that workshop. Siddhartha edited these essays for the April 2000 issue of Humanscape, ‘Fluff: Crisis in the Candyfloss Media’.
Pipal Tree-Alliance workshop for students of Journalism in Bangalore on ‘Media and Environmental Activism’
Saturday 27th January, 2007
Fireflies Inter-cultural Centre, Bangalore
Pipal Tree invited students from the Bangalore School of Journalism in January 2007 for a one-day workshop on “Media and Environmental Activism” as part of the International Alliance of Journalists program. The goals of the workshop were to introduce the students to the Alliance, explore the possibility of building and supporting a community of journalists locally who could increase the space for social reporting in the mainstream media and to show how Pipal Tree has worked in the areas of culture, environment and media over the years.
Siddhartha began the workshop by telling of his experience in journalism and the feelings of isolation, fatigue and low morale that accompany writing on social issues. This spurred the idea for a support group for journalists who did not want to fall into the trap of infotainment writing. With that in mind, these are the Alliance’s objectives:
- To explore the possibility of journalists and social activists forming informal networks that may lobby politicians and bureaucrats to implement social programs.
- To reflect on the role of the media in creating a vibrant civil society where local groups and organizations play a major role in tackling local issues in a participatory and democratic spirit.
- To see the media as a humanizing and culturally energizing force that can generate hope and initiative among a large number of people.
- To monitor the process of globalization in the interests of the poor and the marginalized peoples.
The students also felt that this type of network for journalists could be a great asset to the overall community of writers.
Noted Journalist Arun Subramaniam of Bangalore, was the keynote speaker for this program. He has worked in both print and television in India and Hong Kong, focusing primarily on business. One of his most successful efforts was an investigation into the causes of the 1984 gas leak from a Union Carbide plant in Bhopal in central India, which claimed thousands of lives. His main point to the students was that fair media can help market forces to stay ethical and that media can help in intervene in other areas such as the relatively new bill ‘The Right to Work’ or ‘The Right to Information’ as well as environmental issues.
The second part of the workshop had the students walking through Fireflies Intercultural Center and discovering it as a place with no guru, but one with a deep dedication to the environment and also a place where individuals could come together and discuss the issues that make us who we are. The workshop concluded with talks of creating more communities for journalists who are committed to exploring issues beyond the demands of their politically and entertainment minded newspapers.
State of Journalism in Kerala
Thoppil Shajahan, Journalist, Kerala
Kerala is observing the hundredth anniversary of the extradition of Ramakrishna Pilla by the Travancore government for his fearless journalism. The editor of Swadehabhimani newspaper Ramakrishna Pilla who terrorized the government with the might of his pen and the publisher of that paper Vakkam Khader Maulavi are even today the shining stars in the firmament of Kerala journalism. For them journalism was a fight for right and justice.
But today, for the publisher journalism is a commercial enterprise and for the journalists, a livelihood. Earlier the newspapers were the voice of the oppressed. Today the newspapers wash their hands off these oppressed and marginalised people. Their eyes are on the affluent. They do not consider as a topic the news of adivasis who are usurped off their lands and who are denied jobs. Adivasis do not read newspapers. If you write for them there will not be an increase of even a single newspaper. On the contrary, if anything is written about the oppressors, or exploiters of these people, there will be reduction in the number of copies sold. Kerala journalism has circulation as its aim. Malayala Manorama that stand way ahead in circulation has a circulation of 17 lakh copies; and the second Mathrubhoomi, 13 lakhs. Papers like Madhyamam, Deshabhimani, Kerala Kaumudi, Deepika, Mangalam have circulations of upwards of three lakhs. Newspapers have great influence on the reading public. The newspapers do not take advantage of their influence for social welfare or development.
A newspaper works according to the likes and dislikes of the publisher. The Managing Director of Mathrubhoomi M P Virendrakumar was a former cabinet minister and present state president of Janata Dal. Till the last Lok Sabha election his party was with the CPM led Left Democratic Front (LDF). During that period, Mathrubhoomi backed LDF to the hilt. Later Janata Dal parted company with LDF and joined the congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF). Mathrubhoomi gunned for LDF and went the whole hog in support of UDF.
In Kerala there is a paper for each religion and caste. The Muslim community has five daily newspapers – Madhyamam, Chandrika, Varthamanam, Tejas and Siraj. Christians have Deepika and Izhavars (backward community) have Kerala Kaumudi. Each political party also has a newspaper – CPM has Deshabhimani; Muslim League, Chandrika; CPI, Janayugam; Congress, Veeshanam; BJP, Janma Bhoomi.
There are about 12 TV channels in Kerala. Three channels are there for news alone – India Vision, Asianet, and Manorama News. Channels do not pose any threat to newspapers. With the advent of the channels, the number and sway of the newspapers are on the increase. The newspapers are more trusted than channels. The advertising revenue to the newspapers is also on the ascendant. With technological progress, even small-time papers run up a profit.
The only threat Kerala journalism faces is that of desertion by talented and honest journalists. In a situation where they cannot pursue honest journalism they are forced to seek new pastures. These journalists who are against the commercialization of newspaper and are against kowtowing to political interests go without jobs.
Competition in one-up-man sensationalism is another blow to journalism. Each paper tries to concoct extremely sensational stories to increase the sales of its paper. Dalit violence and Love Jihad are some of these sensationalized stories. Love Jihad is picked up from the RSS website by quite a few newspapers as fact. The Love Jihad news even created animosity between Muslim and Hindu students in the educational campuses. What Muslims consider as a holy word Jihad becomes a heinous term and the Kerala papers acted as a sharp axe of RSS in their vile way.
The other news of the increasing violence of the dalits, the most oppressed of our society, is another cooked up story. The newspapers that should uphold the rights of the mariginalised and oppressed dalits make them, on the contrary, laughing stocks and further victims of oppression.
- Translated by Aravind Menon
South Indian Journalists Conference on NREGS and Media Advocacy
Date: 19-20 December 2009
Venue: Fireflies Inter-cultural Centre, Bangalore
Participating states: Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu
This conference is a progression of the efforts we are making in developing a media platform for journalists in order to provide information and analytical insights on Nregs that may help them in reporting on the various aspects of the scheme (particularly pertaining to women’s empowerment, adivasis, decision making and local governance, creation of productive assets, etc.).
The central objective of this conference is to develop an effective media advocacy for Nregs. We intend to achieve this through a participatory process involving critical appraisals of implementation of Nregs today and presentations by participants of case studies specific to their respective regions. This is intended to establish media as a key element in information sourcing, support and intervention.
Contact:
Pipal Tree
Fireflies Inter-cultural Centre
Dinnepalya, Kaggalipura P.O.
Bangalore – 82 India
Website: www.pipaltree.org.in
Phone: +91-80-28432725
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