20 May
Posted by Tarun as Current Affairs, India, Politics, Social Issues
This week I was planning to write on this latest reservation controversy in India created by Indian politicians. Before I start anything I got following words in e-mail by my friend D. So I just pasted as it is for blog readers. Once you read this, don’t forget to comment your stake for reservation?
Many politicians in India are propagating the theory that “if a developed country like America can have Affirmative actions, why India cannot have the reservation policy”.
While the objectives of India’s reservation policy might be similar in spirit to the USA’s affirmative action programmes, this rhetoric propagated by Indian politicians was bugging me for past several days, untill I found this article by Maya Mirchandani which tells exact difference between the two systems:
So while reserving seats in medical colleges, engineering colleges, government jobs, and parliament may be well intentioned, they are no good without complementary resources. For the millions who might be eligible for these seats, basic primary education is still a pipe dream. Poorly run government schools and the struggle to make ends meet mean that the number of school going children in poorer and oppressed communities has continued to remain below targets. So what good is it to know there’s a place reserved for you in medical school when you are not likely to finish high school?
Isn’t that the question the government should be asking itself? Isn’t that what everyone should be taking to the streets for? It would be a far better use of everyone’s resources if Arjun Singh and the rest of the UPA government put the same resources to work to improve the lot of government schools, ensure that every village, every town has a school system that is committed to providing the education that’s necessary for students to make it to that seat that’s being kept for them in university.
There is no doubt that in a society plagued at every level by social and economic injustice, affirmative action of some kind seems a logical solution - to create the level playing field that we all desire. The state must intervene to ensure its creation, but first and foremost by providing everyone a chance at the same kind of primary education facilities.
As much as it’s in the larger interest of all of us more “privileged” to help the state along in its task, it’s equally the state’s responsibility to do so in a way where hard work and merit, no matter what caste or class, is not dismissed out of hand just for the sake of meeting its quota goals. “
2 Responses
Keshi
May 21st, 2006 at 9:27 pm
1Whatever that policy is, whoever it tries to copy from, it sucks….reservation should be based on merits…not on caste/creed/race/fin stat etc..
Keshi.
Alka
May 29th, 2006 at 9:10 am
2Please publish THIS at your blog.
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