TOP 5 TAKKAR NEWS OF THE DAY (19th JUNE 2023)

1. UNIFORM CIVIL CODE

TAG: GS 2: POLITY

THE CONTEXT: 22nd Law Commission of India sought the views of religious organisations and the public on the issue of a Uniform Civil Code (UCC).

EXPLANATION:

  • A notice issued by the Commission said those interested and willing may present their views within 30 days.
  • This comes eight months after the Centre told the Supreme Court that the Constitution obligated the State to have a UCC for its citizens, saying that people of different religions and denominations following different property and matrimonial laws was an “affront to the nation’s unity”.
  • Responding to petitions before the Supreme Court for uniformity in laws governing matters of divorce, succession, inheritance, adoption and guardianship, the Centre, in October 2022, had told the apex court that the Constitution obligated the State to have a UCC for its citizens. It had also submitted that the matter would be placed before the 22nd Law Commission.

What did the 21st Law Commission say on the matter?

  • Underlining that the Uniform Civil Code is “neither necessary nor desirable at this stage”, the 21st Law Commission of India, in 2018, argued for reform of family laws of every religion through amendments and codification of certain aspects so as to make them gender-just
  • In its ‘Consultation Paper on Family Law Reforms’, the Law Commission took a stand in favour of “equality ‘within communities’ between men and women” (personal law reform), “rather than ‘equality between’ communities” (UCC).
  • It further noted that “women must be guaranteed their freedom of faith without any compromise on their right to equality” as it would be unfair to make women choose between one or the other.

What is Uniform Civil Code?

  • A UCC would provide for one law for the entire country, applicable to all religious communities, in their personal matters such as marriage, divorce, inheritance, adoption etc.
  • Currently, Indian personal law is fairly complex, with each religion adhering to its own specific laws. Separate laws govern Hindus including Sikhs, Jains and Buddhist, Muslims, Christians, and followers of other religions.
  • The exception to this rule is the state of Goa, where all religions have a common law regarding marriages, divorces, and adoption.

What does the Constitution say about a UCC?

  • Article 44 of the Constitution lays down that the state shall endeavour to secure a UCC for citizens throughout the territory of India.
  • Article 44 is among the Directive Principles of State Policy. Directive Principles are not enforceable by court, but are supposed to inform and guide governance.
  • While Article 44 uses the words “state shall endeavour”, other Articles in the ‘Directive Principles’ chapter use words such as “in particular strive”; “shall in particular direct its policy”; “shall be obligation of the state” etc.
  • Furthermore, the phrase “by suitable legislation” is absent in Article 44. All this implies that the duty of the state is greater in other directive principles than in Article 44.

Why is there no uniform code for personal law?

  • Article 25 lays down an individual’s fundamental right to religion.
  • Article 26(b) upholds the right of each religious denomination or any section thereof to “manage its own affairs in matters of religion”.
  • Article 29 defines the right to conserve distinctive culture.
  • An individual’s freedom of religion under Article 25 is subject to “public order, health, morality” and other provisions relating to fundamental rights, but a group’s freedom under Article 26 has not been subjected to other fundamental rights.

2. HAWKISH PAUSE

TAG: GS 3: ECONOMY

THE CONTEXT: The Federal Reserve of the United States, the world’s most influential central bank, decided to pause raising interest rates. While it is a pause, many are calling it a hawkish one a characterisation used for India’s RBI as well.

EXPLANATION:

  • Over the past two reviews (in April and June) of monetary policy which essentially involves the RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) tweaking interest rates in such a manner as to contain inflation while promoting growth and employment  the RBI has decided to “pause” raising interest rates.
  • In any policy review, a central bank either raises interest rates or cuts them or decides to maintain the status quo.

What is a “hawkish pause”?

  • Those central banks (or bankers) who have a very low threshold for tolerating variation from the targeted inflation level (or a range), and who keep their eyes peeled for such divergence and immediately swoop in to raise interest rates, are called “Hawks”.
  • “Doves”, on the other hand, favour boosting growth (by keeping the interest rates low) and are far more willing to risk having higher inflation.
  • A hawkish pause then implies that while the central bank has decided to pause raising interest rates, ending a streak of repeated interest rate .
  • Low interest rates, for instance, imply that stock markets will move higher because fresh credit is cheaper than previously imagined.
  • These are the things that make a pause “hawkish”. Essentially, no one should take it for granted that the Fed (or the RBI) have stopped taking the threat of inflation lightly.

3. MIYAWAKI TECHNIQUE

TAG: PRELIMS PERSPECTIVE

THE CONTEXT: Prime Minister during his latest ‘Mann ki baat’ episode spoke about Miyawaki plantation, the Japanese method of creating dense urban forests in a small area. The PM also cited the example of a Kerala-based teacher, Raafi Ramnath, who used the Miyawaki technique to transform a barren land into a mini forest called Vidyavanam by planting 115 varieties of trees.

EXPLANATION:

  • Meanwhile, to fight climate change, curb pollution levels, and increase the green cover of the financial capital, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has been creating Miyawaki forests in several open land parcels of Mumbai.

What is the Miyawaki plantation method?

  • Named after Japanese botanist Akira Miyawaki, this method involves planting two to four different types of indigenous trees within every square metre. In this method, the trees become self-sustaining and they grow to their full length within three years.
  • The methodology was developed in the 1970s, with the basic objective to densify green cover within a small parcel of land.
  • The plants used in the Miyawaki method are mostly self-sustaining and don’t require regular maintenance like manuring and watering.
  • Over the years, this cost effective method has become the go-to solution for the civic body to restore the green cover in a space-starved city like Mumbai.

How is Miyawaki useful?

  • The dense green cover of indigenous trees plays a key role in absorbing the dust particles of the area where the garden has been set up. The plants also help in regulating surface temperature. Some of the common indigenous plants that are used for these forests include Anjan, Amala, Bel, Arjun and Gunj.
  • With several infrastructure projects like real estate metro rail construction in progress in Mumbai over the past few years, it was recorded that the surface temperature in certain pockets of Mumbai has increased. Therefore, to fight this challenge, such forests are being created.
  • These green patches play a major role in regulating the carbon levels of a given area, which may in return help in maintaining a clean year. Also, these forests encourage new biodiversity and an ecosystem is developed around it, which in turn increases the fertility of the soil and regulates surface temperature.

4. KAMALA SOHONIE

TAG: GS 1: HISTORY

THE CONTEXT: On June 18, Google Doodle honours scientist Kamala Sohonie on her 112th birth Anniversary and here is the brief account of how she made CV Raman change his stance on women in science institutions.

EXPLANATION:

  • Kamala Sohonie was the first Indian woman to get a PhD degree in a scientific discipline and went on to win the Rashtrapati Award for her work on Neera, a palm extract that could fight malnutrition among children from tribal communities in India.

Early life of Kamala Sohonie:

  • Kamala Sohonie (nee Bhagvat) was born on June 18, 1911 in Indore, in present-day Madhya Pradesh.
  • Her father, Narayanarao Bhagvat, and his brother Madhavrao Bhagvat were both chemists who had studied at the Tata Institute of Sciences, now Bengaluru’s Indian Institute of Science (IISc).
  • Following in their footsteps, Kamala graduated in 1933 with a BSc degree in Chemistry (principal) and Physics (subsidiary) from Bombay University, topping the merit list. She then applied for an MSc degree at the IISc, headed by CV Raman where she was rejected.
  • Undeterred, the young Kamala went all the way to Bengaluru to confront Raman.
  • In 1997, at an event to felicitate her at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), She challenged Raman that she would complete the course with distinction, and finally, he allowed her in, imposing several conditions.
  • Sohonie completed her course with distinction and secured admission to Cambridge University, England, in 1936. “This incident forced Raman to change his opinion about women and from that year he admitted a few students every year.

Work at Cambridge and after

  • At Cambridge, Sohonie finished her PhD in merely 14 months, and her thesis was just 40 pages. During her time there, she worked on potatoes and discovered the enzyme ‘Cytochrome C’, a type of protein in the mitochondria which plays an important role in cellular respiration.
  • In 1939, she came back to India to serve her country.
  • She served as head of the Department of Biochemistry at Lady Hardinge College, New Delhi.
  • She then served as Assistant Director of the Nutrition Research Lab, Coonoor, before join the Royal Institute of Science in Mumbai. Here, she studied different food items to identify the nutrients present in them.
  • According to an article on the website of the Indian Institutes of Science Education and Research (IISER), Kolkata, she worked on ‘neera’, a drink made from palm extract on the suggestion of the First Indian President of India, Dr. Rajendra Prasad. Her studies established that ‘neera’ was a good source of Vitamin C along with other vitamins, moreover there are sulfhydryl compounds in Neera that protect vitamins during storage. Realising that this would be a cheap and good supplement for poor tribals, she went to popularise this drink. The introduction of neera in the diet of tribal malnourished children and pregnant women improved their health significantly.
  • She also worked with the administration of the Aarey Milk project to improve the quality of the milk produced.
  • Apart from her academic work, Kamala Sohonie was among the founding members of consumer protection body Consumer Guidance Society.

5. SCIENTIFIC NAMES OF SPECIES

TAG: PRELIMS PERSPECTIVE

THE CONTEXT: In recent years, the field of taxonomy, the science of naming and classifying all living beings, has been witnessing a raging debate whether species with objectionable scientific names should be renamed.

EXPLANATION:

  • In recent years, the field of taxonomy, the science of naming and classifying all living beings, has been witnessing a raging debate whether species with objectionable scientific names should be renamed.
  • Rare insects, exotic flowers and deadly arachnids have been named in honour of people linked to racism and anti-Semitism. Racial slurs have figured in names of flora and fauna. Now, a debate about changing these names is brewing.
  • Although such discussions have always existed, they became mainstream only recently, especially after the emergence of Black Lives Matter (2013-present) in the USA.

What are some of the species with problematic names?

  • The best known example of such a living being is Anophthalmus hitleri. Named after the former German Führer, Adolf Hitler, this rare blind beetle, popularly known as the Hitler beetle, was discovered in 1933 by “Oscar Scheibel, a German amateur entomologist and ardent Hitler fan, and is found in only around 15 caves in central Slovenia. The popularity of the Hitler beetle touched such heights that it became nearly extinct.
  • Another example is the common small-blotched lizard. With the scientific name Uta stansburiana, the reptile, in 1852, was named after Howard Stansbury, who led a famous expedition to study the flora and fauna in the USA’s Utah region and collected this lizard’s type specimens. He was a vocal supporter of and played a key role in a locally-infamous massacre of Timpanogos Native Americans in which more than 100 were killed.
  • The flowering shrub Hibbertia scandens is one more case in point. The plant has the moniker after George Hibbert, an English amateur botanist, who was one of the leading members of the pro-slavery and anti-abolition lobby during the late 1700s.
  • Among the species which have been named after derogatory terms is the Hottentotta tamulus scorpion “colonialists in the 17th century used “Hottentot” as a derogatory term for Indigenous Black people in Africa.
  • One more example is Rauvolfia caffra, commonly known as the quinine tree, which gets its moniker from another offensive term regarded as hate speech against Black communities in South Africa.

How are species given their scientific names?

  • Every species of animal or plant has two scientific names. The first name denotes the genus to which the species belongs. It is a generic name and is always capitalised. The second name identifies the species within the genus and is never capitalised. Both names are italicised.
  • A genus may comprise several closely related species. Thus many large hawks are placed in the genus Buteo. Just as closely related species are placed in the same genus, closely related genera (the plural of “genus”) are grouped into a family. Jaguars, tigers, and house cats all belong to the family Felidae.
  • These names are usually of Latin or Greek origin. Oftentimes, species are named based on their distinctive features.
  • But other times, organisms are named after people who discover them. They are also sometimes named in honour of somebody. These practices, as mentioned before, have been quite controversial in recent times.

Who makes the rules regarding giving scientific names to organisms?

  • Although anybody can propose a name for a type of organism they think hasn’t been formally identified by anyone else, there are certain rules, or nomenclature codes, that they have to follow.
  • A new name is considered to be valid only when it is published in an “openly distributed publication, and it must be accompanied by a detailed description of the specimens the author claims are typical for the group.
  • These nomenclature codes are governed by international bodies such as the International Commission of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) which governs the naming of animals, the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (ICNafp) that sees the naming of plants (including cyanobacteria), and the International Code of Nomenclature of Bacteria (ICNB) that governs the naming of bacteria (including Archaea) and the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) that governs virus names.

Can a species’ offensive scientific name be changed?

  • The International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (ICBN) in its rulebook says, “The only proper reasons for changing a name are either a more profound knowledge of the facts resulting from adequate taxonomic study or the necessity of giving up a nomenclature that is contrary to the rules.”
  • Similarly, as Financial Times reported last week, ICZN recently refused to change problematic names, saying its “commitment to a stable and universal nomenclature remains the priority”.



Ethics Through Current Development (19-06-2023)

  1. You are just one thought away from happiness READ MORE
  2. From ego consciousness to soul consciousness READ MORE
  3. Jallikattu and animal rights READ MORE
  4. A theory of justice READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Geography (19-06-2023)

  1. Biparjoy part of a new trend in Indian cyclones READ MORE
  2. Weather Report: Rains to hit east India midweek, low pressure area may form in Bay of Bengal soon READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Sociology (19-06-2023)

  1. A wandering monk who was a social reformer READ MORE
  2. Rural healthcare: Village family adoption included in MBBS course READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Pub Ad (19-06-2023)

  1. Democracy’s balance between certainty and uncertainty READ MORE
  2. Uniform Civil Code: Time to delegitimise appeasement politics READ MORE
  3. Central Government’s Fiscal Capacity to Support States is Weakening Over Time READ MORE



WSDP Bulletin (19-06-2023)

(Newspapers, PIB and other important sources)

Prelim and Main

  1. Banking on China READ MORE  
  2. What’s the India, U.S. initiative on future tech? READ MORE
  3. Monkeypox outbreaks in Asia-Pacific region READ MORE
  4. Air strikes hit Sudanese capital, killing 17 persons including 5 children READ MORE
  5. Explained | The remarkable endurance of the Y chromosome, ‘master of maleness’  READ MORE
  6. States look for alternatives as Centre restricts FCI purchase READ MORE
  7. Paddy and the price of water READ MORE
  8. Law Commission seeks views on Uniform Civil Code: What is the UCC, the debate around it READ MORE
  9. Google doodle honours Kamala Sohonie: How she made CV Raman change his stance on women in science institutions READ MORE
  10. What is Russia’s problem with the Black Sea grain deal? READ MORE
  11. PM Modi talks of Miyawaki forests in Mann ki Baat: What is this method, also being used in Mumbai READ MORE
  12. New Study Details Serious Effects Long COVID Has on Fatigue, Quality of Life READ MORE

Main Exam

GS Paper- 1

  1. Biparjoy part of a new trend in Indian cyclones READ MORE
  2. Weather Report: Rains to hit east India midweek, low pressure area may form in Bay of Bengal soon READ MORE
  3. A wandering monk who was a social reformer READ MORE

GS Paper- 2

POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

  1. Democracy’s balance between certainty and uncertainty READ MORE
  2. Uniform Civil Code: Time to delegitimise appeasement politics READ MORE
  3. Central Government’s Fiscal Capacity to Support States is Weakening Over Time READ MORE

SOCIAL ISSUES AND SOCIAL JUSTICE

  1. Rural healthcare: Village family adoption included in MBBS course READ MORE

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES

  1. The incredible Delhi-DC embrace READ MORE
  2. Technology spurring growth in India-US ties READ MORE
  3. World Government~I READ MORE
  4. US-India Strategic Convergence: A Bridge Too Far? READ MORE
  5. BRICS Expansion Can Wait, Strengthen the Core First READ MORE

GS Paper- 3

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

  1. The political fictions of economics READ MORE
  2. Freebie culture may garner electoral triumphs, but India can hardly sustain resulting public debt READ MORE
  3. Central Government’s Fiscal Capacity to Support States is Weakening Over Time READ MORE

ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY

  1. Responsibility and the complexities of climate leadership READ MORE
  2. On climate change, wealthy nations must show the way READ MORE

SECURITY

  1. Tri-service integration: Common ACR for top brass a step forward READ MORE

DISASTER MANAGEMENT

  1. Preparedness pays off: On Cyclone Biparjoy READ MORE

GS Paper- 4

ETHICS EXAMPLES AND CASE STUDY

  1. You are just one thought away from happiness READ MORE
  2. From ego consciousness to soul consciousness READ MORE
  3. Jallikattu and animal rights READ MORE
  4. A theory of justice READ MORE

Questions for the MAIN exam

  1. At a time when space technologies are essential for power and prestige in the international system, how far do you think that China’s space presence alters the current power balance? Analyse your view.
  2. India’s Constituent Assembly felt the need to preserve cultural differences in India, the absence of which would lead to the creation of a majoritarian State. In light of the statement, discuss how cultural conservation provided its citizens with social freedom and eliminated the vestiges of India’s colonial past?
  3. The PCA Act, 1960 and the cultural rights of a community under Article 29(1) of the Indian Constitution are conflicting in nature and there is a need to create a balance between these two.
  4. The principles of basic equal liberty and equal opportunity only work when the inequalities are handled to the greatest benefit of the least advantaged members of society. Comment.
  5. There is no immediate need for expanding BRICS rather, a stage for social and economic coalescing among BRICS countries at the institutional, governmental and diplomatic levels should be given. Critically analyse.

QUOTATIONS AND CAPTIONS

  • Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.
  • Today space technologies are essential for power and prestige in the international system.
  • Space may look distant, but today it is one of the necessary tools for proper functioning of civilian, economic and defence sectors.
  • India’s core foreign policy objective has been its economic development and this should hold true even today. For India to remain focused on development it also requires a stable neighbourhood which implies ensuring stable, even if adversarial, relations with China.
  • India’s Constituent Assembly felt the need to preserve cultural differences in India, the absence of which would lead to the creation of a majoritarian State. Cultural conservation provided its citizens with social freedom and eliminated the vestiges of India’s colonial past.
  • Rawls’ Theory of Justice suggests the principles of basic equal liberty and equal opportunity only work when the inequalities are handled to the greatest benefit of the least advantaged members of society.
  • Essence of secularism implies removing any trace of religion from family laws. A uniform civil code (UCC) needs to be implemented at the earliest to keep India’s diverse moral fabric intact.
  • Given the stage of evolution and social and economic coalescing among BRICS countries at the institutional, governmental and diplomatic level, there is no immediate need for expanding BRICS.

50-WORD TALK

  • Outrage over RBI’s guidelines on settlements between banks and loan defaulters is misplaced. The financial aspect of defaults must be separated from their criminal liability. It’s prudent to allow banks to recover what they can, while criminal cases run in parallel. Else, recovery and prosecution will both take costly years.
  • The Law Commission’s public consultations on the contentious UCC is good, but all of India cannot have one law. Diversity of faith-based practices will continue. So, like triple talaq, India can pick what is regressive, irrelevant and unfair to women in each faith—like polygamy, and age of marriage—and bring reforms.
  • The Delhi Police’s decision to seek cancellation of the case against Brij Bhushan Singh for sexually harassing a minor must be subjected to very careful judicial scrutiny. The teenager and her family have given multiple contradictory statements. The criminal justice system must ensure powerful perpetrators cannot intimidate or influence victims.

Things to Remember:

  • For prelims-related news try to understand the context of the news and relate with its concepts so that it will be easier for you to answer (or eliminate) from given options.
  • Whenever any international place will be in news, you should do map work (marking those areas in maps and exploring other geographical locations nearby including mountains, rivers, etc. same applies to the national places.)
  • For economy-related news (banking, agriculture, etc.) you should focus on terms and how these are related to various economic aspects, for example, if inflation has been mentioned, try to relate with prevailing price rises, shortage of essential supplies, banking rates, etc.
  • For main exam-related topics, you should focus on the various dimensions of the given topic, the most important topics which occur frequently and are important from the mains point of view will be covered in ED.
  • Try to use the given content in your answer. Regular use of this content will bring more enrichment to your writing.



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