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Civil Society - July 2020

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Civil Society

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Lockdown stories around us are invariably of the hard-luck variety. It has been a punishing time for everyone, especially so for those whose cheap labour fuels economic growth. Yet, if the general picture is one of gloom and doom, of joblessness and broken dreams, there have also been instances of people beating back the lockdown with extraordinary resilience and inventiveness. Our cover story this month is on farmers in a corner in Karnataka who succeeded in getting their fruits and vegetables to buyers despite the heavy odds stacked against them. They were greatly helped, even inspired, by energetic district officials. It is an example of how an administration can come to the assistance of people through creative collaborations. If local officials hadn’t been so accessible and supportive, the farmers almost certainly wouldn’t have been able to rise above their circumstances. In our opening interview, Narendranath Damodaran of PRADAN makes the point that farmers need predictable linkages with markets. Nikhil Dey of the MKSS discusses the newfound status of MGNREGA in the initiatives of the present government, which till very recently regarded it as an unwanted legacy of the UPA government. With people rushing back to their villages in large numbers, will MGNREGA be the solution that the government has cracked it up to be? To get an idea of how MGNREGA is doing in a village and what migrant workers who return are experiencing, we spoke to Sanjay Sahni, a campaigner for MGNREGA in Ratnauli village in the district of Muzaffarpur in Bihar. We have been profiling NGOs and their work during the lockdown. Often they have been the only support for people in distress. In this issue we feature the Pardada Pardadi Educational Society, an NGO we have come to have high regard for. As could be expected, it has been making a significant contribution in these troubled times.

Civil Society Description:

Civil Society is an independent magazine published from New Delhi.

It was launched in September 2003 to tell stories of change from across the chaotic landscape of post-reforms India.

A newly growing economy has winners and losers — as journalists we wanted to tell the stories of those who were making it and as well as those who were getting left behind.

In the past 15 years, Civil Society has come to be known for its refreshing style of covering people, events and trends. We are credited with redefining mainstream concerns in the Indian media.

Civil Society's reportage has brought to national attention individuals and groups who play leadership roles and drive change but get overlooked. We have shown that there is an India that exists beyond prime time.

This has been possible because we moved out of big media jobs to create a small and efficient enterprise through which journalists could look for stories where it may not be fashionable to look for them.

A democracy thrives on credible information. Small media entities, freed up from the demands of big capital, allow journalists to innovate and explore new frontiers. A large and complex country like India needs more alternative voices.

Started with just Rs 4 lakhs (about $6,000) of personal savings, one small car and a single computer, Civil Society has shown that it is possible for professional journalists with skills and clear values to build influential enterprises in the media.

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