Society

Explore comprehensive coverage of societal issues, focusing on communities, social justice and cultural trends. Articles focus on topics such as gender equality, issues of the senior population, cultural heritage and the welfare of marginalised groups. They highlight challenges faced by various social groups and the impact of modernisation on traditional practices. Stories of grassroots movements, community leaders and policy impact offer a nuanced understanding of urban societal challenges and advancement.

“How would you feel if someone took a picture of your misery? I can’t even refuse the food though, because I am very hungry,” Manjunath, a 38-year old former sugarcane vendor said. Manjunath used to do quite well, earning Rs 700-1000 a day. But he was evicted during a BBMP drive last month, after cholera cases were reported in the city.  “The same corporator and police officials who made us jobless, now come with mobile cameras, give us some packet of food worth Rs 20 and take pictures. They barely talk to us, or even come close to us. They…

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“I am having to do things today I have never done earlier.Waking up  at 6 am in winters and 5 in summers has long been my habit. First thing I would do is offer morning prayers, earlier in masjid, but now at home. A 20-minute physicial workout has been a part of my morning schedule but I have never had to rush to the market in the wee hours. But since the COVID-19 enforced lockdown in Srinagar, I rush to the market soon after my morning exercise to buy vegetables, bread, milk and grocery items as the market remains open…

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In this series, individuals, citizen groups and RWAs explain how they have dealt with the COVID-19 crisis in a constructive manner. In the fourth part of the series, the president of an apartment association describes the measures they took. COVID-19 pandemic has tragically brought home the truth of the age-old Sanskrit saying Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, meaning 'the world is one family’. With this thought in mind, the management committee of Century Saras, an apartment complex in Yelahanka New Town, formed a task force for dealing with the COVID-19 threat immediately after the national lockdown was announced. The task force took the…

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In February 2020, Rangaswamy* (65) was admitted to a hospital in Tambaram Sanatorium due to respiratory issues. Soon after the lockdown was imposed, the hospital authorities discharged him, as he was on the road to recovery. He was prescribed medicines and was at home since March 24th with his wife Sundari* (60) and a college-going son. But soon, he suffered a relapse and his condition got serious. Frantic calls to doctors for home consultation yielded no result and the senior citizen succumbed to a cardiac arrest on April 5th. “We tried reaching many doctors, but they were hesitant to come…

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This article is co-authored by Jillian Du, Robin King and Radha Chanchani The COVID-19 pandemic has created a disruptive new normal for everyone through shelter-in-place orders and social distancing guidelines. But for the billions of urban poor, these guidelines aren’t just burdensome; they’re essentially impossible. Social distancing is a critically important response to the pandemic, but it also assumes that residents have adequate space, services and social safety nets to survive such an order. This is simply not the reality across cities in Asia, Africa and Latin America. More than 1 billion people live in slums and informal settlements globally. As much…

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The reports are everywhere, confirmed by various sources across the country. The coronavirus pandemic and the resultant lockdown have led to a massive spike in instances of domestic abuse. In a shocking report by the Press Trust of India published in early April, it was revealed that the Childline helpline in India received more than 92000 SOS calls over a period of 11 days during the lockdown, seeking protection from abuse and violence. The National Commission for Women has also confirmed a steady increase in the registration of domestic violence complaints from women since the lockdown was announced. But why…

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Co-authored by Angarika Guha and Senthil S In Part 1 of this series, we looked at the difficulties migrant workers face in accessing food during the lockdown. In this part, we explore how citizens themselves can help solve this problem. Even as NGOs and government agencies are involved in providing immediate relief (cooked food or dry ration) to the most vulnerable, the gap in their efforts is in the last-mile delivery of services. Janata audits can be a way to fix this. It is important to document local conditions of the community to which you are providing relief. Accurate, high…

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குடும்பத்தார்கள் வீட்டில் இருக்க வேண்டும், அவர்களுடன் நேரம் செலவழிக்க வேண்டும் என்று விரும்புவதுதான் பெண்களின் பொதுவான மனநிலையென உலகத்தால் பார்க்கப்படுகிறது. அவ்வாறிருக்க, தற்போது கொரோனா  தடுப்பு நடவடிக்கையான இந்த ஊரடங்கினால் முழுநாளும், முழுக்குடும்பமும் ஒரு வீட்டுக்குள் முடங்கிய நிலையில், தேநீர், சிற்றுண்டி, உணவு, மருந்து, இத்யாதி என ஒவ்வொருவருக்கும் வேளா வேளைக்கு தேவைப்படுகின்ற சூழ்நிலையிலும், அவர்களின் மனநிலை அப்படியே தானிருக்குமா அல்லது சலிப்பு மேலிட்டிருக்குமா? அல்லது இந்த யதார்த்தமானது இது சார்பான வேறொரு கண்ணோட்டத்தைத் தந்திருக்குமா? கற்பனையே செய்து பார்த்திருக்க முடியாத ஒரு நிலைமாற்றத்திற்குள் உட்பட்டிருப்பது நாம் மட்டுமல்ல முழு உலகும் தான் என அறிந்து மனங்கள் அதை ஏற்றுக் கொள்ள ஆரம்பித்திருந்தாலும், உண்மைகளானது ஒவ்வொருவரின் முன்னால் நின்று  முகத்தில் அறைவதால் முதிர்ச்சியும் முரண்பாடும் சேர்ந்தே பிரசவமாகின்றதென பெண்கள் பலரது அனுபவங்களைக் கேட்கும் போது புரிந்துகொள்ள முடிகிறது.  இந்த வழக்கத்துக்கு மாறான சூழல் வாழ்க்கையில் இதுவரை படிக்காமல் விட்ட பக்கங்களை நமக்கு…

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Ghulam Mohammed Meer, a 61-year old Kashmiri Muslim, is a worried man. His brow furrowed with worry lines, he sits brooding over a cup of tea in a corner of his rented accommodation, which he shares with 11 other fellow Kashmiris, in Mori Gate Mohalla of Chandigarh. “I am stuck here for the past 22 days,” said Meer, his voice choked with emotion. “I badly need to go home bad. My 105-year-old father is on his death bed. He just wants to meet me one last time before saying his final good bye”. Meer, a resident of Karalpura village of…

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India’s COVID-19 lockdown, one of the strictest in human history, was recently extended by the Prime Minister of India until the 3rd of May. Many stranded migrants waiting for public transport to take them back home or for production activities and markets to resume functioning were disappointed one more time, after the PM’s announcement on April 14th.  Along with poor migrants, other economically weaker sections in the city have been struggling for survival in the slums of cities like Mumbai, Delhi, Surat and Bangalore. This extension would seem like a terrible fait accompli and a final nail in the coffin…

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