27th – 29th November, 2017
The workshop is held in the month of November every year.
27th – 29th November, 2017
The workshop is held in the month of November every year.
Speaker: Dr L D Mishra
Chair: Professor J B Tilak, Distinguished Professor, CSD and Former Vice-Chancellor, NUEPA
Date: November 16, 2017 (Thursday)
Time: 3.00 pm
Venue: Durgabai Deshmukh Memorial Lecture Hall, CSD, Sangha Rachna, 53 Lodi Estate, New Delhi 110003
Abstract of the Presentation
The presentation will cover importance of literacy, challenges of launching a movement for total literacy, positive offshoots of a campaign for total literacy and tasks ahead. The primary mandate of National Literacy Mission was to make 30 million unlettered adults fully functionally literacyby 1990 in a span of five years and an additional 50 million by 1995. This was an extremely challenging assignment in as much as (a) the prevailing environment was one of cynicism and skepticism against literacy (b) functional literacy for adults in comparison with primary and elementary education was a non priority issue. The National Adult Education Programme (NAEP) launched by Morarji Bhai Desai during the Janata Rule on 2.10.1978 had already failed to deliver the results, i.e., making 100 million unlettered adults functionally literate. In this background, it was realized by the NLM that government cannot directly go in for social mobilization through social communication and create a conducive climate for imparting functional literacy. Government can act as a promoter, facilitator, catalytic agent but cannot directly play the role of social mobiliser or communicator. This task should be best left to creative thinkers, writers, artistes, social and educational activists. It is with this end in view that government promoted creation of a government sponsored NGO called Bharat Gyan Vigyan Samiti (BGVS) With effect from September 1989. The BGVS was headed by Dr. Prof Malcom S. Adiseshaiah and had people of originality, imagination, clear perception and innovation like Dr. M. P. Parmeswaran, Vinod Raina, K.K. Krishna Kumar and many others. The BGVS took the initiative of lunching the countrywide jatha or caravan of teachers, students, women and youth known as Bharat Gyan Vigyan Jatha who successfully covered over 100,000 villages spread over 300 districts (out of 460 districts then) and spread the message of literacy among the mute unlettered millions.
A Brief Introduction of the Speaker
Dr L D Mishra is a retired IAS officer. He was Director General; National Literacy Mission for around six years during 1987 to 1993, which according to him was the most productive and exciting phase in his 50 year long civil and public service career (1964-2014). He spearheaded the launch of Total Literacy Campaign (TLC) which started in the district of Ernakulum and later followed in the remaining 13 districts of Kerala, Goa, Puducherry and over 200 districts in various other parts of the country such as Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamilnadu, Bihar,Odisha, Rajasthan, West Bengal and UP.
The Social Development Forum of CSD, New Delhi invites you to a talk on
‘Jagged Edges: Technology, Yields, Cropping Choices and Farmer Adaption to Climate Change in Three Semi-Arid Districts in Peninsular India, Maharashtra, 1966-2011‘ by Dr Deepak Dasgupta at 3 pm on October 30 (Monday), 2017 at Durgabai Deshmukh Hall, CSD, 53, Sangha Rachna, Lodhi Estate, New Delhi-110003.
The event will be chaired by Professor Ashok Pankaj, Director, CSD, New Delhi.
About the Talk: The central thesis of the paper is that patterns and impact of effects of climate change ─ more erratic rainfall and rising temperatures ─ provide a better way of assessing how farmers adapt to climate shocks in reality on the ground rather than the standard method of forecasting the future from climate models and using crop and farm behavior models.
Both technology and climate change effects can be distinguished as farmer adaptation strategies. These adaptation strategies, however, are not necessarily the same everywhere: they differ by institutional, social and historical settings particular to that district and its farmers. Three different typologies: (a) “gamblers” in highly commercial agricultural settings, where risk-reward strategies may actually involve taking even more risk for higher average returns with greater volatility of returns; (b) “risk-averse diversifiers”, in more public research institutional settings, where farmers may diversify to multiple crops and cropping systems to lower their overall risk and perhaps settle for slightly lower average pay-off strategies; and (c) “technology-adopters”, where the driving way that farmers seem to ultimately adapt is to rely even more on new technology and information (new varieties, new cropping systems, water management, etc.) to deal with climate shocks.
Markets, institutions and innovation are shaped by public policy—in sometimes intended or stated, and sometimes unintended or unstated ways, beneficially, and sometimes not. For example, coarse grains lost out to other food crops; commercial crops such as cotton saw much greater support; oilseeds and pulses have been only lately the focus of public attention; public research has everywhere played a crucial role in ushering new varieties and spreading information, and spurring private markets in commercial crops (Bt cotton). The policy challenges for the future rests ─ conjecturally ─ on some areas of focus: more attention to technology in scarce water management (sprinklers and drip-irrigation and not flood irrigation) rather than crop varieties and farm practices alone; weather forecasting reliability at more granular local levels; weather-based crop insurance, especially to guard against catastrophic events; and innovative market stabilization (rather than exhausted public procurement) instruments.
Dr Deepak Dasgupta’s areas of research are Climate change, Agriculture and Macroeconomics. A recipient of Adam Smith Prize and medallion at Cambridge University and the Amex Bank Review Award for essays in International finance, Dr Dasgupta is presently ICSSR Senior Fellow at the CSD. He has earlier worked with the World Bank for over twenty-five years in various capacities. He is a former founding Board Member of the UNFCCC Green Climate Fund (GCF), representing India and Asia Pacific; and former Principal Economic Adviser, Government of India, Ministry of Finance.
Dr Dasgupta has taught and lectured at universities and think-tanks in India as well as in other countries. He is the principal author, co-author or editor of 10 books and 100 articles.
Dates: 11-22 December 2017
Last Date of Application: 30 November 2017
Training
The program train the students/participants how to select and formulate the research problem, write research proposals to different funding opportunities in India and abroad, review the relevant literature, build the conceptual framework, select the research design, formulate the targeted research questions/testable hypothesis, select the sampling methods, prepare the interview schedule/questionnaires and other relevant tools for data collec
ion, choose suitable techniques for data analysis, analyse data through software packages R, interpret the results to complete the scientific report writing, referencing, indexing and other useful techniques required for the publication process. Moreover the training will also cover tools and techniques for policy and impact evaluation studies, and preparing social indices.
Course Design / Methodology
The course is designed to have interactive classroom sessions, lectures and demonstrations by the field experts, and hand-on training in statistical software package R.
Expected Outcome
At the end of the programme the participants are expected to have enhanced capacity to carry out social science research on a scientific basis, to articulate their findings and conclusions in an effective manner to make suggestions and policy recommendation for policy changes in the desired direction.
Course Contribution
The course contribution is Rs 6,000/- (six thousand) per participant which include kit bag, course material, lunch, breakfast, mid-morning and afternoon tea/coffee. The participants will have to make their own arrangement for accommodation.
Last Date for Nomination/application
The last date for receiving nomination/application for this training course is 30th November 2017.
Venue
Durgabai Deshmukh Memorial Lecture Hall, Council for Social Development, 53 Lodi Estate (KK Birla Marg), New Delhi, 110003
Contact Us:
For further information, please contact: Dr.SusmitaMitra, Assistant Professor, Council for Social Development, 53 Lodi Estate (KK Birla Marg), New Delhi, 110003
E-mail: susmita@csdindia.org Telephone: +91-11- 24615383 (ext 220)
Download Registration Form
Date: 05 September 2017
Venue: Conference Room No:II, IIC (Main), New Delhi
CSD MOURNS PASSING OF A GREAT INTELLECTUAL
Pushpa Mitra Bhargava 1928-2017
In the passing away of Professor Pushpa Mitra Bhargava, India has lost an eminent scientist, an influential public intellectual and a unique institution-builder. P M Bhargava breathed his last on 1 August 2017 at Hyderabad at the age of 89.In his death the Council for Social Development lost one of its great mentors. P M Bhargava was a Life Member of CSD , Chairperson of its Research and Publication Committee and Chairperson of the Managing Committee of the Southern Regional Centre, Hyderabad.
Founder of the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad, which he built as a global institute of excellence, P M Bhargava conducted pioneering research in biotechnology on the basis of which he influenced many of India’s policies on genetic engineering. Among his many outstanding researches, the discovery and analytical documentation of some 90,000 species of traditional plants from various parts of India will remain a lasting contribution to the welfare of humankind.
On the burning issues facing the country, he always took steadfast positions in public and presented objective critiques of policy. On the promotion of scientific temper and secular values in society as well as universalising school education he passionately pursued his efforts through his writings and joining various initiatives. His return of the Padma Bhushan award in 2015 was a unique gesture of protest against the increasing climate of intolerance.
As a mentor in CSD PM Bhargava guided research and advocacy programmes of CSD both in Delhi and in Hyderabad with insights and critical advice. In the past two decades he helped CSD to grow into a national centre for research on core issues of social development that concerned the marginalised . Under his leadership CSD undertook several new programmes on themes on the borderline of natural sciences and social sciences. His insistence that good research should not only meet rigorous academic standards but must also be presented to the public for leading to fresh policy initiatives and social action to benefit the common people will always remain the inspiring canon before CSD. Under his leadership the CSD Southern Regional Centre developed into a major centre for innovative research and purposeful public initiatives.
CSD community deeply mourns the passing of Pushpa Mitra Bhargava and sends sincere condolences to his family.
https://thewire.in/164484/csd-hyderabad-pushpa-mittra-bhargava-scientific-temper/
Council for Social Development
is organizing a five day
Training Workshop on
Dalit Rights and Democracy
on
28 August 2017 to 1 September 2017
Open for: Teachers | Social Workers | Researchers |
Civil Servants | Journalists | Students
Sessions Include: Constitutional Framework and Dalit Rights | Protective Laws and their Implementation | Dalits, State and Democracy: Institutions and Processes | Economy and Dalits | Atrocities against Dalits | Dalit Women | Dalits and Education | Reservation and Development Interventions | Dalits and Media | Dalit Movements
Venue: Council for Social Development
Sangha Rachna, 53 Lodi Estate
New Delhi 110003
Phone: 11-24615383
Conveners: Prof. K.B. Saxena, Prof Manoranjan Mohanty, Prof Zoya Hasan,
Prof. N. Sukumar and Dr. Harish Wankhede
Coordinator: Dhruva Narayan (dhruva@csdindia.org)
Contact Person: Komal (k.rajak.du@gmail.com)
(Lectures and discussions will be held in the afternoon from 3 pm to 6.30 pm)
Participants Contribution: ₹1,000 (All payments to be made in the name of Council for Social Development either through Demand Draft or Net Banking (details below:Name of the Bank: Bank of India, 32/33 Raja Gyan Nath Building, Subramanian Bharti Marg, Khan Market, New Delhi-110 003; Full Name of Account: Council for Social Development, Account Number :600720100050048, IFSC Code : BKID0006007, Type of Account : Current Account)
Applicants are requested to mail a brief statement of purpose for attending the workshop along with their CV by 20 August 2017.
Durgabai Deshmukh Memorial Lecture, 2017 by Shri. P.Sainath on 15 July 2017
Title: THE MORAL ECONOMY OF THE ELITE And why they can’t confront the Inequality that is our greatest crisis
Venue: C.D.Deshmukh Auditorium, IIC Main building on 15 July 2017 (at 6.30 pm).
This lecture was organised jointly with IIC.<>
Date: 14-15 July, 2017
Venue: India International Centre Main, New Delhi
Renowned Bangladeshi singer Ms Farida Parveen sings Lalan Geeti in Bangla and Hindi translation of Lalan Shah Fakir’s selected songs by Prof. Muchkund Dubey
Date: June 2, 2017
Time: 3 to 5 pm
Venue: India International Centre