25 Nov 2016

Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellowships in Public Health and Tropical Medicine 2017

Application Deadlines: 
  • Preliminary application deadline: 6th January 2017
  • Full application deadline: 7th March 2017
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Low- and middle-income countries. See list below
To be taken at (country): United Kingdom
Eligible Field of Study: Public health
About the Award: This scheme enables researchers from low- and middle-income countries to establish themselves as leading investigators in their scientific field. The scheme aims to support research that will improve public health and tropical medicine at a local, national and global level.
Type: Post-Doctoral Research
Eligibility: To be eligible for a Senior Research Fellowship in Public Health and Tropical Medicine, candidate must:
  • be a national of a low- or middle-income country
  • have a PhD or a degree in medicine and are qualified to enter higher specialist clinical training
  • have five to twelve years of postdoctoral research experience.
  • have made significant progress towards establishing yourself as an independent investigator
  • have a strong track record in your area of research
  • have sponsorship from an eligible host organisation in a low- or middle-income country
  • have a research proposal that is within our public health and tropical medicine remit.
Selection Criteria: Candidate’s application must show:
  • good track record
  • the quality and importance of the research question(s)
  • good approach to solving these questions
  • the suitability of candidate’s research environment.
Number of Awardees: Not stated
Value of Scholarship: Salary and research expenses covered
Duration of Scholarship: 5 years (candidate can apply for renewal after this time)
Eligible African Countries: Algeria, Angola,  Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Dem. Rep. , Congo, Rep., Côte d’Ivoire, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Federation Rwanda, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Tunisia, Turkey , Uganda, Ukraine,  Rep. Zambia, Zimbabwe.
Other Countries: Afghanistan, Albania, American Samoa, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh,  Belarus, Belize, Bhutan, Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Chile, China, Colombia, Comoros, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Arab Rep., El Salvador, Fiji, The Georgia, Grenada, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, India, Indonesia, Iran, Islamic Rep. Iraq, Jamaica, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kiribati, Korea, Dem Rep., Kosovo, Kyrgyz, Republic Lao PDR, Lebanon, Lithuania, Macedonia, Malaysia, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Mexico, Micronesia, Fed. Sts., Moldova, Mongolia, Montenegro, Mayotte, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Palau, Panama, Papua New Guinea,  Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Romania, Russian, Samoa, São Tomé and Principe, Serbia, Solomon Islands, Sri Lanka, St. Kitts and Nevis St. Lucia St. ,Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, Syrian, Arab Republic, Tajikistan, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Tonga, Turkmenistan, Tuvalu, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Venezuela, RB Vietnam,  West Bank and Gaza Yemen,
How to Apply: Candidate must submit their application through the Wellcome Trust Grant Tracker
Award Provider: Wellcome Trust, UK
Important Notes: Candidates who don’t have PhD or a degree in medicine may still be considered you if they have a first or a Master’s degree and can show substantial research experience. The scheme mmay be very important if candidate is an intermediate career fellow.

Search for Common Ground (SFCG) Africa Spring Internship 2017 for African Students

Application Deadline: Ongoing
Eligible Countries: African countries
To be taken at (country): SFCG’s Washington DC headquarters.
About the Award: The Africa Program is active in Angola, Burundi, Central African Republic, Chad, Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Guinea, Liberia, Madagascar, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Sudan, South Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe.
Search for Common Ground (SFCG) is an international non-profit organization that promotes peaceful resolution of conflict. With headquarters in Washington, DC and a European office in Brussels, Belgium, SFCG’s mission is to transform how individuals, organizations, and governments deal with conflict – away from adversarial approaches and toward cooperative solutions.
SFCG seeks to help conflicting parties understand their differences and act on their commonalities. With a total of approximately 400 staff worldwide, SFCG implements projects from 55 offices in 35 countries, including in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and the United States. The organization is an exciting and rewarding place to work, with a dedicated and enthusiastic staff who love their work. You will be joining a highly motivated staff with a good team spirit and there will be opportunities to grow.
The Intern will be expected to:
  • Contribute to the production of donor reports and grant proposals;
  • Attend policy meetings, representing the Africa Program;
  • Backstop the Washington DC-based Africa Team and country offices overseas; and
  • Assist with website, program literature and database system maintenance.
Type: Entry-level Internship
Eligibility: The ideal candidate will exhibit:
• Good writing, editing and communication skills (required);
• A self-starting, detail-oriented and flexible approach to tasks (required);
• Demonstrable interest in African issues and/or conflict resolution (required); and
• NGO and/or international experience (preferred);
• Fluency or advanced proficiency in French with a focus on writing (preferred).
Undergraduates (juniors and seniors), graduate students, and recent graduates are welcome to apply.
Duration of Internship: The internship begins in January and typically lasts until May
How to Apply: Please submit a resume, cover letter, and two one-page writing samples (one in English, and one in French if possible) in document through our Bamboo application system at https://sfcg.bamboohr.com/jobs/view.php?id=628.
We require commitments of no less than twenty hours a week for this position. Please note that this position is unpaid. Credit can be arranged for students with their institution. For international applicants, Search for Common Ground is not responsible for providing student or work visas; you will need to make your own visa arrangements.
Only those applicants selected for an interview will be contacted. We ask that you do not follow-up with calls or emails concerning the status of your application. Candidates who fail to submit and/or complete the full application and do not meet the appropriate application deadline will not be considered.
Award Provider: Search for Common Ground (SFCG)

Africa Science Leadership Programme (ASLP) 2017. Fully-funded to Pretoria, South Africa

Application Deadline: 16th December, 2016
Eligible Countries: African countries
To be taken at (country): Pretoria, South Africa
About the Award: The ASLP is an initiative of the University of Pretoria in partnership with the Global Young Academy, funded by the Robert Bosch Stiftung. It serves early- to mid-career researchers in basic and applied science, engineering, social sciences, arts and the humanities. The programme aims to grow mid-career African academics in the areas of thought leadership, team development, engagement and collaboration, with the intention of enabling them to solve the complex issues that face both Africa and the global community.
The programme will use a highly interactive approach to training, application of skills to a leadership project, peer support, and mentorship. Fellows will attend an initial 5 day, intensive on-site programme in Pretoria, South Africa from 22-27 March 2017 (departing on the 28th). The process will involve an approach that cycles between theory, application and reflection. Participants will be challenged to work collaboratively to design initiatives that advance a new paradigm for African science.
The leadership programme:
  • Identifies early- to mid-career academics who have demonstrated leadership potential and an interest in developing key leadership skills
  • Supports them to apply the acquired skills to projects that are relevant to the academic development on the continent and its impact on society
  • Creates a network of academic leaders on the continent, spanning not only across countries, but also across disciplinary boundaries
  • Advances a curriculum for academic leadership development, which can be utilised in institutions in Africa and beyond
Type: Training
Eligibility: To be selected, applicants need to display a compelling vision of their future involvement in the development of research projects, programmes, human capacity, specific policies or societal structures. The selection process will consider individual qualities but also focus on ensuring a diversity of culture, subject background (Natural and Social Sciences, Humanities) and gender among the fellows. Where possible the programme will also attempt to create small ‘cores’ of leadership; multiple strong applicants from the same centre or country will thus be considered.
Selection Criteria: The following criteria are used as a guide for the nomination and selection of fellows:
  • A PhD degree or equivalent qualification;
  • A faculty or a continuing research position at a research institution;
  • Active in research and teaching at an African institution of higher education or research;
  • A sustained record of outstanding scientific outputs;
  • Interest in translating and communicating the results of their work for impact in society;
  • Demonstrated leadership ability in research and beyond.
  • Interest in the role of research in addressing complex issues affecting society;
  • Interest in collaborations across disciplines and sectors (e.g. industry, government, etc.);
  • Commitment to participate in all the activities of the fellowship; and
  • Intent to share what is learned in the programme with their broader networks.
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Program: The training will cover:
  • Core elements of collective leadership
  • Creative and systems thinking
  • Development of effective networks
  • Stakeholder engagement for change
  • Maximising the efficiency and impact of collaborative efforts
  • Advanced dialogue and communication skills
  • Effective problem solving and decision making
Following the first training week, fellows will apply their skills to a focus area or project relevant to their context.
As described above, projects will aim to contribute to a new paradigm for Africa science. During the year, participants will continue to engage with the group and have access to professional support. The costs incurred during the workshop (training, relevant travel, meals and accommodation) will be covered by the programme. In March 2018, fellows will complete their projects and present them at the second in-person training, which will consist of 3 days.
There will be some costs, which are not covered by the programme, such as visas, vaccinations or local transport expenses, for which you may need to seek support from your local institution or fund personally. You will also be required to provide us with your personal travel insurance details as a condition of participation.
How to Apply: All applicants have to provide two support letters by academic referees (details are provided in the application form). One of the two referees has to commit to be involved in future communications and mentorship in case of selection of the applicant into the programme. This referee will be informed about the progress of the fellow and should be willing to support the fellow if he or she requires it.
All applications will be reviewed and shortlisted by representatives of the University of Pretoria, the Global Young Academy, national young academies, and ASLP Management. The ASLP Management team will make the final selection of candidates
Award Provider: The ASLP is an initiative of the University of Pretoria in partnership with the Global Young Academy, funded by the Robert Bosch Stiftung.

Take Online Course on Chicken Behaviour & Welfare by University of Edinburgh

Enrolment: starts 12 December (+take on-demand)
Timeline: 5 weeks
Skill Level: Beginner
Course of Study: Chicken Behaviour & Welfare | 
Course Platform: Coursera
Created by: University of Edinburgh
Cost: Free
About the Course
This course explains the general principles of chicken behaviour and welfare, and the behavioural and physiological indicators that can be used to assess welfare in chickens kept in hobby flocks through to commercial farms.
This course focuses primarily on laying hens and meat chickens (broilers), although many of the principles are relevant to other types of poultry.
Learning Objectives: At the end of this course, you will be able to
  • Describe avian sensory perception and motivation
  • Explain the main behaviour patterns of poultry
  • Define welfare and explain the bases of welfare standards
  • Assess chicken welfare, using behavioural and physiological means
  • Understand common welfare problems of chickens
Eligibility requirement
The course is likely to be of interest to people who own chickens as pets or keep a small hobby flock, commercial egg and chicken meat producers, veterinarians and vet nurses.
Certificate offered? Yes
How to Enrol
Notes: This course is taught by staff from Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC), University of Glasgow, and St David’s Poultry Team.

Now Open! Shell University Scholarships for Undergraduate Nigerian Students 2016/2017

Application Deadline: 2nd December, 2016
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible African Countries: Nigeria
To be taken at: Nigerian Universities
Subject Areas: Courses offered at Nigerian Universities
About Shell Scholarship: Shell ScholarshipThe Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (Operator of the NNPC/SHELL /TEPN/AGIP Joint Venture) Scholarship Scheme offers first year students in all Nigerian universities the opportunity to study with an annual grant from the SPDC JV for the full duration of their course.  The programme aims to promote academic excellence and improve the skills of young Nigerians.
Type: Undergraduate
Who is qualified to apply? Eligible Applicants must: ·
  • Be citizens of Nigeria, currently enrolled in an accredited and approved university in Nigeria.
  • Have gained admission during the 2015/2016 academic session, and pursuing a first degree programme.
  • Have a minimum of seven O/Levels credits, including Mathematics and English.
  • Be enrolled full‐time, in a university in Nigeria at the undergraduate level with a minimum grade point average of 2.5 at the time of application (attach transcripts or official records).
The Scholarship is in two categories;
  • the National Merit Award (NM) and
  • the Areas of Operation Merit Award (OM).
Number of Scholarships: Several
Scholarship Worth: Annual grant from the SPDC JV for the full duration of your course
Duration of Scholarship: For full duration of the course
How to Apply
  1. All applicants should have their personal valid email accounts (for consistent communication).
  2. Candidates who meet the above entry qualifications should apply online at www.shellnigeria.com and to provide the required personal and educational details, and load scanned copies of the following:
    • A recent passport-sized photograph of the applicant (i.e. jpeg format, not more than 200kilobytes);
    • University or JAMB (UTME or D/E) Admission Letter;
    • Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations (UTME) Scores;
    • ‘O’ Level Result(s); and ‘A’ Level /OND /NCE Result(s) as applicable; and
    • Letter of Identification from State (showing Local Government) of Origin.
  3. Scanned copies of letters of identification, (which must be duly stamped and signed) by:
    • The Paramount Ruler of the Community; and
    • The Chairman of the Community Development or Executive Council (CDC or CEC) is also required of applicants for the Operational Area Awards (OM). The letters should be addressed to The Manager, Social Investment, Shell Petroleum Development Company, Prodeco 5, Room 10, Shell Industrial Area, Rumubiakani, Port Harcourt.

Sponsors: Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (Operator of the NNPC/SHELL /TEPN/AGIP Joint Venture)

Angela Merkel and the Elections

Victor Grossman

Berlin.
While Americans try to swallow the prospect of four Trump years, Germans can now wonder, after months of suspense, about the chance of four more Angela Merkel years. Between the two there are certainly huge differences, not only in gender and language. Most obviously, while he spoke often of throwing immigrants out, she was spotlighted for calls to let them in. Only gradually, under great pressure, has she reduced this; not any and all immigrants, only refugees from certain war-torn areas like Iraq and Syria – and not too many more of them.
There was pressure from many sides, also within her own Christian Democratic Union (CDU) but far more from its sister party (Christian Social Union, CSU), which has a separate status only in Bavaria. Usually both work together but the Bavarians, known abroad for lederhosen, dirndls and the October Fest, always lean further right. Currently losing ground in their own habitat, they are threatening to punish her “leftist leanings”. Such pressures take their toll, not only of her usually cheery countenance but also in the polls. Her personal popularity, now at about 55%, is reviving after a record low, but her party stands at only about 35%, which hardly guarantees victory in the September election.
But Merkel’s current coalition partners, the Social Democrats (SPD), face poll figures stagnating at under 25%. Their stout warrior Sigmar Gabriel, far less popular than Merkel, lost even more luster by forcing reluctant followers to support the Canadian equivalent (CETA) of the trans-Pacific trade deal TPP and the US-Europe deal TTIP. Luckily, both hang inches away from the final shredder, thanks to worldwide campaigns but also, believe it or not, to disapproval by Donald Trump, even if it may have been for the wrong reasons.
Trump’s very ambiguous yet welcome campaign words about meeting Putin and withdrawing NATO from Europe caused storms of confusion here. But while they struck at the underpinning of decades-long declamations about “our eternal bonds of trans-Atlantic friendship” they also supplied new footing for people like Defense Secretary Ursula von der Leyen, who yearn to build up a big “European defense force”, separate from the USA and led by a powerful Germany, with its century of valuable experience in “how to defend humane European values against invading hordes”. Now, without British meddling and with France facing calamity, German tanks, fighters (and soon  “Made in Israel” drones) can take the lead, reinforcing right-wing rulers in Poland and the Baltic states and building up strength to within 85 miles of St. Petersburg, to the furthest reaches of the Black Sea and on to Africa and Asia as well.
With a smiling Angela speaking simply and reasonably as ever, we have a one “good cop” and two “bad cop” situation, for Finance Minister Schäuble is still busy pressuring weaker European leaders in the south not to reject austerity fetters but to keep buying big expensive weapons from Germany.
But there is also a second “good cop”. While Angela was giving her long-time ally Barack a goodbye hug, Germany was also preparing for a line of moving vans to and from its White House equivalent, Bellevue Palace. After February, President Joachim Gauck’s perpetual smile, a triumph of hypocrisy, can soon be forgotten. Who should replace him in this ceremonial job, where the president is supposed to avoid the political scene? Since they had no better offer, Merkel’s crowd OK’d a Social Democrat, Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, 60. Handsome, white-haired, with a deliberate way of speaking full of pauses, his one-time promotion of laws against the jobless fully forgotten, he is the most popular man in his party, perhaps because he sometimes seemed more sensible than others in trying to settle conflicts, as in Minsk and the Ukrainian conflict. He will now be kicked upstairs into the columned palace to welcome visiting kings and dignitaries and make nice speeches.
Without him, the SPD faces the difficult job of finding a candidate to oppose Angela Merkel in the main election. Will it be the unpopular Gabriel? Or perhaps Martin Schulz, now president of the European Parliament, also a smiler with a hidden poniard up his sleeve when Greek or other upstarts try to upset the apple-cart. Foreign minister or chancellor – which is he aiming at? We shall see.
Media speculation is rife about the vote and its aftermath, with stress on the math, since no party can win enough seats to rule by itself. The CDU may agree to join again with the SPD – only if the SPD will play junior partner again. What about the Greens? Once considered young militants, they have long since cooled down as their well-educated core of voters became successful in their professions or in government jobs. Their current strong man, Winfried Kretschmann, 68, minister-president in the state of Baden-Württemberg, has become ecologically paler green thanks to his friendship with the area’s powerful Daimler-Benz concern, now facing charges of emission fraud as serious as those hitting Volkswagen. Could the Greens and the CDU join hands? They have done so in some states, some rightist Greens leaders excel in belligerency in world conflicts. But this still seems unlikely.
A constant debate concerns any coalition between the SPD, Greens and the LINKE ((Left). The math might just work out. But the SPD and the Greens reject any alliance unless the LINKE agrees to support NATO and approve the deployment of Bundestag troops outside Germany. This goes against the LINKE program, and some insist that any softening on this issue would mean accepting the path of German military expansion which dominated the last century so tragically and sacrificing the distinguishing feature of the LINKE as the Peace Party. Others in the party, like Thuringian Minister-President Ramelow, call for compromises, in hopes that the LINKE an accomplish more within a government than outside it.
This question of such a three-way coalition is now front stage in Berlin, where just such a tripod will take charge next month if approved by all participants (in the LINKE with a referendum of all Berlin members). Already almost certain, it will consist of the present SPD mayor plus four cabinet posts (here called Senators) for the SPD and three each for the Greens and the LINKE.
But casting a menacing shadow over the whole political scene is the Alternative for Germany (AfD), whose voters gave it 24 seats (out of 149) in Berlin’s House of Deputies plus seats in all twelve borough councils, where some will even head departments. With a mix of far righters, pro-Nazis, former embezzlers and the like, they will follow the line worked out at their recent national congress; hit out at foreigners, above all Muslims, defend “German nationality and culture” and, by the way, stand for every rightwing tendency from homophobia and anti-abortion to low taxes for the wealthy and a strong military. This may sound familiar; with prospects for the extreme right in Austria, the Netherlands, perhaps France and already existing in Hungary and Poland, the prospect is frightening.
The main resistance to the alienation, fear and uncertainty feeding this trend should be coming from the LINKE. Sadly, its leaders have often been distracted by internal disagreement and by a neglect of battles for the needs and wishes of working people – not only in parliamentary meetings but in the streets, factories and other centers. There have been some – but far too few.
Happily, perhaps, the LINKE has decided on a candidate of its own for the job of president. Professor Christoph Butterwegge, 65, not a party member but a resolute expert on the question of poverty, the forces causing it and the fight against it, knows he has no chance to win against Steinmeier. But he wants to provoke discussion about the social gap between wealthy and poor in an otherwise toothless election debate. Although the Greens have stated they will not support him, but instead probably CDU and SPD candidate Steinmeier, he hopes to win over at least some votes from other parties among the many delegates who choose a president – as a good symbol.
However, this contest will pale when the slugging begins for the main election in September. Will the LINKE put up a tough fight against social cutbacks and military advances? If so, and only if it does,  it could gain ground again and reduce to some degree the threat from the far right.

The End of Privacy is on Sale, and We’re Buying

Thomas L. Knapp

Like it or not, these days the reason for the season seems to mostly be: Shopping. Even if you weren’t among the millions lining up outside brick and mortar establishments on “Black Friday,” you’ve probably got your eyes peeled for holiday deals on the web.
The hottest bargains this year come with microphones and the promise that those microphones will put the world at your beck and call.
Amazon’s Alexa-powered line of devices and Google’s new Home appliance augur an increasingly voice-powered world. Adjust your thermostat, turn on the lights, pull up the movie you want to watch or the music you want to listen to, order a pizza — all by just saying it. Our phones have been conditioning us to that paradigm for several years. This is what’s next.
No, I don’t want to crush the buzz or put you off the idea. I’m in. I run an Android phone digital assistant app that listens for my voice command, and just grabbed up a Cyber Monday deal at Amazon myself ($29.99 for the Alexa-enabled Fire TV stick with voice remote — one reason I went that way is that it supposedly requires a button push to activate the mic instead of being “always on”).
But if you’re going the voice-controlled home appliance route, ask yourself one important question: Who’s listening, and how much are you comfortable with them knowing?
Ten years ago, you’d likely have considered that question an example of paranoid conspiracy theory. But unless you live under a rock, you’ve heard of Edward Snowden by now and have come to understand that yes, governments really HAVE been hoovering up our phone and Internet data for years. Does anyone really expect that home microphones won’t become part of the continuously expanding surveillance state?
Governments aren’t the only bad actors — over the last couple of years we’ve seen hackers compromise everything from baby monitor webcams to automotive computer systems — but governments are undoubtedly more dangerous than assorted pranksters, stalkers and thieves in cyberspace just as they are in the real world. In the not too distant future, police may be automatically dispatched to your home based when one of your devices hears something a computer program interprets as a domestic dispute — or a seditious conspiracy.
By all means, get your voice groove on at a discount. But when it comes to electronic ears, be sure you keep your eyes open.

Time for the Brits to Ditch the United Kingdom and Its Monarchy?

Kenneth Surin

The announcement last week that the UK taxpayer is going to have to fork out for an extensive remodelling of Buckingham Palace, whose occupant is one of the richest people in the world, was met with more hostility than one would expect from a country that has been immersed fully in the royal psychodrama, and mesmerized by its attendant fantasies, for centuries.
The renovation of the palace, projected to cost £370/$450 million, comes at a time when, thanks to the policies of a callous Conservative government, levels of poverty and homelessness are approaching heights not seen since the 1930s.  In the face of such misery and destitution, the Treasury announced that funding of the royal family is to increase by 10% to meet the cost of repairs to the palace.
The opposition Labour party, led by an avowed anti-royalist, immediately fudged the issue by saying it would not oppose the use of the public purse to fund the renovation, since Buckingham Palace is “a national monument”.  Which only begs the question why someone is entitled by an accident of birth to have a national monument (or two or three or more), with ample subventions from the taxpayer, as their place to call “home”.
The Brexit vote has generated a constitutional conundrum.  London voted Remain, the north of England was for Leave, Scotland voted Remain, Wales was for Leave, the North of Ireland voted Remain.   A jumble of motives underlay this variability of outcomes.
London’s prominent globalized service sector (which is hugely reliant on migrant labour) serves the interests of workers and consumers rather than citizens.  It conduces to an inclusivity and cosmopolitanism of a certain sort, evinced by the large Remain vote, but catering to the cosmopolitan dispositions of an international bourgeoisie puts London at odds with most of the rest of England, and, moreover, does little to advance democracy and greater equality in the UK.
Scotland is deeply hostile to the UK’s reigning neoliberal dispensation and tired of playing a bit-part in an English-dominated Westminster system.  Scots have fashioned, piecemeal, their version of a modern constitutionalism capable of expressing their national identity.  Given that the EU is a congeries of national identities, continued EU membership is seen by many Scots as the best way for their country to entrench these initiatives.
The key to the political situation in Northern Ireland is the agreement between two sovereign states (Eire and the UK) designed to overcome civil conflict.  This two-state agreement is premised on power-sharing between the two communities—unionist and nationalist—while upholding the principles of equality, toleration, and acceptance of difference.  The Northern Irish vote to remain in the EU was motivated in large part by the perception that an EU framework, as opposed to a Westminster dominated by England and decoupled from the EU, is more likely to safeguard the cross-border cooperation vital for continued peace in the north of Ireland.
The north of England and Wales have suffered more from postindustrial blight than other parts of the UK, and their Leave vote has affinities with the vote for Trump in similarly blighted American regions.  That is, this was a “backlash” vote born of anguished desperation, and an expression of the collapse of the Hobbesian compact– subjects obey in return for protection from the sovereign– that has prevailed up to now.   People living in these devastated regions have come to realize that governments since Reagan and Thatcher care more about corporations and banks than supposedly ordinary citizens.
The referendum on the EU, then, was in no way a conclusively collective expression of the “will of the people”.  What it expressed more than anything else, and with a jumble of underlying motivations and desires, was the uneasy but growing realization on the part of the electorate that the UK’s ruling elite has since the 1970s been less concerned with the interests of “the people” and much more invested in its own self-servingly avaricious ends.  Hence the weakening of the hitherto dominant Hobbesian compact.
The implementation of Brexit has been chaotic.  Theresa May, who voted Remain but held her finger up to the prevailing wind and caved-in to her party’s Eurosceptic wing by opting for a hard Brexit, contradicts herself on the implementation from one day to the next, and members of her cabinet contradict her Brexit positions on an hourly basis.  It is impossible to tell how this will pan out, but whatever happens “Ukania” could be on its last legs.  (“Ukania” being Tom Nairn’s term, who in turn used Robert Musil’s “Kakania”, a fictional central European nation in deep dysfunction, as his model.)
The Scots, and to a lesser extent the northern Irish, are likely to make their own accommodations with the EU regardless of what transpires in Westminster.  The Scots are going to want a second independence referendum, and with EU membership on the line, the vote of the first referendum, which was against independence, is likely to be overturned.
The northern Irish may do something deemed wildly improbable even a few years ago, and see that they may have more in common with the country south of the border, which is solidly ensconced in the EU, as opposed to belonging to an increasingly alien UK without Scotland and hamstrung by a pervasive Little Englanderism, with its customary loathing of all things Irish.
All the above is conjecture at this point, but if any of it comes about, the monarchy will almost certainly be jeopardized, or at least profoundly transformed.
The nonagenarian queen is generally respected, at least for her perceived decorousness, but the erratic Prince Charles is not (the social trauma over Diana still disquiets the British soul).
Australian friends assure me that once the queen has had her state funeral, Australia is almost certain to declare itself a republic– after all, how many countries have a foreign monarch as their head of state?
With Scotland gone as well, it will be more difficult for Brits to sustain the psychodrama underpinning the principle of monarchy.  The disintegration of the politically backward Ukania and the decaying remnants of Empire (marked decisively by Australia’s soon-to-happen dumping of the English monarch) will make it easier, in principle, for Brits to remove the collective blindfold wrapped round their heads.
The foreignness of its monarchy has always been difficult to square with the ethno-nationalist and nativist impulses driving the Little Englanderism that was one of the main propellants behind the Brexit vote. It has always been puzzling to some of us how Brits can be oblivious to the history of their monarchy, which in the last millennium has seen three foreign houses constitute its royal dynasties.
First there was William I, the conquerer from Normandy, in 1066.  When the Tudor blood-line could no longer be maintained due to a conflict over a rivalrous Protestant or Catholic succession, William III and his wife Mary, from the House of Orange in the Netherlands, were invited by the aristocracy to take over in 1689.  When the blood-line of the House of Orange came to a halt, the House of Hanover, from the minor German principality of that name, was invited to take over in 1714.
Moreover, the queen’s great-great-great grandfather was the Belgian Prince Albert, husband of Queen Victoria.  Prince Phillip, aka Phil the Greek, is the father of the next in line to the throne, Prince Charles.
And yet there are royalist Brits who typically undergo a sharp blood-pressure spike when they hear the accents of a Polish plumber or Romanian hotel maid.
Will Brits see that submission to the monarchy is integral to Ukania’s political backwardness, and that overcoming the latter will require the abandonment of its royalist psychodrama?
Ukania’s political backwardness (its lack of a proper constitution, the retaining of a wholly unelected second chamber, the absence of proportional representation in elections, a hideously corrupt honours system abused by all the mainstream political parties, the deliberate production and maintenance of its Celtic periphery), of which the royalist psychodrama is simultaneously a prime cause and manifestation, ensures that the monarch’s subjects are incapable of seeing their true relation to the country’s social surplus.
Billionaire tax-dodgers who run virtual Ponzi schemes and raid pension funds are overlooked by a rigged legal system, while the right-wing tabloids run melodramatic features on those who chisel the benefits system for gains that are minuscule in comparison to what’s snagged by the pension-fund raiders and tax-dodgers (the recent prime minister David Cameron and his finance minister George Osborne amongst the latter).
Eradicating this royalist psychodrama will therefore be an important first step in a radical reshaping of institutions, enabling in this way a less distorted view of the UK’s unfair and unbalanced division of the social surplus, and hopefully making possible its truly equitable division as a potential next step.
For another thing, it would save a lot of taxpayer-money spent, now and in the future, on the refurbishment of those presumed “national monuments”!

The Reality Of Fake News

Binoy Kampmark

Fake news as reality; the inability to navigate the waters in which it swims; a weakness in succumbing to material best treated with a huge pinch of salt. That, we are told, is the new condition of the global information environment.
Laura Sydell of National Public Radio’s All Things Considered furnished readers with one such example: “FBI Agent Suspected In Hillary Email Leaks Found Dead In Apparent Murder-Suicide.” Shared over half a million times, it ran on a site “that had had the look and feel of a local newspaper” (not that you can feel the website Denverguardian.com).
There was not much to the site. It was the only story running, spawned on WordPress. Eventually, a triumphant Sydell, with the assistance of a head engineer at MasterMcNeil Inc., John Jansen, based in Berkeley, identified the individual in question behind the story.  Justin Coler of Disinformedia, “got into fake news around 2013 to highlight the extremism of the white nationalist alt-right.”
This ushered in a life of information fakery, an attempt to “publish blatantly or fictional stories and then be able to publicly denounce those stories and point out that they were fiction.”
A dangerous dance is thereby initiated, one that assumes a false balance. The “meat,” as Coler calls it, is consumed more enthusiastically by some than others. Naturally, his target audience was always going to be the more indignant and loudly cheering one.  Conjuring up the fiction to then condemn it only goes so far.  The beast eventually develops legs, scurrying away from the truth.
This was very much the case in the reactions to supposed fake news stories.  Some supporters would accept the product wholesale, ignoring the rebuttal.  The Trump followers, claimed Coler, were “just waiting to eat up this red meat they they’re about to get served.”
This led to something of a perversion: to prove a point, Coler, as a registered Democrat, was effectively cultivating a market and exploiting it. He was even making money out of the credulous, even if they were backing another candidate.
Again, the wheel on this score is being re-invented.  The jump to conclusions that fake news sites are somehow new is only matched by the ignorance about what came before – the carefully doctored text to defame a minority, the false narrative about a race, idea or culture (The Protocols of the Elders of Zion come to mind), and the airbrushing of history.
Traditionally, the misinformation business was reserved for the higher end of the news production cycle: a William Randolph Hearst, a Rupert Murdoch, or a director of propaganda operations in a government (totalitarian or otherwise) ever enthusiastic about spinning the story.  The difference now is that the arm of dissimulation has been extended – to the ordinary citizen who has a huge array of sharing functions and social media platforms to spread a word.
Information in this era, being treated as some magic gold dust, is being packaged and fed to the public via various mediums.  The only thing interesting about this aspect is the democratisation of production and dissemination.  We are all potential directors of the fake news industry.
In that sense, fake news has seen a seamless incorporation into the commons – the dissemination of fictions, suppositions and fantasies, made available like domestic crockery to the everyday citizen.  The effects of mass democracy can be, in parts, hideous.
Technology, seen in conventional utopian circles as emancipative, has become the handmaiden for acts, conscious or otherwise, of orchestrated mendacity.  Rather than freeing the mind and adding a corrective to standard media accounts, it can supplant them, becoming their own form of tyranny.  Cheap, available, easy to use, the creation of a myth, spun with rapid ease via the blogosphere that mimics the newspaper, spreads like a violent brushfire through social media, burning down rival narratives with inexorable force.
Before you know it, clumsy Hillary Clinton is sharing the same fate with dotty Kim Kardashian, locking horns on fictional terrain about who died and which one did not, and what crime was committed or, as it often can be, not.  Celebrity vacuity and political lies occupy the same terrain, and the muddle assumes total form via social media.
The digital giants of information, such as Google, claim that this phenomenon can be arrested by limiting advertising tools to websites in the service of fake news.
“Moving forward,” said Google in a statement to Reuters, “we will restrict ad serving on pages that misrepresent, misstate, or conceal information about the publisher, the publisher’s content, or the primary purpose of the web property.”
This limited appraisal assumes that people engage in the fake news business do so purely for purely business motivations.  Only the money matters; but what, of ideological motivation and basic malice?
Perhaps it is far more fitting that we accept one logical consequence of this information revolution: that we are here on this planet to also misinform and spread the fleeting lie, which is always easier than the lumbering truth. The danger here is the speed that lie rushes into the digital sphere, and eventually, print: rapid, it takes hold of the narrative, and eventually supplants the truth.

Demonetisation And Terrorism

Jayashubha

An argument which has been put forward in the recent ‘Demonetisation’ issue is its relationship with Terrorism. It has been pointed out that ‘funds’ either from outside or otherwise find their way into the terrorist groups. Fake currency or notes in denominations of Rs. 500 and 1,000 sustain and fund the terrorist activities. Hence the belief expressed is that Demonetisation will hit the backbone of terrorism.
Though it has not defined terrorism, it can be assumed that it refers to Kashmiri militancy, Maoist insurgency in tribal belts and ethnic unrest in North-east apart from rise of Islamic radical groups.  Establishing a relationship between Demonetisation and Terrorism is too simplistic an argument by the Government. It tends to deny the root causes for emergence of militant activities and unrest among certain sections.
On Kashmir issue, such a relationship tends to deny the political nature of the Kashmiri militancy. It tends to ignore the fact that the Kashmiri militancy continues because of indigenous factors but not because of external factors. It continues due to unrest among Kashmiri with the larger Indian approach of handling Kashmir issue. News that is being circulated in Social media is that incidents of stone pelting have stopped since the announcement of Demonetisation. It assumes that stone pelters involved in such acts after accepting cash worth Rs. 500 funded from Pakistan. However, as reported by Safwat Jargar, the incidents of stone pelting only saw a natural decline starting from 820 in July to 179 in October. This further declined to about 49 incidents till 14h November (15 between 9th and 14th November). As stated by him that such a claim is ‘laughable, stupid and hollow’ for Kashmiri.
On Maoist insurgency, the linkage tends to be ignorant of the fact that it is not the cash in denominations of Rs. 500/1000 but the cashlesness and impoverishment of the poor which sustains the movement. Conditions of mass poverty and inequity create conditions for sustenance of the movement. In the simplistic relationship that is getting established in the name of demonetisation, issues of social and economic inequity, injustice to the tribal groups in the name of industrialisation and takeover of forest lands, large scale displacement of the tribal groups, human rights violations are being denied.
On ethnic unrest in North-east, establishing relationship between Demonetisation and Militancy tends to simplify the complex nature of issues in North-east. The issues in North-east is largely due to a) failure of Indian state to accommodate the ethnic / nationalist aspirations within the framework of Índian Union’; b) continuation of a discriminatory attitude towards North-east; c) failure in creating a fair system which create conditions among ethnic groups not to compete but to share the limited natural resources; d) failure in creating a system for ethnic minorities to feel safer in their geographies with provisions of protecting their cultural identity. These factors seem to be ignored.
The signs of Islamic radicalism may be a worrying sign. However, it cannot be denied that majoritarian extremism in the name of Hindutva may only create more conditions for rise of Islamic radicalism. Moreover, the issue that needs to be addressed is the large scale alienation of Minorities. Protecting and strengthening the secular fabric rather than moving away from it will create this sense of security.
Overall the demonetisation and terrorism argument put forward by the Government is completely unconvincing. Politically, it is reduced to a role played by an external hand. Economically, it is reduced to the contribution of fake currency in sustaining the movement. Socially, it tends to deny the deprivation and social alienation among various sections. Culturally, it tends to ignore the need for religious and ethnic minorities to feel safer.  A simplistic relationship between demonetisation and terrorism only shows the narrow solutions to complex issues.

India’s Agrarian Crisis

Moin Qazi

More than a billion people in the world are employed in agriculture, and in India, one out of four people are farmers or agricultural workers. Farm output contributes $325 billion. ( about 15 per cent) to India’s $2-trillion economy. Small farmers—who constitute 85 percent of farmers globally—make up one of the largest constituencies among the world’s poor .Small and marginal farmers constitute 80 per cent of total farm households, 50 per cent of rural households and 36 per cent of total households in India.
These farmers and their families are among the victims of India’s longstanding agrarian crisis. Economic reforms and the opening of Indian agriculture to the global market over the past two decades have made small farmers vulnerable to unusual changes and fluctuations. The small farmers have now to compete with the larger ones who are well endowed with capital, irrigation and supplementary businesses to buffer them against any adverse shocks. As fallout the farmers are facing what has been called a “scissors crisis”, which is driven by the rising cost of inputs without a commensurate increase in output price. A crop failure, an unexpected health expense or the marriage of a daughter are perilous to the livelihood of these farmers. An adverse weather change, for example, can lead to a drastic decline in output, and the farmer may not be able to recoup input costs, leave alone the ability to repay loans. Sometimes farmers have to plant several batches of seeds because they may go waste by delayed rains or even excess rains. The problem has dragged down yields and rural consumption nationwide — a heavy economic drag on a nation where two-thirds of people live in the countryside.
Small and marginal farmers also do not have access to institutional credit. Most of them depend on village traders, who are also moneylenders, giving them crop loans and pre-harvest consumption loans. The superior bargaining power of village traders and the middlemen means that the prices received by farmers are low. On account of the small size of the farms, they can rarely apply technological solutions that work best on the large scale. Since the extension workers of the government are not properly trained small farmers do not have access to knowledge of best practices .It involves crop rotation techniques by which crops are rotated such that no single family (botanical family) has a predominance in the rotation; this ensures that pests do not build up, since pests are family specific also. Higher farm labour and input prices and depleting ground water resources add to their woes.
The current crisis in Indian agriculture is a consequence of many factors – low rise in farm productivity, non remunerative prices for cultivators, price fluctuations. erratic weather conditions affecting harvests, small landholdings, overdependence on subsidies for power and fertilizer, unfavourable trade policies, , constrained markets for their products, restricted access to capital and farm inputs such as fertilizers or seeds ,insecure land ownership limiting farmers’ propensity to invest ,poor food storage facilities resulting in high levels of wastage.. Fragmentation of land holdings and a fall in public investments in rural areas, especially in irrigation facilities have further compounded his woes.
We have opened Indian farmers to global competition and given them access to expensive and promising biotechnology, but not necessarily provided a mechanism that can equip him with higher prices, bank loans, irrigation or insurance against pests and rain. Indeed, one or two crop failures, an unexpected health expense or the marriage of a daughter have become perilous particularly when farming is both risky and unprotected by ay official safety window. which are resistant to bollworm infestation, the cotton farmer’s prime enemy. It says the seeds can reduce the use of pesticides by 25 percent .Bt cotton was touted as an answer to bollworm infestation, the cotton farmer’s prime enemy. But genetic modification has not accelerated increases in crop yields or led to an overall reduction in the use of chemical pesticides.
Once known as white gold because it was such a profitable crop, cotton is no longer a money-making venture in India. The growing sophistication of agricultural methods has made cotton farming more and more expensive over the decades, and the Indian government has gradually moved away from subsidizing farmers’ production. Cotton is more vulnerable to pests than wheat or rice, and farmers are forced to invest heavily in pesticides and fertilizer.
The promotion of Bt cotton since 2006 has increased the capital cost incurred on cotton production exponentially. Though the yield from planting Bt cotton was high initially, it has been declining continuously for the last four to five years It has gone down from up to 300 kg of cotton from less than half a hectare of land to 100 kg.
There is greater value for farmers in forming groups for mutual self help where those growing the same crops come together in organized groups to receive joint training, buy inputs in bulk and start to sell as a single body .Smallholder farmer producer groups are a key component of creating true scale because of the confidence, support and buyer/seller power they provide. This also enables a greater scale of transformation in terms of individuals and communities
The Indian farm community is at a crossroads. .Eccentric weather patterns and a dearth of government aid have seen the agrarian crisis swell since the 1990s, forcing farmers to search for other modes of income. While the rural areas are being emptied, moving the population into the urban areas is leading to the collapse of the cities. It is expected that by 2035, roughly 50 percent of India’s population will be urban based. The population shift from rural areas along with prime farmland being diverted for non-agriculture purposes will create a food deficit thereby leading to an unforeseen crisis on the food security front While farmers, particularly those with small parcels of land ,continue to work out strategies to keep their age old bond with their land alive the new generation finds farming unsustainable for their new living style .This is the key reason of their influx to cities despite the hard truth that the hopes for a new utopia in their new word is just a mirage
We need to arrest this influx and inject the rural economy with new skill development programmes to generate local employment .That is the right way of saving both the cities and villages –in a way the civilization itself.