GENRE: In Focus

As the NDA government’s flagship program, Smart Cities Mission completes three years, the New Delhi-based policy think tank, Housing and Land Rights Network (HLRN), has released a new report titled India’s Smart Cities Mission: Smart for Whom? Cities for Whom? This report comes as a sequel to HLRN’s earlier report on the Smart Cities Mission released last year, which provided a comprehensive review of the first 60 selected Smart City proposals. This updated report provides major findings of the research team’s analysis of Smart City proposals from 99 cities, highlights important developments, raises human rights concerns related to the Mission…

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This article is supported by SVP Cities of India Fellowship Over the last five years, we have read or seen enough stories of engineering graduates driving Ola cabs or even rickshaws for a living. Unfortunately that fear has not abated. College students all across the country are biting their nails over the uncertainty of employment, post graduation. While some think the situation is terrible, others believe it could be worse. Arjun Sen, currently an undergraduate in Bengaluru claims, “With a sociology degree I thought I had it bad, but I am slowly feeling a lot more comfortable, now that everyone…

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2015 வெள்ளத்திற்கு பிறகு தொடர்ந்து கூவத்தையும், அடையாற்றையும் மீட்டெடுக்கும் பணி குறித்து நாம் தொடர்ந்து எழுதி வருகிறோம். அதில் இருக்கும் சவால்கள், சிக்கல்கள் – குறிப்பாக கூவத்தின் ஓரமும், அடையாற்றின் ஓரமும் வாழ்ந்த மக்கள் மறு குடியமர்த்தப்பட்டதை குறித்தான கட்டுரைகளை நம் தளத்தில் எழுதியுள்ளோம். (இணைப்புகள் கட்டுரையின் முடிவில்) நீர்நிலைகள் மீட்கப்பட வேண்டும் என்பதில் எந்த மாற்றுக்கருத்துமில்லை. ஆனால் அதே சமயம் இங்கு வாழ்ந்த மக்கள் மறுகுடியமர்வு செய்யப்பட்ட அவர்கள் வாழ்விடத்தில் இருந்து தொலைதூரத்தில் உள்ள பெரும்பாக்கம், படப்பை நாவலூர், கூடப்பாக்கம் ஆகிய பகுதிகளில் எப்படி வாழ்கிறார்கள் என்பது மிக முக்கியமான ஒன்று. அடிப்படை தேவையான கல்வி, சுகாதாரம், வேலைவாய்ப்பு – இவை மக்களுக்கு சரியாக கிடைக்கிறதா என்ற கேள்விக்கான பதில் மிக மோசமானதாகவே இருந்து வருகிறது. பெண்ணுரிமை இயக்கம் தொடுத்த வழக்கு குடிசை பகுதி மக்களுக்காகவும், வீட்டு வேலை செய்யும் பெண்களுக்காகவும் தொடர்ந்து போராடி வரும்  பெண்ணுரிமை இயக்கம் இது…

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Those familiar with the social structure in the North Karnataka region will tell you, religious mathas in North Karnataka hold a very powerful place. Epicentres of power and faith, they make an appearance on the list of must- visit places for devotees and politicians alike, albeit for different reasons. One of the defining features for many of them are the community kitchens they run, where thousands of people eat everyday. Largely run on donations from devotees, these kitchens could, however, pose a serious challenge for those in the business of waste management. But even as management of kitchen waste from…

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“I have been urging everyone to switch to solar for the last decade. It is the best decision I have made. If people just understood how simple it is, they would be willing to try it. It has to do more with the mindset” says Chennai citizen D Suresh, who has been bestowed the moniker Solar Suresh for his efforts to take solar energy to the general public in the city and the state. A study by Greenpeace India and GERMI titled Rooftop Revolution: Unleashing Chennai’s Solar Potential estimates that Chennai has an untapped rooftop solar power generation potential of…

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What is common among urban waterways, economics and culture? All three are intertwined, and can complement as well as transform each other. But they can also lead to weakening urban systems if they are poorly planned, as the Indian port city of Kochi has shown. However, the city has seen recent attempts at overall upgrading of systems and researchers from the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER) emphasise the role that the city’s waterways can play in this makeover effort. Kochi’s crisscrossing canals and rivers linked to a backwater system can significantly impact its socio-economic and cultural…

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Nature is the manifestation of God, said Frank Lloyd Wright, the noted American architect. Indeed, Nature is often equated with the divine. However, our worship of the divine often takes a toll on the natural environment. Have we stopped to consider the magnitude of waste generated at our religious institutions? Tamil Nadu, which has 38,000 temples under the Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments (HR &CE) department alone, generates more than 3.8 lakh kilos of floral waste every day, according to a senior HR & CE official. This number does not include the hundreds of private temples, mosques and gurudwaras, where…

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A common sight in many Indian cities are decrepit or waste-laden canals that were once integral to the local economy. Cities have grappled with the mammoth task of cleaning and restoration of such canals with limited success. Often people who have made a life on the banks and margins become collateral damage to these efforts. Now Alappuzha in Kerala could pave the way for an alternative. The Canalpy Project A model canal-restoration project, Canalpy, is taking shape in the backwaters of Alappuzha. Funded by the Kerala Institute of Local Administration (KILA), the effort is supported by Cochin University College of…

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Speeding two-wheelers, Electricity Board (EB) boxes (working or otherwise), tree stumps and encroachments, and no space to walk. The picture this conjures explains the pathetic state of footpaths in Chennai, a city with a significant percentage of pedestrians in the traffic. On one hand, the Greater Chennai Corporation (GCC) claims to be creating more footpaths and cycle paths in the city. “We will soon be creating footpaths along 80 percent of the city roads, to facilitate the movement of pedestrians,” said a senior corporation official. On the other, the civic body has flouted several rules in its footpath construction in…

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On hot summer days in Bangalore, India, it is common to see public water taps on roadsides hissing and spurting as water struggles to come out. People crowd around the tap with pots of brightly coloured plastic, burnished brass or steel, waiting for their turn. Many of these people have come from homes without such luxuries as indoor plumbing and will return carrying enough water to last several days. More privileged citizens have water piped to their houses in larger quantities – and more frequently. But even for them, interrupted water supply and rationing have always been a fact of…

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