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Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz- 2018 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 122]

UPSC Quiz- 2018 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 122] Archives Q.1) Consider the following statements about Appointments Committee of the Cabinet It is chaired by the Prime Minister of India Minister of Home Affairs and Minister in-charge of the concerned Ministry is part of the committee Select the correct statements 1 Only 2 Only Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.2) Consider the following statements about Battle of Haifa It is considered as one of the bravely-contested battles of World War II 15th (Imperial Service) Cavalry Brigade helped liberate Haifa from the clutches of the Turkish-German forces Select the correct statements 1 Only 2 Only Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.3) In the context of the development in Bioinformatics, the term 'Transcriptome' refers to A range of enzymes used in genome editing The full range of mRNA molecules expressed by an organism The description of the mechanism of gene expression A mechanism of genetic mutations taking place in cells Q.4) Which one of the following brings out the publication called "Energy Statistics" from time to time? Central Power Research Institute Planning Commission Power Finance Corporation Ltd Central Statistical Organization Q.5) MCA-21 is a major initiative taken up by the Government of India in which one of the following areas? Foreign direct investment in India Attracting international tourists E-governance Modernization of airports To Download the Solution – Click here All the Best  IASbaba

AIR

All India Radio (AIR) : National Nutrition Mission

National Nutrition Mission ARCHIVES Search 2nd December here http://www.newsonair.com/Main_Audio_Bulletins_Search.aspx TOPIC: General Studies 2 Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes; The cabinet has approved the National Nutrition Mission with a three year budget of Rs.9046.17 crore commencing from 2017-18, to provide lifeline to large number of malnourished children in India. Malnourishment is one of the gravest problems in India where the proportion of malnourished children in India is even higher than sub-Saharan countries of Africa. In India, the nutrition problem is in the younger age group from 0-6 years’ group, adolescent girls and lactating mothers. The aim is to try to reduce the level of stunting, under-nutrition problem, anemia problem and low birth weight problem in these groups. This has to be reduced by atleast 2-3% per annum. For this, the National Nutrition Mission has been introduced. The major highlight of the mission is that this will have an apex body which will monitor, supervise and fix the target and guide the nutrition related intervention across all the ministries. At present, many ministries are taking care of this problem- Women and Child ministry, Ministry of Health, Ministry of Sanitation. Now the idea is to coordinate the activity of all the ministries and various ongoing schemes. The proposal consists of mapping of various Schemes contributing towards addressing malnutrition introducing a very robust convergence mechanism ICT based Real Time Monitoring system incentivizing States/UTs for meeting the targets- There will be competition between different states to achieve the targets faster. incentivizing Anganwadi Workers (AWWs) for using IT based tools- Also involve anganwadi workers as they implement the scheme. They should also be incentivized when they fulfill the target. eliminating registers used by AWWs introducing measurement of height of children at the Anganwadi Centres (AWCs) Social Audits setting-up Nutrition Resource Centres, involving masses through Jan Andolan for their participation on nutrition through various activities, among others. A change from the past Main thrust is on use of ICT tools to monitor the real time basis implementation of the programme. Now there will be synergy of schemes, achievements of targets and real time monitoring by using the IT tools. Till now it was operated through manual registers with anganwadi workers. Now they will use smart phones, laptops and computers to register the data. The idea is to coordinate and monitor the schemes on IT basis and supervise in real time and compile reports. The move will be a deviation from the old practice of maintaining registers and will also help to reduce pilferage. Social audit of impact of all these schemes on the masses. Except for MGNREGA, no other scheme has social audit. The government has brought in transparency, accountability through social audit. When there will be constant monitoring, there will be compliances to the standards as well as work done. Involving the masses through the jan andolan is the idea. Creating IEC materials like posters, videos, doing street plays etc. will involve the public as well as create environment for awareness. How is it different from other schemes? Earlier, there were many schemes but they were not synergized. Now the government has decided to synergize them and goal is to benefit 10 crore people. Initially 315 districts where problem of malnutrition is very high have been identified and catered till 2018, in 2019, 235 districts will be targeted and in 2020, remaining 90 districts will be covered. For this, the government has a dedicated budget of 9046 crore for which, 50% will be contributed by government (60:40 between Centre and States/UTs, 90:10 for NER and Himalayan States and 100% for UTs without legislature) and 50% by World Bank. Impact of malnutrition The under nutritious child has many weaknesses which may result into high infant mortality. They have stunted growth which leads to repeated infection and lead to poor child performance at the school level, economic burden at the family level as well as total national productivity. Way forward Food and medicines is provided through anganwadi workers and ASHA workers but it is a challenge to maintain the quality of it though. For this, the government has involved the sector specific NGOs and other organizations and industries to produce low cost and high quality drugs and involved them in further distribution. For school going children there is mid-day scheme where the child should get minimum 300 calorie per day. Another medium to tackle malnourishment is distribution of iron tablets, distribution of Vitamin A and Vitamin D capsule, doing medical examination of those groups, calorie deficiency and giving best possible care. These are different mechanism by which these groups can be helped. Soon, every child will have Aadhar linkage so that benefit goes to the targeted child only and it is monitored. Conclusion Money will continue for ICDS and other schemes will also continue. There is no dearth of schemes but lack of creating synergy and linking the schemes with each other to achieve common goal. NNM through robust convergence mechanism and other components would strive to create the synergy. ICDS- Integrated Child Development Scheme is one of the oldest schemes of Government of India dealing with issue of malnutrition. Other schemes are propagated for lactating mothers and adolescent girls. They are going on for long period of time and hence there has been improvement in the cases of reduction of malnourishment and stunted children. However, the pace has not been high. Also read- National Nutrition Strategy which provides a deep look through India’s nutritional status and measures to fight against low nutritional levels. Connecting the dots: What is national nutrition mission and how can the aim of Kuposhan Mukt Bharat be achieved? Comment.

PIB

IASbaba PIB Weekly : Press Information Bureau – 8th Jan to 12th Jan, 2018

IASbaba Press Information Bureau 8th to 12th January, 2018 ARCHIVES GS-2 Report card on BharatNet Phase 1 (Topic:  Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation) Achievement: Government has achieved a significant milestone under the BharatNet by completing Phase-1 of the project by connecting over one lakh Gram Panchayats (GP) across the country with high speed optical fibre network as per the declared deadline. BharatNet network built under Phase 1 envisages: Delivery of high-speed broadband services in over 2.5 lakh villages benefitting more than 200 million rural Indians. BharatNet: World’s largest rural broadband project created on the mantra of Create, Collaborate and Conquer Aims to provide affordable broadband services to citizens and institutions in rural and remote areas, in partnership with States and the private sector. BharatNet infrastructure is expected to catalyse digital delivery of services for the rural poor – viz. health, education, livelihood, skills, e-agriculture and e-commerce. The project achieved a global record of laying of 800 kilometres of optical fibre per day Must Read: Link 1 + Link 2 Companies (Amendment) Act, 2017 (Topic: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation) Section 53 of the Companies Act, 2013 prohibited issuance of shares at a discount. The Amendment Act now allows companies to issue shares at a discount to its creditors when its debt is converted into shares in pursuance of any statutory resolution plan such as resolution plan under the Code or debt restructuring scheme. Section 197 of the Companies Act, 2013 required approval of the company in a general meeting for payment of managerial remuneration in excess of 11 percent of the net profits. The Amendment Act now requires that where a company has defaulted in payment of dues to any bank or public financial institution or non-convertible debenture holders or any other secured creditor, the prior approval of the bank or public financial institution concerned or the non-convertible debenture holders or other secured creditor, as the case may be, for such payment of managerial remuneration shall be obtained by the company before obtaining the approval in the general meeting. Section 247 of the Companies Act, 2013 prohibited a registered valuer from undertaking valuation of any assets in which he has a direct or indirect interest or becomes so interested at any time during or after the valuation of assets. The Amendment Act now prohibits a registered valuer from undertaking valuation of any asset in which he has direct or indirect interest or becomes so interested at any time during three years prior to his appointment as valuer or three years after valuation of assets was conducted by him. Cabinet approves MoU between India and Canada for cooperation in the field of Science & Technology: The MoU will provide a mechanism and help to foster scientific cooperation between R&D and academic institutions of India and Canada. Salient features: An innovative model of R&D cooperation between India and Canada will be implemented under a MoU concluded by the Department of Science and Technology with the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada. Under this MoU, the India-Canada Centre for Innovative Multidisciplinary Partnership to Accelerate Community Transformation and Sustainability (IC-IMPACTS) programme will be supported to promote India-Canada multidisciplinary research partnerships. The R&D projects will be aimed at accelerating social transformation by providing solutions through application of science and technology. The participants will include researchers from scientific organizations, academia and R&D laboratories from India and Canada. Identified areas of mutual cooperation include safe and sustainable infrastructure and integrated water management. This will help to develop institutional networking and support the establishment of connections between scientific organizations, scientists and specialists of India and Canada. Amendments in FDI policy 100% FDI under automatic route for Single Brand Retail Trading 100% FDI under automatic route in Construction Development Foreign airlines allowed to invest up to 49% under approval route in Air India FIIs/FPIs allowed to invest in Power Exchanges through primary market Definition of ‘medical devices’ amended in the FDI Policy Continuation of Members of Parliament Local Area Development Scheme beyond 12th Plan MPLAD Scheme: Ongoing Central Sector Scheme which was launched in 1993-94 - The Scheme enables the Members of Parliament to recommend works for creation of durable community assets based on locally felt needs to be taken up in their constituencies in the area of national priorities namely drinking water, education, public health, sanitation, roads etc. The MPLAD Scheme has resulted into creation of various durable community assets which have impacted the social, cultural and economic life of the local communities in one way or the other. The entire population across the country stands to benefit through creation of durable assets of locally felt needs, namely drinking water, education, public health, sanitation and roads etc., under MPLAD Scheme. Please note: Aanchal Thakur: Won India’s first international medal in skiing at FIS International Skiing Competition in Turkey Matunga Railway Station in Mumbai Division of Central Railway enters Limca Book of Records 2018 for posting all women staff on the station Ministry of Railway launches Smart Freight Operation Optimisation & Real Time Information (SFOORTI) Application: Smart Freight Operation Optimisation & Real Time Information (SFOORTI) Pradhan Mantri Har Ghar Sahaj Bijli Yojana (SAUBHAGYA) has been launched by Government of India with the objective of achieving universal household electrification by providing last mile connectivity to all household in rural and urban areas ISRO’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle successfully launches 31 satellites in a single flight. So far, PSLV has successfully launched 51 Indian satellites and 237 customer satellites from abroad.

Motivational Articles

Creative Guidance – Honesty is still the best policy – Inspirational & Educative Articles

Honesty is still the best policy: Honesty is the best policy – When was the last time you reflected on this phrase? It was probably during your moral science exam in school. We of course didn’t take moral science seriously. In fact we had to call morality a science just so that it can be included in our school curriculum. There was no pass or fail in moral science; all we had to do was get a grade. There comes a time in everybody’s life when they realize that, probably moral science was the most important subject in their school curriculum. Honesty is still the best policy. If there is any challenge in understanding life and dealing with our daily challenges, it is only because we have forgotten the importance of being honest. Honesty is not an outward attitude you add on to your personality when required and take it off when not needed; honesty is the very foundation of who you are. Honesty is not a behavior; it is a science of measuring yourself against the world. If you are not honest, then you lose all possibilities of learning and growing. Why is it so important to be honest? The most important reason is because there is no other communication channel that connects you to yourself. If you are not honest, you sever all connections with your personality. If you are not honest, you lose track of your life and everything that is happening in it. Without honesty you are just a collection of experiences that have no meaning and purpose. Honesty is necessary to evaluate your progress; it is necessary to make the changes that will steer your life in the right direction; it is necessary to gain acceptance of people around you; it is necessary for managing all relationships; it is necessary to live a good and meaningful life. The only problem with the idea of honesty is that we reflect least on it when we need it the most. Discarded as a foolish trait to passionately endorse all the time, we let go of this most precious quality. We get addicted to quick fix solutions and forget that on the longer run it is only honesty that wins the race. A dishonest person can fool people and attain to momentary success, but eventually he will lose everything meaningful. Honesty is not about speaking truth all the time; it is a quality of having honest and pure intentions for oneself and others. Honesty does not reside in the words we speak; it reflects in our deeds and actions. Honesty is still the best policy; it is still the law that governs all human actions and interactions. If there is only one moral quality you are allowed to develop, let it be the art of being honest. “The articles are a copyright of The Ahamo Movement and IASBABA.”

AIR

All India Radio (AIR) : Balance between Legislature, Executive and Judiciary

Balance between Legislature, Executive and Judiciary ARCHIVES Search 27th November here http://www.newsonair.com/Main_Audio_Bulletins_Search.aspx TOPIC: General Studies 2 Separation of powers between various organs dispute redressal mechanisms and institutions. Old but dynamic The issue of question of fine balance between the 3 organs of the states legislature, executive and the judiciary has been discussed from time to time as it always a live issue. The Constitution has maintained a certain fine balance in the structure to maintain the structural harmony and functional harmony. If there is slight deviation in this balance then the functional harmony of the state will get disrupted. Present context of the perceiving imbalances The organ of the states stepping into the domain of another organ happens at different times. Rejection of the NJAC bill or act by the apex court. Question of selection of judges by a collegium of judges has been an issue on which there are different opinions of legislature, executive and judiciary. Judiciary wants primacy or rather absolute right over selection of judges that is the real bone of contention. SC deciding to levy taxes on polluting vehicles in Delhi. Some of the steps taken by the judiciary in Delhi when the pollution was rising alarmingly affecting the health of the people have been effective. They ordered introduction of gas as a fuel which helped bring down the pollution level. But the point will arise whether it was duty or function of the judiciary. Essentially it is executive job for the government to decide but unfortunately the government did not do anything about it so the judiciary stepped into this. A few years ago, there was unwarranted judicial overreach when the entire functioning of the assembly was set by the Supreme Court which laid down its direction as to how the assembly should conduct its proceeding and how the voting should be done in the assembly and so on. This was repeated twice or thrice during the past many years. This is something that the judiciary cannot do under the Constitution as it is entirely for the legislature to conduct this proceedings. Thus, before analyzing right or wrong of the particular issue, it is important to look at the context of decision made. If a particular organ fails in discharging its legitimate duty and responsibility towards the people, another organs steps in and tries to correct it. Strict work areas not possible Separation of power that has been a subject which is been discussed many times by the judiciary and the legal experts. There is separation of powers under the Constitution but not a rigid system of separation of powers. Judiciary can review law made by in the legislature and the executive also has legislative power under article 123 where the President can promulgate ordinance which is a law which has a same effect as act of Parliament so here the executive also has power to legislate, the judiciary can come into the area of legislature there is something called Judge made law where the judges are also empowered to make law in the sense that they can interpret the law when they can feel the gap somewhere. There is some kind of flexibility built into the system here. The Constitution may not want one organ to step into the rein of another organ and disrupt the whole functional balance as well as structural harmony. But then Indian society is evolving and norms are changing the paradise change and all kinds of situation arise where this kind of encroachment on by one organ of the stage on another territory can happen. Judiciary can enter only when the fundamental right of the citizen is injured, is violated and they can certainly decide what is right and what is wrong but otherwise they cannot step into. Similarly, the executive of the day has to do a certain things in their line of duty and as their responsibility and if they fail in deciding that responsibility there cannot be vacuum so another organ will slip in. Importance of judicial review Essentially the conflict appears to be between the judiciary on one side and the legislature on the other side. So far as the conflict between the legislature and the judiciary is concerned, it is related to who makes laws and who reviews its validity. In England, the judiciary cannot review a law made by Parliament as Parliament is supreme over there, but the Indian constitution provides for judicial review and judicial review has been termed as part of the basic structure. So judicial review occupy an important procession in a whole scheme of things. Conclusion The balance among the legislature, judiciary and the executive has been the backbone of India’s constitution. Because of this balance, the nation was able to defeat the internal emergency imposed from 1975-77. During emergency the citizen had no fundamental rights but later the Supreme Court corrected it. So this kind of self-correction is a positive thing about the system. Supreme Court verdict from Indira Nehru Gandhi vs Raj Narayan case, 1975, between Golaknath vs State of Punjab case in 1967 specifies the importance and the need to maintain separation of powers between the 3 organs of the state. There is a need to ensure the balance between the judiciary, legislature and executive so that they work together and strive towards fulfilling the aspirations of the people. Connecting the dots: Separation of powers is not a possibility in Indian governance.

IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs [Prelims + Mains Focus] - 13th January 2018

IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs (Prelims + Mains Focus)- 13th January 2018 Archives (PRELIMS FOCUS) Caste and gender distribution in teaching profession Part of: Mains GS Paper I, II- Social issues, Issues related to education Key pointers: The recently released All-India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) for the year 2016-17 reveals that- At 4.9%, Muslim representation among teachers in higher educational institutions in India is much lower than the community’s proportion in India’s population (14.2%). The representation of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes is also lower than the populations of the two categories. The representation of SCs is at 8.3% of the total number of teachers in higher educational institutions, ST representation is 2.2%. The Scheduled Castes account for 16.6% of India’s population and STs about 8.6%. Gender distribution in the teaching profession at the higher education level: Bihar comes across as having a hugely skewed gender ratio, with 75.3% male teachers and just 24.7% female teachers. Jharkhand also shows an excess of male teachers, with the ratio at 60:40. A few states Kerala, Punjab, Chandigarh, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Delhi and Goa have more female teachers than male teachers. Reason behind: One reason for the skew in representation may be variable access to higher education – a must for teaching at these levels. The data reveal that SC, ST and OBC reservations have still not brought about representational parity. All-India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) is done by the Ministry of Human Resource Development.  Article link: Click here Wealth Index prepared by NFHS-4  Part of: Mains GS Paper II- Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Background: The National Family and Health Survey (NFHS-4) was conducted among more than 6 lakh households in 2015-16. Its large sample size and the fact that it was carried out just a couple of years ago, makes it an extremely useful source of information in analysing India’s socio-economic landscape. NFHS-4 has prepared a wealth index. Wealth index: The index has been prepared on the basis of scores on ownership of consumer goods such as television and bicycles, and household characteristics such as availability of clean drinking water. This information has been used to classify all households into wealth quintiles. Those in the lowest quintile would the poorest 20%, while those in the top would be the richest 20% of the lot. The report then uses these quintile scores to classify population for states, religious and caste groups and rural-urban areas into each quintile. Findings: The report shows that poverty is predominantly a rural phenomenon in India. 29% of rural India belongs to the bottom quintile, while the figure is just 3.3% for urban India. Among major states, people in Delhi and Punjab are the richest with more than 60% of their households in the top wealth quintile. Bihar is the poorest with more than half of the households in the bottom wealth quintile. Jains are the richest religious community, with more than 70% of their population in the top quintile. There isn’t much difference between Hindus and Muslims and they are very close to the national distribution of wealth. Upper castes have almost double the share of households in the top quintile compared to any other caste group. Scheduled Tribes are the worst-off section in terms of wealth. NFHS-4 statistics on disparity in wealth-holdings across various categories tell us that there cannot be a one size fits all policy if the government is serious about addressing this problem. Article link: Click here (PRELIMS+MAINS FOCUS) NATIONAL/ECONOMY TOPIC: General Studies 2: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. General Studies 3: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment. Making Indian labour globally competitive Background: The integration of developing economies such as China and India into the global economy in the last few decades has helped lift millions out of poverty. The introduction of their labour forces into the global economy increased growth and income in these economies which also resulted in a decline in global inequality. Second wave of change in the global labour market: The World Bank’s latest “Global Economic Prospects” report shows that the second wave of change in the global labour market will play out over the next two decades, with developing economies contributing to all of the addition in the global skilled labour force, as the number of skilled workers in advanced economies is expected to decline. The rising level of skill and education in developing economies will also lift potential global growth and continue to reduce global inequality. Introduction: The global skilled workforce is likely to increase from 1.66 billion workers in 2011 to 2.16 billion by 2040. Skilled workers have been defined as those having at least nine years of education. Since improvement in the level of education and skill tends to increase income, rising income in the developing world will lead to a reduction in inequality. The global Gini coefficient is estimated to decline from 65.8 in 2012 to 62.6 by 2030. Indian context: The way things progress in India, to a large extent, will determine how fast income convergence happens and the level of global inequality declines. The World Bank in this context notes: “…fast-growing EMDEs (emerging market and developing economies) with a large number of poor, such as India, which accounts for 28 percent of the world’s poor in 2013, will continue to contribute to the reduction of global inequality.” Benefiting from the gains: The next wave of gains will depend on how well India adjusts to the changing economic and technological environment. India will need to make adjustments to be able to take advantage of a potential change in the composition of the global labour force. Policymakers will need to work on different levels to be able to create a competitive labour force and make India benefit from the emerging global situation. India urgently needs to focus on education and skill development. The “Annual State of Education Report” periodically shows the depressing state of education in Indian schools. Despite several initiatives by the government, outcomes in the area of skill development have also not been as desired. One way of improving outcomes could be better use of technology in education. India needs rapid improvement from primary to tertiary education to be able to compete in the global market. The changing technological landscape also means that the workforce should be in a position to make quick adjustments. The World Bank in its analysis assumes that additional workers will get employed . This will be a big challenge for India. It has not been able to create enough employment opportunities for people moving out of agriculture. The basic reason for this is India has not capitalized on labour-intensive manufacturing. India’s competitive advantage in some of the labour-intensive sectors has actually declined in recent years. The legal and regulatory requirements in markets like land and labour make it difficult for firms to grow and take advantage of economies of scale. To be able to absorb its rising workforce, India needs to remove impediments in the manufacturing sector. Even though inequality at the global level declined in recent decades, it has gone up in advanced economies as the national income share of wages came down. This has resulted in a political backlash. Therefore, there is a lingering risk of protectionism. India will need to protect its interest in such an environment and look for opportunities to increase trade at both bilateral and multilateral forums. Also, adequate attention should be paid to currency management in the world of volatile capital flows. Exports are an important driver of growth and job creation. It will be difficult to grow at a faster pace without the backing of strong exports.  Conclusion: A skilled labour force along with a focus on manufacturing and exports will help India grow at a faster rate in the medium to long run. An increasing number of skilled workers not only raises the potential growth but also reduces inequality within the country by reducing the skill premium. Connecting the dots: An increasing number of skilled workers not only raises the potential growth but also reduces inequality within the country. Discuss. Given the importance of skilled labour, enumerate ways of making Indian labour competitive. NATIONAL TOPIC: General Studies 2: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes; mechanisms, laws, institutions and bodies constituted for the protection and betterment of these vulnerable sections Individual rights versus innovation  Introduction: A committee headed by Justice B.N. Srikrishna, a former Supreme Court judge, has been tasked with making recommendations and drafting a data protection law. The rationale of the committee is “to harness the benefits of the digital economy and mitigate the harms consequent to it”. Since technologies such as Big Data, the Internet of Things, and Artificial Intelligence are here to stay and hold out the promise of welfare and innovation, India will have to develop a data protection law. A white paper has been published by the committee, this gives reason for concern. Concern: The broader framing of the document proceeds from a premise of weighing the scales between individual rights and technological innovation. The committee says that we need data protection law to ensure a balance between innovation and privacy. This framing of a trade-off between the demands of technological innovation and individual rights is a terrible bargain for our future. It presumes to hold both fundamental rights and innovation as somewhat equal, or at the very least as competing values. This appears contrary to the principles of individual liberty. Way ahead: A data protection law should be guided by following three: The right to privacy verdict given by Supreme court in the Puttaswamy case. Nine privacy principles proposed by Justice A.P. Shah Committee. The data breach alleged with Aadhaar system in place.  The right to privacy judgement: The judgment asserts that the right to privacy exists as a natural right inherent in all fundamental rights of the Constitution. At the root of this is the liberty of the individual that finds expression through concepts such as autonomy and dignity — choice and freedom. Privacy has positive and negative features, where it restrains “an intrusion upon the life and personal liberty of a citizen”, and also requires “an obligation on the state to take all necessary measures to protect the privacy of the individual”. The privacy protections that limit state intrusion and data protection laws should shield individuals rather than commercial interests or technological innovation. By avoiding a binary bargain between the benefits of rights and technology, a sound legislation would further innovation as a social goal that serves human needs. It would make big data subject to greater legality, the Internet of Things best suited to the Internet of people, and artificial intelligence subject to natural rights. Justice A.P. Shah Committee: The committee proposed nine privacy principles acting on a “fundamental philosophy” of “ensuring that the privacy of the data subject is guaranteed”. Principle of Notice: A data controller should notify all individuals of its information practices before collecting information from them. Principle of Choice and Consent: Individuals divulging information must have a choice in the matter. No collection or processing of personal data should take place without consent, with the exception of authorized agencies. Principle of Collection Limitation: A data controller should collect only as much information as is directly necessary for the purposes identified. Principle of Purpose Limitation: The collection or processing of information be restricted to only as much information as is adequate and relevant. Principle of Access and Correction: Data subjects should have access to the data held about them, the ability to seek corrections, amendment, or deletion of such data in case of inaccuracy. Principle of Disclosure of Information: The data subject (person whose information is taken) has the right to privacy in case their personal information is disclosed to a third party. Principle of Security: A data controller to ensure the security of the collected personal information by ‘reasonable security standards’ to protect from reasonably foreseeable risks. Principle of Openness: A data controller to make public all the information it can about the practices, procedures, policies and systems that it implements. Principle of Accountability: This principle pins accountability on the data controller to comply with measures that fulfil the other eight principles. Data protection protecting individuals and not about protecting innovation, state interests for welfare objectives, or commercial interests of technologists and corporations. Recent instances of data breach: The Aadhaar project, which aims to usher a data-driven revolution in the private sector and at the same time act as a state policy panacea, has become a topic of public concern. Repeated press reports indicate continuing data breaches, exclusion and theft of benefits, lack of legal remedies and the prospect of profiling and surveillance. Conclusion: To forge an understanding, a fundamental acknowledgement has to be that technology is a means, and not the end in itself. It must exist and work within the framework of the rule of law. We need to honour constitutionalism, privileging individual rights over innovation. Data protection legislation should be about protecting people, not innovation. Connecting the dots: A data protection legislation should be about protecting people, not innovation. Analyse. MUST READ Judiciary in turmoil The Hindu The duty of the young Indian Express Worrisome rift Business Line Bright hopes for India-Israel relations Business Line

IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs [Prelims + Mains Focus] - 12th January 2018

IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs (Prelims + Mains Focus)- 12th January 2018 Archives (PRELIMS+MAINS FOCUS) Negative social attitudes Part of: Mains GS Paper I- Social Issues Key pointers: A new survey on social attitudes in the country indicates that close to two-thirds of the population in rural Rajasthan and rural Uttar Pradesh still practice untouchability and almost half the population in the same area is also opposed to Dalit and non-Dalit Hindu inter-marriages. Despite decades-old-laws criminalising untouchability, it appears to be practised more by women. The survey also has results on significant attitudes towards women. Nearly half the persons interviewed disapproved of women working outside homes, indicating that social stigma for working women is still high. (Female participation in the labour force at 27 per cent by the International LabourOrganisation (ILO) placed India at a rank lower than 170 among 188 countries). About the survey: The survey, Social Attitude Research, India (SARI), which was conducted through representative phone surveys in 2016 in Delhi, Mumbai, Rajasthan and UP, focusses on discrimination against Dalits and women. Conducted by the University of Texas, the Research Institute for Compassionate Economics, and Jawaharlal Nehru University, the survey sheds light on “explicit prejudice”. Article link: Click here Two-tier security process for Aadhaar Part of: Mains GS Paper II- Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Key pointers: The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) has rolled out a new two-tier security process that will come into effect from June 1. This has been done in the wake of a report of an alleged breach of the Aadhaar database. The security process aims at eliminating the need to share and store Aadhaar numbers. The UIDAI has introduced the concept of a virtual ID, which an Aadhaar holder can use in lieu of his/her Aadhaar number at the time of authentication, besides sharing of ‘limited KYC’ with certain agencies. A Virtual ID (VID) will be a temporary 16-digit random number mapped with the Aadhaar number. There can only be one active and valid VID for an Aadhaar number at any given time and it will not be possible to derive the Aadhaar number from VID. The VID authentication will be similar to using Aadhaar numbers. However, since a VID is temporary, agencies will not be able to use it for de-duplication. Only the Aadhaar holder will be able to generate a VID and no other entity. Article link: Click here 100th Satellite launched by PSLV C40 Part of: Mains GS Paper I- Science & Technology Key pointers: The PSLV C40 successfully placed the 100th satellite, Cartosat-2 series, a weather monitoring one into orbit. It also launched 29 more smaller satellites sequentially during a window of two hours of skillfulmanoeuvres. Buoyed by the growing business that Antrix Corporation, the commercial arm of ISRO is attracting for the PSLV, the Government recently announced that it will fund the space agency’s efforts to develop an exclusive Small Satellite Launch Vehicle (SSLV). This launcher can cater exclusively to mini and micro satellites. There is growing demand from private sector, research institutions and universities who want to put small payloads into low orbit for space data. India offers cost competitive advantagevis-a-visBig players like Arianespace, US, Russia, ESA etc. through PSLV. The SSLV can emerge more lucrative as ISRO can bring down its launch costs and offer better price to customers, instead of the present piggyback ride on the PSLV, which can then focus on higher payloads. Article link: Click here (MAINS FOCUS) NATIONAL TOPIC: General Studies 2: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health, Education, Human Resources. Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes RTE Act, 2010: Improving implementation Introduction: Free and compulsory education of children in the 6 to 14 age group in India became a fundamental right when, in 2002, Article 21-A was inserted in the 86th Amendment to the Constitution. The enforcing legislation came eight years later, as the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (RTE) Act, 2010, or the RTE Act. There are clauses in the Act which have enormous catalytic potential but that have gone largely untouched and unnoticed. A focus on three of the provisions of the RTE Act can result in an immediate and discernible impact. The three provisions are: Ensuring retention. Pupil-to-Teacher ratio Decentralisation of academic schedules Focusing on retention: The Act envisages that the state, i.e. State governments and panchayats, would aggressively ensure that each child is brought into the schooling system and also “retained” for eight years. Issue: Unfortunately, tracking dropouts and preparing and mainstreaming them into age-appropriate classes has been subsumed into existing scheme activities. Even seven years after its enactment, there are still children on the streets, in fields and in homes. The problem now is more about dropouts than children who were never enrolled. Way out: Strategies to ensure retention need to change from the earlier approach of enrolling the un-enrolled. As children out of the fold of schooling are the most hard to reach, such as girls, the disabled, orphans and those from single parent families, the solutions have to be localised and contextualised. Pupil-teacher ratio(PTR): It is the most critical requirement. But it has got the least public attention. Importance: All other forward-looking provisions of the Act such as continuous assessment, a child learning at her own pace, and ‘no detention’ policy are contingent on a school with an adequate number of teachers. No meaningful teaching-learning is possible unless trained teachers are physically present at school. It is impractical to expect quality education without this. Issue: According to the Education Department’s data, under the Unified District Information System for Education (U-DISE) database 2015-16, 33% of the schools in the country did not have the requisite number of teachers, as prescribed in the RTE norms. RTE Act prescribes a PTR of 40:1 and 35:1 at primary and upper primary level, respectively in every school. The percentage of schools that were PTR-compliant varied from 100% in Lakshadweep to 16.67% in Bihar. Way out: Teacher provisioning should be the first option to fund as no educationally developed country has built up a sound schooling foundation without a professionally-motivated teaching cadre in place. In States with an adequate overall number of teachers, their positioning or posting requires rationalisation according to the number of students. Decentralisation of academic schedules: Another provision in RTE is that the academic calendar will be decided by the local authority, which, for most States and Union Territories, is the panchayat. Importance: This provision recognises the vast cultural and regional diversities within the country such as local festivals, sowing and harvesting seasons, and even natural calamities as a result of which schools do not function academically. It is socially acceptable that priority will be given to such a local event and not schooling. Not all festivals and State holidays declared by the the State headquarters may be locally relevant. So, if panchayats, perhaps at the district level, decide the working days and holidays, this would not only exponentially increase attendance and teaching-learning but also strengthen local panchayats, being closest to the field, to take ownership of their schools. They would be responsible in ensuring the functioning of the prescribed instruction days. The RTE Act is a game-changer in that it establishes that the onus to ensure free and compulsory education lies on the state. However, the ‘compulsory’ and ‘state liability’ part needs to be imbibed by the educational bureaucracy, which is now lacking. Conclusion: A law is as good or as bad as its implementation. It is unfair to blame legislation alone for the sad state of affairs without implementing it in full measure, especially its enabling provisions. Open-minded adoption of the above-mentioned provisions, keeping the child in mind, can go a long way in radically transforming our school education sector. Connecting the dots: Right to Education Act, 2010 can go a long way in transforming our school education sector if all its provisions, especially those related to retention, pupil-to-teacher ratio and decentralised academic schedule, are implemented in true spirit. Discuss. 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MindMaps

IASbaba’s MINDMAP : Issue – Neighbourhood Policy

IASbaba’s MINDMAP : Issue – Neighbourhood Policy Archives NOTE – Instructions to download Mind Maps/Images Right Click on the image and ‘Open in a new tab’ Remove/Delete the resolution part from the URl. Eg. “-1024×869” and Press Enter/Load Again Afterwards the URL will look something like this – “iasbaba.com/…./…/..-IASbaba.jpg” Right Click and Save As/Download (You’ll get the maximum resolution)

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz- 2018 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 121]

UPSC Quiz- 2018 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 121] Archives Q.1) Consider the following statements Article 124 of the Indian Constitution deals with ‘Establishment and Constitution of Supreme Court’ Article 217 of the Indian Constitution deals with the ‘Ancillary powers of Supreme Court’ Select the correct statements 1 Only 2 Only Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.2) ‘Mission Raftaar’ is concerned with which of the following ministries? Ministry of Road Transport and Highways Ministry of Power Ministry of Railways None of the above Q.3) China is bordered with which of the following countries? Uzbekistan North Korea Afghanistan Laos Select the correct statements 1, 2 and 3 2, 3 and 4 1, 3 and 4 1, 2 and 4 Q.4) A redistribution of income in a country can be best brought about through progressive taxation combined with progressive expenditure progressive taxation combined with regressive expenditure regressive taxation combined with regressive expenditure regressive taxation combined with progressive expenditure Q.5) ‘De-notified tribes' refers to tribes which are aboriginals nomadic tribes tribes practising shifting cultivation tribes which were earlier classified as criminal tribes To Download the Solution – Click here All the Best  IASbaba