History and Origins
The history of the Indira Gandhi Technological and Medical
Sciences University (IGTAMSU) may be traced from the year
2002 when the great institution builder and thinker Dr.
Priya Ranjan Trivedi, President, World Institution Building
Programme (WIBP) was motivated and encouraged by the then
Prime Minister Hon'ble Atal Bihari Vajpayee in the year 2002
for selecting the State of Arunachal Pradesh for
establishing a State level University for taking care of the
tertiary education needs of the North-Eastern States in
general and of Arunachal Pradesh in particular.
The then Prime Minister of India Hon'ble Atal Bihari
Vajpayee and
Dr. Priya Ranjan Trivedi after discussing the
action plan for Arunachal Pradesh.
Establishment and Legislation
Although the initial developmental work got initiated from the
year 2002 after the formal invitation was accorded to the WIBP
President Dr. Priya Ranjan Trivedi by the then Governor and the
then Chief Minister for selecting the site and proposing the
draft of the legislation to be passed from the Arunachal Pradesh
State Assembly, it took almost ten years till the legislation
titled "Indira Gandhi Technological and Medical Sciences
University Act 2012" was passed from the State Legislature (Act
6 of 2012). Since then different courses at Certificate,
Diploma, Post Graduate Diploma, Bachelor's and Master's levels
are being conducted in the specialised areas f nursing, law,
paramedical sciences, management, engineering, information
technology, education, social sciences, applied sciences etc.
Accreditation
Created under the provisions of the Indira Gandhi Technological
and Medical Sciences University Act 2012 (Act 6 of 2012) of the
Government of Arunachal Pradesh, this university is recognised
by the University Grants Commission (UGC) Ministry of Human
Resource Development (MHRD), Government of India. The School of
Nursing established by the University is also recognised by the
Indian Nursing Council.
The Hon'ble
President of India Shri Ram Nath Kovind receiving the first copy
of his Book brought out by the IGTAMSU Team
Future Programmes
The university has also envisaged an action plan for launching
new programmes including Bachelor of Vocation (B.Voc.), Master
of Vocation (M.Voc.) besides Master of Science (M.Sc.) Degree by
research and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Degree by research.
The university is of the view that education is the largest
single activity in the world, involving over 700 million
students and 31 million teachers at all levels, not counting
millions of others in educational support activities. But its
importance stems not merely from its size but also from its role
as institutionalized knowledge - the principal repository,
producer, disseminator and transmission belt of all forms of
knowledge.
The most significant feature of education for mother earth
protection in the 21st century is not so much what the French
call li explosion scolaire (i pupil explosioni), but the
knowledge explosion, which has expanded the catchment areas of
learning so fast that it takes only a decade now for the state
of the art in any field to become obsolete. Different modes of
communicating for advancement of knowledge are fast changing and
becoming more sophisticated. In this technological era knowledge
can be dispensed technologically and electronically. Teachers
and formal school structures are becoming less important, and
the conventional age limits on the learning process are becoming
blurred.
The Book titled "Narendra Modi : The Man India Needs" authored the Founder Chancellor Dr. Priya Ranjan Trivedi being released by the Union Minister of State for Home Affairs, Government of India : Hon'ble Mr. Kiren Rijiju at Leh Ladakh
As the human race prepares to venture into a new century,
conversations and news reports are peppered with references
to our fragile and endangered planet. The earth is five
billion years old, and over the eons it has endured
bombardment by meteors, abrupt shifts in its magnetic
fields, dramatic realignment of its land masses, and the
advance and retreat of massive ice mountains that reshaped
its surface.
Life, too, has proved resilient: In the more than three and
a half billion years first forms of life emerged, biological
species have come and gone, but life has persisted without
interruption. In fact, no matter what we humans do, it is
unlikely that we could suppress the powerful and chemical
forces that drive the earth system. Although we cannot
completely disrupt the earth system, we do affect it
significantly as we use energy and emit pollutants in our
quest to provide food, shelter, and a host of other products
for the world's growing population. We release chemicals
that gnaw holes in the ozone shield that protects us from
harmful ultraviolet radiation, and we burn fuels that emit
heat - trapping gases that build up in the atmosphere. Our
expanding numbers overtax the agricultural potential of the
land.
Tropical forests that are home for millions of biological
species are cleared for agriculture, grazing, and logging.
Raw materials are drawn from the earth to stoke the engines
of the growing world economy, and we treat the atmosphere,
land, and waters as receptacles for the wastes generated as
we consume energy and goods in our everyday lives.
Scientific evidence and theory indicate that as a result of
such activities, the global environment is undergoing
profound changes. In essence, we are conducting an
uncontrolled experiment with the planet to the extent that
we have come to a point of no return and we may face the
disaster any time.
Our courses have been design for selecting accomplished
individuals, enabling them to guide the human race living in
a historic transitional period of burgeoning awareness of
the conflict between human activities and environmental
constraints, preparing to venture into a new century and a
new millennium and to finally help save the fragile and
endangered planet with the natural resources already
overtaxed.
Hon'ble Chief Minister of Arunachal Pradesh Mr. Pema Khandu receiving the Book titled "Foreign Policies of Narendra Modi Government" from the Founder Chancellor Dr. P R Trivedi, Chancellor Dr. Markandey Rai, Pro Chancellor Dr. Utkarsh Sharma and Forensic Auditor Mr. Vineet Chaturvedi in the official chamber of the Chief Minister at Itanagar
The successful students will help in developing a neological
and neocratic approach to governance for reducing the toll
the world citizenry have exacted in supporting daily life
and the ever increasing problems on the earth exerting
profound pressures on the environment.
If human society is to endure not for just another century
but for thousands and thousands of years, we need to learn a
way of life that could be sustained by the Mother Earth.
Human society must learn to control population size and
develop more efficient technologies that produce as little
harmful waste as possible. We must learn to rely on
resources that are renewable. A society based on these ideas
is called a sustainable society. We should long for having a
sustainable world so profoundly different from the way we
live which cannot be imagined without a strenuous exercise
of mind. Like human body the Mother Earth has its organs
that adjust to changes - in climate, nutrient levels and
other aspects of the environment to maintain its stability.
Just as the human organism is made of trillions of cells and
so is the world organism; each of us is a cell of Gaia
(Greek word for Mother Earth).
Changing our ways will be a colossal task which may involve
arduous work but as an optimist we should view the third
millennium with a cleaner and greener mind and pledge to
work on new pollution control technologies as the answer to
our polluted waters and skies by better treating our Mother
Earth by not to rival nature but to cooperate with it and
live in harmony.
The Hon'ble Education Minister of Arunachal Pradesh Mr. Honchun Ngandam receiving the Book on Divinity from the IGTAMSU Team Members at Itanagar
As the human race has ventured to enter the third
millennium, conversations and news reports are peppered with
references to our fragile and endangered planet. The earth
is five billion years old, and over the eons it has endured
bombardment by meteors, abrupt shifts in its magnetic
fields, dramatic realignment of its land masses, and the
advance and retreat of massive ice mountains that reshaped
its surface. Life, too, has proved resilient: In the more
than three and a half billion years first forms of life
emerged, biological species have come and gone, but life has
persisted without interruption. In fact, no matter what we
humans do, it is unlikely that we could suppress the
powerful and chemical forces that drive the earth system.
Although we cannot completely disrupt the earth system, we
do affect it significantly as we use energy and emit
pollutants in our quest to provide food, shelter, and a host
of other products for the world's growing population. We
release chemicals that gnaw holes in the ozone shield that
protects us from harmful ultraviolet radiation, and we burn
fuels that emit heat - trapping gases that build up in the
atmosphere. Our expanding numbers overtax the agricultural
potential of the land. Tropical forests that are home for
millions of biological species are cleared for agriculture,
grazing, and logging. Raw materials are drawn from the earth
to stoke the engines of the growing world economy, and we
treat the atmosphere, land, and waters as receptacles for
the wastes generated as we consume energy and goods in our
everyday lives. Scientific evidence and theory indicate that
as a result of such activities, the global environment is
undergoing profound changes. In essence, we are conducting
an uncontrolled experiment with the planet to the extent
that we have come to a point of no return and we may face
the disaster any time.
Hon'ble Chief Minister of Arunachal Pradesh Mr. Pema Khandu receiving the Book titled "Buddhist Heritage of Ladakh" from Dr. Priya Ranjan Trivedi and Dr. Markandey Rai
Publications Programme
The university has brought out more than 100 books on
different developmental subjects including habitat,
population studies, eco-philosophy, eco-tourism, disaster
management, sustainable development, peace studies, conflict
resolution, environmental sciences, disaster management,
geoinformatics, bioinformatics, nursing, health, nutrition
etc.
It has also been proposed to bring out a comprehensive Book
on Arunachal Pradesh titled "Arunachal Pradesh : Past,
Present and Future" running into more than 800 pages besides
districtwise profile of each of the 23 Districts of
Arunachal Pradesh.
Solution of the burning problems of the State and the
Country
The university has also prepared a vision document with
a view to solving all problems of the State and the Country
by proposing changes in the developmental systems as the
same has become obsolete or needs immediate modification.
That is why the following existing systems and the proposed
systems are described below :
Hon'ble Home Minister of India Mr. Raj Nath Singh with President of Confederation of Indian Universities (CIU) Dr. Priya Ranjan Trivedi and Director General of Indian Institute of Governance and Leadership Mr. Himadrish Suwan at North Block, New Delhi
The Indira Gandhi Technological and Medical Sciences
University (IGTAMSU) after analysing the weaknesses in the
present developmental policies has great pleasure in
suggesting the following changes and modifications for the
overall development of India in general and of Arunachal
Pradesh in particular :
For Overall Development of Young People
1.1 Principles
IGTAMSU wants to believe that the key issues for India's
young people are:
a) access to secure, affordable and appropriate long term
housing;
b) meaningful work and a competency based wage system;
c) access to education and training;
d) a clean and healthy environment;
e) access to diverse cultural and recreational facilities;
f) access to reliable and affordable transport;
g) access to a living environment which is free from the
threat of physical or emotional abuse or discrimination of
any kind; and
h) access to health services which focus on the social,
economic and environmental factors that impact on the lives
of young people.
Information about services available to young people must be
accessible and comprehensible.
We oppose all forms of ageism, and support initiatives to
counter this, including public education and affirmative
action.
Youth interests must be included in public policy
decision-making, and this requires greater input from young
people themselves.
Recognising that young people have a positive contribution to make to society, we support representation from young people at all levels of Government. Young people must not only play a central role in formulating those policies which affect them, but they should be included more widely in general policy formulation.
Hon'ble Vice President of India Mr. M. Venkaiah Naidu with with Dr. P R Trivedi
1.2 Goals
IGTAMSU wants to believe that we will :
a) facilitate processes which allow young people to express
their needs and aspirations at all levels of Government, as
well as in their own communities;
b) listen to young people through regionally based Youth
Advisory Committees comprising representative groups of
young people with a range of interests and skills, who will
meet to discuss ideas, initiatives and solutions to
problems, as well as provide feedback and advice on
Government programmes. These Advisory Committees will have
input at both state and national levels, to assist with
greater coordination of national, state and local
initiatives;
c) support the right of people from the age of 16 years to
vote and to hold public office, in recognition of the
increasing awareness of and responsibility towards current
issues of young people.
1.3 Short Term Targets
1.3.1 Unemployment
We will work towards the implementation of a national
employment strategy for young people, to be administered at
a local level with a focus on facilitating community
development.
Local Employment Committees will be established. They will
provide vocational training, financial support and the
development of job opportunities which address needs within
local communities and promote green jobs.
The Sarsanghchalak of Rashtriya Sawayamsevak Sangh (RSS) Dr. Mohan Bhagwat releasing the Book on RSS jointly authored by Dr. P R Trivedi and Dr. Bipin Kumar
We also support greater representation of young people on regional economic organisations and greater recognition of community-based organisations which will finally generate environment friendly and sustainable as well as socially useful employment opportunities.
All labour market and training programmes must be developed
in consultation with young people and should not be
discriminatory on any grounds, including age.
1.3.2 Education
Our education system must be able to provide the
intellectual and social skills necessary for confronting the
social and environmental problems now facing India. The
skills and knowledge of indigenous as well as non-indigenous
ancestry and culture must be shared with our young people to
give them an understanding of the basic solutions to our
cultural crisis.
We are committed to:
a) diverse and inclusive curricula at the school level;
b) supportive school environments that cater for social and
academic development and raise self-esteem;
c) support for early intervention programme;
d) more flexible pathways to employment and training;
e) increased emphasis on training in life skills;
f) ensuring that training programmes are relevant and
accessible, and that they are directly connected to ongoing
employment opportunities; and
g) civic education to enable greater understanding of and
participation in all spheres of Government.
Dr. Priya Ranjan Trivedi presenting the first copy of his Book on RSS to Hon'ble Dr. Mohan Bhagwat, Sarsanghchalak of Rashtriya Sawayamsevak Sangh (RSS)
1.3.3 Youth Justice
The recognition of young people's issues and needs is
inadequate in India's legal system. Young people often feel
regulated by the law but without adequate access to and
support from the legal system or their legal rights. Young
people should be protected from violence, discrimination and
exploitation.
We support:
a) immediately establishing a Children's Bureau including a
Commission for Children as well as a Children's
Ombudsperson; and
b) the development of a Children and Youth Justice Strategy
which would include community legal education and an
advocacy programme for young people.
1.3.4 Health
There are many serious health issues facing young people in India. Good health is closely connected to lifestyle. While young people should be encouraged to take responsibility for their own health, we recognise that physical and emotional wellbeing is often compromised by inadequate access to appropriate housing, income support, meaningful work, creative or recreational opportunities as well as by degradation of the environment.
An integrated and holistic approach to health policy is
necessary.
Recognising the urgency of the problem, we support the
development of strategies to deal with youth suicide and
mental health problems among young people.
We also support increased HIV/AIDS education and more
preventive programme targeted to young people with eating
disorders.
1.3.5 Housing
The number of homeless youth in India is increasing and
projections suggest this situation will worsen in the
future. Adequate housing and especially secure long term
housing are fundamental to young people working towards
their chosen lifestyle.
We support facilitation of community housing and housing
cooperatives in urban areas as a means to servicing the
young homeless.
We support co-housing and all other forms of multiple
occupancy.
Young people should be involved in the planning and
development of housing appropriate to their needs.
1.3.6 The Environment
Young people have a clear interest and concern in the
wellbeing of the planet. Respect for the environment is
essential to the security and wellbeing of future
generations.
We support community-based employment, housing and cultural
activities which increase the quality of life and empower
young people without consuming vast amounts of resources and
generating excessive waste.
We encourage Hovernment support and facilitation of innovative environmental projects including urbanised community farms as well as gardens, alternative housing construction, design, energy conservation and alternative energy generation, recycling and secondary resource management.
The 2nd Edition of the Book on RSS authored by Dr. P R Trivedi being released by Hon'ble Mr. Prakash Javadekar, Union Minister of Human Resource Development
Policies for Older People
2.1 Principles
In recent years, political parties have been primarily
concerned with economic indicators of value. They have
devoted scant interest to quality of life issues. When the
value of people is measured by their productive capacity
inside the market place, older people tend to be
disregarded, considered only when their votes are needed at
election time.
We consider it fundamental that older people be accorded the
same consideration and respect as everyone else. The
experiences, skills, wisdom and memories of older people are
assets for the whole community. We oppose all forms of
ageism, and support initiatives to counter this, including
public education and affirmative action.
2.2 Goals
We aim to give older people control over their own social
situation, enabling them to realise their potential as fully
participating members of society.
This means that they should have the power to take part in
designing the institutions that will affect their
well-being.
The exercise of choice to determine how to live, and what kind of care is needed, is as important for older people as for everyone else.
Hon'ble Union Minister of Tribal Affairs Mr. Jual Oram releasing the Book titled "Tribal Welfare and Development" authored by Dr. P R Trivedi
2.3 Short Term Targets
We are working towards:
a) promoting a supportive environment for older people;
b) giving everybody the right of early retirement;
c) ensuring that the right to work is not governed by age;
d) adequate health services;
e) ensuring that older people have access to a range of
suitable accommodation including quality public sector
housing;
f) personal care for all older people;
g) providing sufficient home and institutional care so that
older people who need assistance can be assured of living
out their lives in comfortable and dignified surroundings
that are appropriate to their individual conditions and
capacities;
h) easing the problems of transport for older people;
Policies for the Development of Women
3.1 Principles
We are committed to the following:
a) the protection of women's rights to equal respect,
opportunity and responsibility in society;
b) basing policies on ensuring equal access by women to all
areas of political, social, intellectual and economic
endeavour;
c) increased and equitable participation by women in all
decision-making processes;
d) infrastructure changes to protect women from inequality,
exploitation, poverty and violence; and to enable them to
reach their full potential;
e) the right of women to make informed choices about their
lives - lifestyle, sexual identity, health, whether to bear
children, their reproductive process, etc. Discriminatory
laws against women must be repealed. Women and men should be
able to choose whether they participate in the areas of paid
work and/or domestic responsibility.
f) women having equal access to all forms of education and
training.
The Union Minister in the PMO and in charge of the Ministry of Development of North-Eastern Region (DoNER) Dr. Jitendra Singh releasing the Book titled "Challenges of 21st Century" authored by Dr. Markandey Rai
3.1.1 Women and Violence
All women have a right to safety at home, on the street and
in the workplace, but violence against women is not only a
women's problem. Breaking the cycle of domestic violence in
particular is a societal problem and the provision of
shelter and refuge should be considered only a short-term
solution. Any act of violence should be condemned publicly
and privately as unacceptable. Our long-term objective is to
create an environment of nonviolence, and to provide care
and protection for victims in the interim.
3.1.2 Women and Pornography
We oppose the production, performance, display and
distribution of pornographic material which depicts women
and children as suitable objects for violence and sexual
exploitation.
3.1.3 Women and Education
We seek to ensure educational experience and outcomes for
girls and women that enable full and equal participation in
all aspects of economic and social life.
3.1.4 Women and the Environment
The environmental decision-making process has, to date,
largely excluded women.
Some environmental planning and decision-making needs to be
decentralised and devolved to local communities in such a
way that the concerns of all people are heard.
The domestic sector and those industries where women predominate should have equal representation in environmental planning and decision-making.
Hon'ble Mr. Suresh Prabhu, Union Minister of Commerce and Industry, Government of India releasing the Book titled "Foreign Policies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi" jointly authored by Founder Chancellor Dr. P R Trivedi and Chancellor Dr. Markandey Rai
3.1.5 Women and the Arts
We support greater recognition of women's contribution to
arts and acknowledge the role of women in shaping and
representing cultural norms.
We will work towards ensuring that the views of women are
represented, for example, through such avenues as
representation of women on Arts Advisory Boards.
3.1.6 Women and Sport
We support equal access for women and men to recreation
facilities, coaching, sports education, competition, media
coverage and funding. The need for programme which encourage
girls to continue sporting and recreational pursuits beyond
early secondary schooling is a priority.
3.2 Goals
3.2.1 Political and Public Participation
We will work towards:
a) ensuring that any reform is consistent with India's
commitment to the UN Convention on the Elimination of all
forms of Discrimination Against Women (UN-CEDAW);
b) ensuring equal representation of women in decision-making
processes in the organisations of at all levels, local,
state and national; and
c) ensuring that all public boards and committees will have
a statutory requirement for equal representation of women
and men.
The CD titled "Foreign Policies of Narendra Modi Government" being presented to the Director of Higher and Technical Education Government of Arunachal Pradesh Dr. Tayek Talom by the Founder Chancellor Dr. P R Trivedi and the present Chancellor Mr. Markandey Rai at Itanagar
3.2.2 Women and Violence
We will work towards:
a) a review of all relevant laws which have bearing on
violence against women, treatment of victims and
perpetrators; and
b) ensuring women's access to safe and secure accommodation
through a comprehensive housing policy and the provision of
adequate emergency housing.
3.2.3 Women and Pornography
We will work towards promoting the use of legal complaints
procedures and processes.
3.2.4 Women and Health
We will work towards:
a) ensuring research and development funds are allocated
both to women researchers and into women's health problems;
b) ensuring changes to the education of health providers
with regard to women's health issues;
c) improving women's access to information regarding their
health in order that appropriate personal decisions can be
made;
d) preventive health strategies targeting women and girls,
including those which reduce the incidence of smoking
amongst females;
e) providing strategies for more women medical practitioners
to enter those specialisations where women are currently
under-represented.
3.2.5 Women and the Workforce
We will work towards:
a) ensuring equal opportunities for people employed in the
paid work force with family responsibilities;
b) ensuring the provision of adequate child care facilities
in the workplace;
c) encouraging flexible working conditions to enable workers
with family responsibilities (eg. parents minding young
children, and adult children minding ageing parents) to
fully participate in the workforce, and avail themselves of
opportunities equally with those who do not have those
responsibilities;
d) providing centres for continuing education and training
for workers, including training and promotion opportunities
for part-time and temporary workers;
e) taking steps to facilitate re-entry, without loss of
occupational status, of people who leave the workforce for
parental leave or family responsibilities leave;
f) ensuring changes brought about by strategies relating to
the elimination of sexual discrimination will not place
undue and unequal responsibility upon women and add to
women's workload;
g) ensuring that award restructuring includes the specific
aim of upgrading and broadening the low-paid, low-status
positions that have traditionally been work for a majority
of women, particularly migrant women; and
h) ensuring that women enjoy the full benefits of enterprise
bargaining arrangements, particularly in the traditional
work areas such as the service industry, where there is low
union representation.
3.2.6 Women and Education
We will work towards:
a) ensuring that a National Policy for the Education of
Girls in Indian Schools is implemented at all levels, until
national indicators on education outcomes are relatively
equal for women and men;
b) the elimination of gender-based harassment in school and
educational institutions and the establishment of Equal
Opportunity offices to assess and consult about the
effectiveness of programme and policies to achieve this;
c) ensuring that teacher training for new and continuing
teachers critically examines the patterns of sex role
stereotyping that occur in our society;
d) continuing Territory / State / Central programme to
promote girls' and women's greater participation in access
to school, and university education, especially in science
and technology disciplines;
e) promoting policies to achieve a higher retention rate of
women at higher degree level in universities; and
f) promoting policies to encourage a higher representation
of women academics in all faculties of universities, and a
higher proportion of women in senior academic positions.
3.2.7 Women and the Law
We will work towards:
a) remedying existing discrimination by ensuring a higher
representation of women on legislative and judicial bodies;
b) examining ways women could be encouraged to enter private
practice and the bar;
c) encouraging women to enter all areas of the legal
profession,
d) reviewing all laws which have a bearing on violence
against women;
e) developing further options for the protection of victims,
and for the naming of perpetrators;
f) addressing the myth of 'victim-blaming' by promoting
change in societal attitudes to violence;
g) removing sexist language from existing laws, and ensure
future legislation is non-sexist and does not assume
assignment of roles according to sex;
h) repealing laws relating to sex work.
3.2.8 Women and the Environment
We will work towards:
a) implementing strategies and programmes to ensure that all
environmental assessments include consideration of impact on
health, community and women; and
b) implementing strategies to ensure that women's needs and
advice are considered in the area of urban planning.
3.2.9 Women and Sport
We will work towards:
a) developing monitoring strategies for equal opportunity
and anti-discrimination principles to be applied to the
administration of all sporting organisations; and
b) ensuring allocation of funding and awards will not be
discriminatory and will allow equal opportunity for women.
3.3 Short Term Targets
3.3.1 Political and Public Participation
We will work towards developing programmes and strategies to
provide women with the skills to be effective candidates and
members of parliament and to actively promote women to stand
as candidates for election.
3.3.2 Women and Violence
We will work towards:
a) establishing a national enquiry into sexual assault and
uniform sexual assault laws. Specifically, the Party want
recognition of sexual assault within marriage and
relationships;
b) providing education from early primary school level on
non-violent conflict resolution;
c) addressing the health effects, both physical and
emotional, of violence against women, through adequately
funded, appropriate health and education programme;
d) using publicity and educational campaigns to bring about
a change in the way violence is viewed in our society, which
includes a strategy to educate men that violence against
women is a crime;
e) expanding crisis services for women, with and without
children. These include refuges, and services in areas such
as rape crisis, abortion counselling, incest and domestic
violence. Special provision needs to be made for
geographically remote locations.
3.3.3 Women and Pornography
We will work towards:
a) extending classification systems to include video games,
live performances and other leisure technologies;
b) strengthening regulation on the display of advertising of
material which includes violence against and sexual
exploitation of women and children;
c) instituting an education programme to encourage critical
examination of the role that the entertainment industry and
the media play in the portrayal of women and children as
victims of violent and sexual exploitation;
3.3.4 Women and Health
We will work towards:
a) ensuring access to safe contraception on demand for all
women, and information on options available;
b) ensuring that women have a choice of where and how to
give birth and information on available options;
c) repealing all laws which restrict the right of women to
choose abortion and which restrict access to services; and
d) ensuring access to legal, affordable, humane and safe
abortion for all women, and provision of counselling pre and
post-termination.
3.3.5 Women and the Workforce
We will work towards:
a) ensuring that apprenticeships and training programmes
have positive discrimination towards women to ensure that
opportunities are not denied to women because of inaccurate
evaluation of women's ability;
b) giving the provision of maternity and paternity leave
equal status in order to encourage the sharing of the
parenting roles and equality of gender in the workplace;
c) undertaking programmes to raise awareness on issues of
gender equity in the workplace and in education;
d) ensuring that women have access to adequate retirement
income, including superannuation; and
e) ensuring continuation of superannuation during parental
leave.
3.3.6 Women and Education
We will work towards:
a) providing adequate funding for the support structures and
the support personnel necessary to implement national
policy;
b) ensuring that affirmative action is practised in schools
to overcome the attitudes inherent in our society that
result in different expectations for girls and boys. Such
action would include changing school curricula and
increasing girls' participation in areas of maths, science,
technology and trades;
c) the application of affirmative action to increase the
number of women in senior, policy and decision-making
positions in educational systems;
d) providing bridging courses for women to facilitate their
entry into the formal education arena;
e) expanding women's participation in science and technology
to ensure that the introduction of new technology does not
further the advantage of men; and
f) increasing women's access to training and education in
the use and understanding of computers and computer
technology.
3.3.7 Women and the Law
We will work towards:
a) applying affirmative action to ensure that more women
hold senior level positions within the Public Service
departments responsible for policy, administration and
enforcement of the law;
b) applying affirmative action to ensure that more women
hold senior faculty positions within Schools of Law;
c) strengthening laws which prohibit portrayal of women or
children as objects of violence or sexual exploitation; and
3.3.8 Women and the Environment
We will work towards:
a) ensuring equal and proportionate representation of women
on environmental decision-making bodies; and
b) applying affirmative action principles to ensure women
are able to participate at all levels of planning,
implementation and assessment of environmental policy.
3.3.9 Women and Sport
We will work towards:
a) providing public education to raise awareness of women's
rights to equal recreation and the importance of this; and
b) providing public education to change attitudes towards
women in sport.
Policies for Health
1.1 Principles
We believe that good health is dependent upon:
a) the environmental, social, political, economic, cultural
and spiritual context of life;
b) protection of the biosphere and Earth's ecosystem, and
ecological sustainability;
c) peace and nuclear disarmament, freedom from war, freedom
from violence in the community and in the home;
d) social justice and community participation in
decision-making;
e) the provision of equal access to affordable, appropriate
health services, which emphasise care as well as cure;
f) an emphasis on community-based and community-controlled
primary health care, available from a comprehensive range of
service providers;
g) the placement of greater emphasis on health promotion,
disease prevention and education for optimum health;
h) research which encompasses traditional and alternative/
complementary treatment modalities;
i) an intersectoral approach to policy-making with
health-outcomes criteria affecting decisions made across a
range of portfolios, such as transport, housing,
environmental protection, employment, local community
services and education;
j) the availability of a universal health fund covering not
only medical and hospital, but including the full range of
appropriate health services and also including dental and
nursing services; and
k) forms of treatment which have been developed in an
ethical framework which acknowledges true environ-mental and
social cost/benefits.
1.2 Goals
Our aim to:
a) develop and implement a national environmental health
strategy which supports a public health approach to health
enhancement, and identifies clear national health
priorities;
b) reduce high hospital admission rates by re-orienting
health service provisions to a public health focus which is
preventive, and to a primary care approach concerned with
maintenance of optimum health status;
c) phase out the use of animals for medical research;
d) instigate a parliamentary inquiry into iatrogenic deaths
in hospital;
e) develop, with widespread community consultation, a Health
Bill of Rights and Responsibilities;
f) ensure that India fulfils international obligations to
address environmental issues which impact on health;
g) ban the use of hormones and drugs on farm animals, other
than those medications which are therapeutic and
individually prescribed by veterinarians;
h) restrict the use of chemical food additives and the
practice of irradiating food;
i) consider the effects of fluoridation of drinking water;
j) expand the network of multi-disciplinary community health
centres which will provide a range of treatment options,
with community-based control of resource allocation;
k) expand the availability of birthing centres, where
midwives provide primary management;
l) expand the availability of mobile women's health centres
in remote and rural areas;
m) initiate programme aimed at reducing suicide rates,
particularly among young people and people in rural areas;
n) reintroduce dental care as a service claimable under
Medicare.
1.3 Short Term Targets
We support:
a) the maintaining of Medicare;
b) an increase in the Medicare levy on the basis that such
funds (i.e. those derived from the increase) be directed
specifically to primary and public health care (i.e. to
maintenance of optimum health) rather than to reactive
disease management interventions;
c) the proposal that all pharmaceutical drugs be sold under
their generic name as well as under their commercial one and
that the generic name appear in all advertising for a
particular drug;
d) the implementation of legislation whereby Medicare
rebates are available across a wider range of therapeutic
interventions;
e) the development and implementation of social policies to
address the widespread over-use of medications.
Policies for Improving the State of
Education and training
2.1 Principles
We support:
a) a vision of education as a life-long process of
intellectual, physical, emotional, ethical and cultural
development, taking place in a variety of formal and
informal settings, and aimed at empowering people to live
purposeful, satisfying lives, to help develop communities
that are peaceful, just and ecologically sustainable, and to
extend that ethical commitment to the other peoples of the
world. Lifelong education can enable all citizens to make a
lifelong constructive and creative social contribution;
b) a vision of lifelong education, within which each person
may be called on to become a teacher sharing skills,
knowledge and insights with others;
c) the right of all people to have access to educational
experiences appropriate to their needs, abilities and
aspirations, and to adequate financial support while
undertaking formal educational programme;
d) the right of all children to an education;
e) the right of all people who are committed to
home-schooling to choose to educate their children at home;
f) major programme to create jobs, and the development of a
rational approach to workforce planning at the national
level, so that all people may participate in socially useful
and satisfying forms of work;
g) the maintenance and strengthening of a quality public
schooling sector;
h) the right of parents and citizens organisations,
community groups and academic and student unions to play a
significant role in setting directions, priorities,
curricula and the running of the public education system.
This will assist the development of an education system
appropriate to a multicultural India, which places more
value on a sense of community and enriching personal
relationships than on motives of competition and profit
which presently permeate our society; and
i) the important roles played by professional associations,
private providers, community groups and business in
providing educational opportunities.
Recognising that in a technological society, empowerment of
the individual relies on his/her ability to effectively use
communication technology and information systems, we will
support education policies to enhance the opportunity for
all Indians to become scientifically and technologically
literate.
2.2 Goals
2.2.1 General
We will work to:
a) provide a quality public education system with guaranteed
access for all;
b) develop a national work-force planning capacity based on
sound research, and reflecting national industry and
employment objectives which are built on the fundamental
principles of social justice, sustainability and increasing
national self-reliance;
c) develop lifelong education and training options which
enable people to change occupations as they mature and grow
older;
d) provide additional incentives and provision for a
continuous cycle of in-service training for teachers at all
levels of education, including tertiary teaching;
e) develop the associationist principle, leading over time
to a diminution in the role, authority and scale of
centralised educational bureaucracies, and an increased
level of democratic and responsible community involvement
and authority in setting the educational objectives and
curriculum content of our schools; and
f) increase emphasis in education on such aspects as:
• understanding human relationships and psychological
processes,
• physical and emotional health and well-being,
• dignity and self esteem,
• the development of an ethical commitment and of
caring attitudes to other people and to the planet,
• the importance of cooperation and social benefit
rather than competition and profits as social goals,
• a sense of responsibility for the well-being of
future generations, and
• adaptability and flexibility.
2.2.2 Tertiary Schooling
We will work to:
a) implement a policy of free tertiary education;
b) extend access to tertiary education through development
of more decentralised campuses, through the use of distance
delivery modes and through open access programmes;
c) conduct environmental audits and environmental
development plans in all tertiary institutions; and
d) encourage all tertiary institutions to include
environmental programmes among their courses.
2.2.3 Primary and Secondary Schooling
We will work to:
a) review the current National Statements in the key learning areas to ensure that:
• there is a balanced concern in school curricula for
all dimensions of human development-intellectual, physical,
emotional, ethical and cultural;
• there is a balance between such emphases as personal
development, intellectual understanding, technical and
technological competence, vocational skills and learning for
democratic citizenship;
• critical perspectives and processes are integral to
all areas of the curriculum in schools;
• there is emphasis on global interdependence;
• all curriculum areas reflect a commitment to the
development of a more peaceful, just, democratic and
ecologically sustainable world for all people; and
b) increase democratic participation in the decision-making
processes within schools and within home-based and
community-based educational settings;
c) guarantee the right of all children to education which
promotes freedom of thought;
d) guarantee the right of parents to choose to educate their
children at home or in other settings without being bound by
compulsory registration, provided they can demonstrate a
commitment to ensuring a balanced education for their
children; and
e) encourage the development of local, community-based and
democratically controlled public schools, through provision
of capital and recurrent funding to such schools on a
demonstrated needs basis, provided those schools reflect the
principles of the national education policy.
2.2.4 Ethical Commitment to other Peoples of the World
We will work to:
a) extend the funding available through international
organisation for educational projects aimed at enhancing
international cooperation and under-standing, and at
promoting social justice and sustainability within
communities and countries overseas through the unconditional
funding of projects devised by and for the people of those
communities and countries;
b) ensure that educational links with other societies,
through such appropriate development means as training
schemes, exchanges, admission of overseas students,
development projects and consultancies, are characterised by
justice, equity and cultural sensitivity;
c) develop educational material and methods for
future-vision building; and
d) provide increased financial support for the activities of
Development Education Centres.
2.3 Short Term Targets
2.3.1 General
We will work to:
a) allocate increased resources to all levels of formal
education, but with particular attention to supporting the
renovation of the primary sector;
b) extend Open Learning opportunities so that people of
various ages in all locations may have access to quality
educational programmes of formal and informal study;
c) retain appropriate centralised conditions of employment
for teachers, including the principle of tenure;
d) extend funding and other support to community groups,
non-government organisations, business, private providers
and others offering appropriate community education
programmes and facilities, including those catering for
interest areas and segments of the population not catered
for by conventional and formal educational provision;
e) provide additional funding for students who are
physically and/or intellectually disabled, or who are
disadvantaged by location and/or distance.
2.3.2 Tertiary Schooling
We will:
a) work to increase democratic participation in the
decision-making processes within tertiary institutions;
b) allow the collection of fees from students for amenities
and services, provided any fees collected are under the
democratic control of the student body.
2.3.3 Primary and Secondary Schooling
We will support a review of the Profiles developed in each
area of the National Curriculum to ensure that they reflect
the intentions of the National Statements, are supportive of
sound educational principles, and are not used to promote an
unwarranted technical, vocationally-driven notion of
educational attainment.
2.3.4 People Requiring Special Consideration
We consider that the following groups of people should
receive special consideration:
• people in remote areas; and
• people from economically disadvantaged backgrounds.
We will work to:
a) raise awareness within the community of the educational
needs of these special groups;
b) guarantee equity of access as well as participation in
appropriate curricula;
c) establish and maintain conducive as well as educational
environments;
d) guarantee equitable resource allocation;
e) provide specialist support services; and
f) actively encourage such specialists to take up teaching
and other positions within educational institutions.
2.3.5 Education for Sustainability
We will work to:
a) develop a national strategy for environmental education
which addresses the complete range of environmental
education in the formal and informal education sectors, with
some emphasis on locally based action;
b) encourage Indian industry to ensure that its vocational
practices are environmentally sound, and that vocational
training (and other education) are to world best practice
standards and to the best available environmental standards
(which may be in advance of existing world best practice);
and
c) provide support for schools which develop organi-sational
practices to minimise their environmental impacts (for
example, energy use), and ensure that maintenance and
refurbishment of infrastructure is environmentally sound.
Housing Policy for One and All
3.1 Principles
We will support initiatives which ensure that:
a) new urban developments are environmentally sound, respect
human scale and facilitate community interaction; and
b) the community is able to participate fully in urban
planning and in the assessment of development proposals.
3.2 Goals
We will work to:
a) ensure that people unable to provide for their own
housing are given assistance to do so by the Government;
b) eliminate housing-related poverty by increased provision
of public housing;
c) increase tenant participation in decisions about services
to be provided;
d) review building codes so that houses are constructed in
accordance with energy efficient design criteria and so that
building materials are selected for their low environmental
impact;
e) regulate the materials used by the building industry so
that the environment is protected from both
over-exploitation and toxic processes;
f) encourage the development of urban villages in
consultation with local communities to allow people to live
in ecologically and socially satisfying ways within cities;
and
h) ensure that the facilities that promote healthy
communities (recreational, cultural and social amenities)
receive priority in town planning.
3.3 Short Term Targets
3.3.1 General Planning
We propose that:
a) any future urban development be based on environmental and social planning principles by
• ensuring that house blocks are correctly aligned for
maximum solar access;
• landscaping for rainwater trapping and waste water
recycling;
• maintenance of privacy and noise controls;
• provision of adequate public open space;
• designing integrated cycleway networks across urban
areas; and
• lowering residential speed limits.
b) town centres be planned to contain a greater mix of commercial activities with
• introduction of more residential activity; and
• re-humanising of the centres through more public open
space and attractive urban design;
c) different types of housing be available to cater for diverse social needs, including
• youth;
• non-family groups;
• the disabled; and
• older people;
d) the community's reliance on private motor vehicles be reduced through
• improvements in public transport;
• concentration of residential, educational and
small-scale commercial development around neighbourhood
shopping centres;
• the introduction and expansion of commuter cycling
systems; and
• strategic location of carparking spaces.
3.3.2 Urban Development
The public transport system must be energy-efficient,
economic and convenient, e.g. light rail integrated with
other express and normal bus services to other parts of the
cities.
We propose:
a) that planning of urban developments focus on the concept
of urban villages based on environmental and social
principles;
b) that public housing be well integrated with other types
of housing;
c) that continued funding of community housing programmes be
supported; and
d) that certificates with gradings be issued to
owner-builders in remote areas so people can live in
"unfinished" houses if they choose to do so.
3.3.3 Building Design
We propose:
a) mandatory provisions requiring new buildings to meet
minimum standards of energy-efficiency, noise insulation and
water conservation;
b) encouragement of local wastewater recycling, composting
toilets and rainwater collection systems;
c) adequate car parking requirements for buildings; and
d) a system of solar access rights to facilitate the passive
solar design of new residences.
Efficient Transport Policy
4.1 Principles
Our transport policy is based on:
a) enabling people to obtain access to a wide range of
destinations, goods and services in a safe, timely and
energy-efficient manner which has low environmental impact;
b) the recognition that urban form and design are crucial
aspects of transforming transport policy;
c) using integrated transport and urban planning, and
incorporating environmental and social costs, so that
energy-efficient modes of transport (walking, cycling,
public transport, rail, coastal shipping) and non-transport
solutions are able to compete for funding with the provision
of facilities for cars and trucks;
d) empowering local communities so that they can make
informed choices;
e) getting the most out of existing facilities by managing
demand, rather than continually building facilities to meet
projected demands; and
f) favouring walking, cycling and public transport as the
preferred modes of "passenger" transport.
4.2 Goals
Our aim to:
a) dramatically reduce per capita and overall use of fossil
fuels for transport, making the system sustainable into the
future;
b) reduce car ownership and use for urban commuting while
improving the quality of service provided by public
transport, especially in relation to frequency, speed and
convenience;
c) increase recognition that access to an adequate level of
public transport services is a community right and that
these services should remain under public control and not be
subjected to full cost recovery;
d) make users of private transport aware of, and ultimately
pay for, the full costs of their transport choices;
e) increase opportunities for the community to participate
in integrated transport and urban planning;
f) shift urban form towards the development of urban
villages, to bring people and jobs together in areas
well-serviced by public transport;
g) reduce the direct impacts of transport infrastructure
(e.g. noise, air pollution) on urban neighbourhoods and
provide fair compensation for those affected by new
transport infrastructure;
h) improve the safety of roads, especially for pedestrians
and cyclists, and of airways and sea-lanes;
i) provide improved access to transport services for
residents of rural India;
j) improve services for those with special needs, including
people with disabilities, youth and older people; and
k) encourage the cycling and walking amenity of the streets
by supporting, for example, lower urban speed limits on
residential roads.
4.3 Short Term Targets
4.3.1 Overall
We will work to:
a) ensure the adoption of national standards for ambient air
quality equal to or better than world best practice;
b) ensure the adoption of national noise and emissions
standards for petrol and diesel vehicles equal to or better
than world best practice; these standards will include
requirements for testing; and
c) develop targets for self-containment levels in urban
planning; that is, measures of the degree to which jobs,
retailing and local services are located with residential
developments.
4.3.2 Land Transport
We will work to:
a) in each major city, double the market share (in passenger
kilometres) held by public transport compared with private
cars by 2020;
c) ensure the adoption of targets for the average fuel
efficiency of new additions to the national car fleet of 5.0
litres per 100 km by 2020, reducing to 4.0 litres per 100 km
by 2025;
d) ensure the adoption of mandatory fuel-efficiency
labelling of new cars;
e) make all central funding or approvals for transport
projects contingent on the achievement of specified
environmental and social criteria; these criteria will
include air quality standards (including greenhouse
emissions), environmental protection benchmarks and public
participation;
f) ensure that in planning any new road construction,
thorough consideration is given to the need for the road,
viable public transport alternatives, destructive impact on
local communities as well as the external costs to the
environment.
4.3.3 Ports and Shipping
We will work to:
a) cap the number of port sites at the present number;
b) amend rules to expose oil tankers to strict and unlimited
liability when travelling within Indian waters, bringing
India into line with the world best practice embodied in the
United States Oil Pollution Act 1990; and
c) institute strict and mandatory controls on ballast water
discharges and on other practices that put the Indian marine
environment at risk.
4.3.4 Air Transport
Recognising that air transport causes considerable
environmental damage and is also less fuel efficient by a
large factor than ground transport, particularly in
comparison to transport by rail or by sea, we consider it
important that the environmental costs of air transport are
taken into account openly and incorporated into the cost of
air travel.
We believe there are many unexplored possibilities for
decreasing the dependence on air travel. One of these is the
expansion of teleconferencing. In general, we will support
measures such as tax incentives which will encourage people
to fly less.
We recognise that bad planning in a number of cases has
caused housing areas near airports to have an unacceptable
noise level and support moves to remedy such mistakes, for
example through modifying flying patterns and airport
operations and compensating residents in the most affected
areas.
Information Technology Policy
to be User Friendly
5.1 Principles
Our Information Technology (IT) policy flows from the basis
that we must adopt lifestyles and development paths that
respect and work within the ecological limits. Developments
in IT need to be subject to community scrutiny and the
benefits of IT need to be shared amongst all members of the
community and not be used to increase power and privilege
for a few.
We want the debate about technological choice brought out of
the back-rooms of Government and industry and into the
public arena. There must be appropriate public IT planning
to ensure integration of IT into the broader social and
economic objectives and to avoid the adoption of IT products
becoming supplier-driven and piecemeal.
Full implementation of on-line services envisaged in some
"Information Superhighway" proposals will be very expensive
and the extent to which Government should fund such
proposals requires further analysis. We will support
sufficient Government funding to enable no- or low-cost
access to e-mail, the Internet and other electronic
information resources for schools, libraries and public
sector organisations, in a context where the provision of
such services is important to full participation in society.
We support direct measures, rather than tax incentives,
which tend to be less equitable, to help organisations
convert their systems to avoid the millennium bug.
5.2 Goals
Real opportunities exist for India, with a relatively
educated and skilled population, to make a large
contribution to developments in software, multimedia and
intellectual property.
We support universal access to the fullest range of
information and communication services.
5.3 Short Term Targets
We propose:
a) the establishment of an independent Information
Technology Assessment Board (ITAB), to continually assess
both new and existing information technologies and to
recommend Governmental action. Economic assessment would run
alongside checks on health, safety, environmental and
cultural impact, risks, and job satisfaction. The ITAB would
have a statutory obligation to keep the public informed of
its work in a clear and accessible way;
b) the encouragement of significant value-added operations
in IT, such as Research and Development (R&D).
c) in the practices of Government Departments and in private
business, the enforcement of the principles of:
• privacy-maintaining the confidentiality of personal
information; and
• freedom of information-enabling public access to
statistics and decision-making processes;
d) the encouragement of the adoption of codes of ethics or
practice for which members of practising professional bodies
can be suspended or "struck off" if the code is contravened
? preventing or restricting their ability to practise;
e) to make Government set an example of open and responsible
use of IT in its own systems;
f) the promotion of the development of networking standards
for global operation in order to boost international
communication, understanding and trade;
g) support for a democratic, egalitarian operation of the
Internet with appropriate regulation based on wide public
discussion;
h) support for the growth in "telecommuting" whereby office
staff can work from home, reducing the demand for physical
commuting, whilst ensuring protection for employees'
conditions;
i) support the growth of teleconferencing in order to
decrease the dependence on air travel
j) support for the growth of remote "work centres" or "tele-
villages" in order to reduce depopulation and increase
employment opportunities in rural areas;
k) support for the growth of "tele-conferencing" in order to
decrease the need for travelling;
l) to prevent the emergence of monopoly in
telecommunications, computing or IT;
m) to identify and list sensitive applications/systems (i.e.
with safety or security implications) and restrict their
design to qualified professionals holding a valid licence to
practise;
n) to achieve greater public review of the development of
Government computer systems, requiring proposals for new or
amended Government systems to be widely published with
adequate if reasonable objections are recorded;
o) to support universities as well as other research
establishments in research free of external direction by
industry or Government;
p) to support the full and frequent flow of information from
researchers to the professions and the media regarding
research progress and its implications;
q) support for an industry free to develop hardware,
software and services commensurate with ethical business
practices;
r) the encouragement of flexible approaches in industrial
relations responses to changes in organisations, working
conditions, job definitions and skill boundaries - all
affected by IT;
s) the imposition of a rating and censorship system (similar
to film) for computer games and related leisure services;
t) the improvement of women's access to training and
education in the use and understanding of computers and IT;
u) to ensure that the education system promotes children's
access to, and ability to use, information and technology;
v) facilitating access to Internet and e-mail services for
rural residents by providing local call cost access through
a Government-managed and/or funded rural internet provider
service.
w) enabling the trained IT professionals to get neological
training in the field of enrepreneurship for establishing
more and more training centres all over the country with a
view to having a competent cadre of young men and women
having expert knowledge in the field of different aspects
and facets of information technology for managing the third
millennium.
Policies related to Work including Employment
1.1 Principles
We distinguish between work, defined as any purposeful
activity, and employment, defined as paid work. We support
the principle of full employment, meaning the availability
of safe, socially useful, environmentally benign, adequately
paid work for all those who wish to engage in it. This may
be full or part time.
We define unemployment as the lack of availability of paid
work for anyone who wishes to engage in it.
We do not support the perception in society that unemployed
people cannot make a useful contribution to society. We
reject any inference of 'inadequacy' in those who choose not
to seek employment but contribute to society through other
productive, economic and/or socially useful activities.
We are committed to redressing discrimination and inequality
across the spectrum of work. We also believe that economic
growth is an inadequate solution to the unemployment problem
at a time when market economics and mass-consumerism have
already placed the environment and people under heavy
pressure.
The trend to globalisation and the view of economic
rationalist theory that international competitiveness should
be the priority consideration in economic policy clearly
both need review. Constraints on globalisation are necessary
for important environmental, social and economic reasons.
Protecting employment in domestic industries is one of those
important social reasons, and such protection may also have
environmental benefits from reduced transport of goods.
While protection can have an overall economic cost, this
cost is of secondary importance to the social and
environmental benefits, and is therefore a cost that is
warranted for the
social good.
We realise that the logical consequence of the present
conditions is that less formal work is needed and more free
time becomes available for everyone's chosen pursuits. We
will work towards shorter standard working hours and a
reversal of current trends towards increased unpaid work.
A radically new perspective needs to be taken. The green
vision is one where work, leisure and income are all shared
equitably. In a green society, everybody is the master of
her/his own time. People must have time for leisure as well
as for shouldering the responsibility of the family, society
and the environment. People must also have time to keep
better informed and to participate in politics.
1.2 Goals
We propose an employment, labour market and income policy
that will recognise and reward all peoples' occupations
appropriately, with a commitment to a proper safety net for
all.
We aim to redress discrimination and inequality in
employment and to promote equitable participation by all
Indians regardless of gender, age or ethnicity.
We will work towards creating a society in which:
a) the goal is full employment as defined above;
b) the norm is shorter hours in paid work than at present;
c) people enjoy self-esteem, security and material comfort
whether or not they have paid jobs;
d) it is recognised that all people have the potential to
contribute to the enhancement of the community, whether or
not they are in paid employment;
e) educational, recreational and creative opportunities and
resources are provided for all people, regardless of age and
regardless of whether or not they are in paid employment;
and
f) actions which are positive for the society and the
environment are valued whether they are paid for in the
formal economy or carried out in the informal sector.
1.3 Short Term Targets
There is plenty of socially and environmentally sustainable
work which needs to be done and imaginative forms of job
creation and sharing will need positive intervention by
Government.
There are also many areas of manufacturing and services
which could be encouraged whilst taking careful account of
the need for such activities to be environmentally positive
or at least benign.
We propose:
a) the creation of a system in which all citizens have the
right to a Guaranteed Adequate Income.
b) a society where paid work is distributed more equitably
than it is at the present time;
c) greater equity in job sharing because of the shortage of
full-time jobs for all and the need for more leisure time
and less stress;
d) greater equity in job sharing between people from
different regions, with different gender and of different
ethnic origin;
e) the creation of ecologically sustainable industries;
f) legislation preventing discrimination against people who
are not in formal employment;
g) public discussion on the meaning of work, facilitated by
the Government;
h) the promotion of an anti-materialist culture to reduce
needless consumption, whilst enabling people to fulfil their
real economic and social needs.
Social Citizenship including Social Justice
and Empowerment
2.1 Principles
2.1.1 Inequities addressed
We propose a system in which the Central Government will
assist the States, and where necessary mount its own
programme, to address the uneven provision of basic services
in India. The unevenness of delivery of services is
exemplified by the disastrous state of housing, health and
education that exists in many rural areas.
2.1.2 Work to be Redefined
We call for a redefinition of the concepts of work and
unemployment.
2.2. Goals
2.2.1 Affirmative Action
We recognise a continuing need to focus on disadvantaged
groups in the Indian community.
Affirmative action policies need to ensure that the
opportunities and rewards for women are equal to those for
men.
2.2.2 Strengthening Communities
While a world view is necessary if we are to both care for
the planet and redress world-wide injustices and inequities,
the fate of the world rests significantly on the actions of
communities - both in their ability to generate local
initiatives and in their combined ability to promote change
at national and international levels. We aim to strengthen
local democratic processes, encourage regional sustainable
development initiatives and planning, and enhance management
capabilities within local communities.
2.3 Short Term Targets
2.3.1 Income Security
We propose that the social security system be reformed. It
should be simplified and made more uniform by:
a) aligning all payments for adults and independent young
people associated with unemployment, study, disability,
special benefit and age pensions;
b) aligning all youth payments and increasing these over
time to reflect real living costs;
c) amalgamating the various child support and family
allowance payments, and increasing these in line with the
cost of caring for children;
d) linking all income and other support levels to changes in
the cost of living, so that they are automatically adjusted
for inflation.
2.3.2 Targeting Inequities
We propose that disadvantaged individuals and communities
will be the focus of specific public housing, health,
education and public transport programme.
2.3.3 Community Development
We propose that:
a) financial assistance be provided to local interest groups
to assist them to participate in local and regional planning
and sustainable development initiatives;
b) funds be made available from the Central Government for
the coordination, preparation and implementation of
ecologically sustainable strategic plans by state
Governments and regional organisations;
c) funds be made available for the planning and initiation
of ecologically sustainable industries at local and regional
level; and
d) funds be provided for a Rural Community Initiatives
Programme to be instituted to assist in the strengthening of
rural communities, including improving opportunities for
employment, cultural and youth activities.
Industrial Relations Policies for Productivity
3.1 Principles
The starting point for us in industrial relations, as in all
policy areas, is ethics. The workplace should provide the
opportunity for workers to be empowered and to engage in
safe, socially useful and productive work. Criteria such as
profitability and efficiency are important in structuring a
workplace, but they are secondary.
The central issue in industrial relations is to maintain the
arbitration system as the protector of the public interest.
We support:
a) the provision of pathways for all employees to have work
which is safe, satisfying and socially useful;
b) opportunities for workers to receive education and
training appropriate for the achievement of these goals;
c) equal opportunities and fair and equitable treatment
across the workforce for all employees;
d) effective consultation between Governments, employers and
unions on all aspects of industrial legislation;
e) processes of conciliation and arbitration as the proper
bases for a fair and effective industrial relations system;
f) the rights of unions and unionists to take industrial
action to protect and promote their legitimate industrial
interests without legal impediment;
g) the establishment of a Charter of Workers' Rights in
special legislation;
h) the right of all workers to be involved in participatory
planning; and
i) a wider role for the Indian Industrial Relations
Commission (IIRC) a body to be established as an arbiter in
industrial disputes to consider social and environmental
implications regarding a dispute. Appropriate
representatives of relevant groups should be given standing
to appear in the Commission to present their views regarding
such implications.
3.2 Goals
We aim to:
a) maintain the system of industrial awards;
b) extend the system of equal opportunity throughout the
workforce;
c) develop flexible and democratic workplace patterns and
structures;
d) support the highest standards of workplace health and
safety.
3.3 Short Term Targets
We will work to:
a) repeal the provisions against legitimate union activity
such as boycotts and pickets in the Trade Practices Act and
other pieces of Central legislation, and protect unions and
workers against common law actions;
b) provide accredited and transferable training and skill
development for employees in a national framework;
c) support a national system of industrial relations and
facilitate the provision of more flexible working
arrangements/hours where these are not at the expense of
work satisfaction, workers' income or family life;
d) extend union participation in the Central industrial
relations system regardless of the nature of the employment
of their members, such as casual or part-time employees;
e) facilitate the continued effective and democratic
functioning of unions;
f) encourage employee owned or managed businesses, or
businesses with significant employee ownership or control;
g) establish processes which ensure the participation of
women in enterprise or collective bargaining and other
industrial negotiations;
h) support legislation that ensures that employers recognise
and negotiate with the relevant unions;
i) support only those enterprise agreements that do not
undermine the system of awards and award conditions, and
support enterprise agreements that involve employers and
unions;
j) ensure resources are provided to organisations of the
unemployed to give them an effective voice in society.
Strengthening Rural Communities through Rural Reconstruction
4.1 Principles
4.1.1 Rebuilding Rural Communities
While a world view is necessary if we are to both care for
the planet and redress world-wide injustices and inequities,
the fate of the world rests significantly on the actions of
communities - both in their ability to generate local
initiatives and in their combined ability to promote change
at national and international levels. Our policies therefore
strengthen local democratic processes, encourage regional
sustainable development initiatives and planning, and
enhance management as well as administrative capabilities
within local communities.
Our policy for strengthening rural communities is based on
the recognition that the situation in rural communities,
whereby occupational choices are limited, family members
often have to leave the district to obtain work, services
have been cut back and where cultural and social
opportunities are restricted, is one which needs major
Government attention and implementation of positive
community and regional development initiatives in order to
be redressed.
We recognise that Indian rural communities have, in recent
time, been subject to Government policies which have
adversely affected the viability of community life, the
quality of life in rural communities as well as adversely
affecting producers' access to markets within India. We are
wary of making an economy less diverse and more vulnerable
through encouraging it to specialise in those industries in
which it has competitive export advantage while abandoning
those industries that cannot compete against foreign
imports.
An efficient and sustainable agricultural sector is critical
to the viability of local and regional economies and is a
vital component of the revitalisation of rural India. Our
policies for strengthening rural communities and for
Agriculture recognise the central role of community and
ecologically sustainable agricultural production to regional
and national economies.
We also recognise that in a technological society,
empowerment of the individual may rely on his/her ability to
effectively use communication technology and information
systems.
We will support education policies to enhance the
opportunity for all Indians to reach their full potential in
science and technology literacy.
4.1.2 Physical Environment
Agricultural practices are presently operating beyond the
ecological capacity of most areas devoted to farming, which
in turn impacts on rural communities. Processes that
threaten biodiversity, the long-term viability of
agriculture and in which inappropriate land management
practices are currently implicated include:
• ongoing legal and illegal clearing of native vegetation;
• changed and/or insufficient flow regimes in rivers and
streams;
• salination;
• soil erosion and degradation;
• chemical contamination of habitat and food sources;
• water pollution;
• irrigation; and
• intensive inappropriate or cruel animal production
practices.
The ecological and economic cost of land degradation will
increase unless major steps are taken to counter degradation
processes. Farm financial pressure is a contributing factor
to land degradation. The servicing of loans often requires
farmers to extract the maximum amount of income from their
land. Financial pressures are exaggerated by unsympathetic
banks, fluctuating commodity prices and unreliable climatic
conditions. The cost of land degradation in India is now
measured in crores of rupees per year, resulting also in
significant impacts on rural communities.
Our policies for water are based on adopting a total
catchment approach to the management of water, recognising
that the restructuring of the water supply in India by
introduction of free market competition is likely to be
accompanied by a severe loss of social and environmental
accountability and responsibility; and, equitable allocation
of water amongst all users.
4.2 Goals
4.2.1 Provision of Services to Rural Communities
We aim to:
a) provide a level of services comparable, where feasible,
with metropolitan services, for example, in health,
education, community care, communications (including both
post offices and information technology services), sports
facilities and cultural activities;
b) provide programmes to ensure residents achieve a
comparable quality of life and access to services;
c) provide programmes to enable rural residents to
appreciate culture and knowledge; and
d) facilitation of public transport and communications
(including postal services) and provide improved access to
transport services to residents of rural India.
4.2.2 Community Participation in Government
The following goals are set by us:
a) in the long term, wherever possible, decision-making
should be determined by bioregional considerations and
patterns of social interaction;
b) community services and local environment policy should be
provided at the closest possible level to the consumers of
the services; and
c) there should be a move towards regional planning and
organisation, foreshadowing the eventual emergence of a more
decentralised system of Government.
4.2.3 Environment
We aim to:
a) hold the amount of water captured for human use from
surface aquatic systems and provide environmental flows to
all river systems and their dependent ecosystems;
b) limit the amount of water drawn from groundwater systems
to rates not greater than they are replenished; and
c) maintain public ownership and control over all major
water supply, distribution, drainage and disposal systems.
4.3 Short Term Targets
4.3.1 Provision of Services to Rural Communities
We will:
a) work to provide a quality public education system with
guaranteed access for all, including rural residents;
b) provide additional funding for students who are
physically and/or intellectually disabled, or who are
disadvantaged by location and/or distance;
c) initiate programmes aimed at reducing suicide rates,
particularly among young people and people in rural areas;
and
4.3.2 Support for Young People in Rural Communities
We support:
a) increased employment and education opportunities, for
disadvantaged young people, including for those in rural or
remote areas; and
b) greater representation of young people on regional
economic organisations and greater recognition of
community-based grassroot organisations which generate
environment friendly and sustainable as well as socially
useful employment opportunities.
4.3.3 Community Participation in Government
We propose that
a) funds be made available from the Central Government for
the coordination, preparation and implementation of
ecologically/environmentally sustainable strategic plans by
local Governments and regional organisations; and
b) financial assistance be provided to local interest groups
to assist them to participate in local and regional planning
and sustainable development initiatives.
4.3.4 Trade
We will also support a review of agriculture subsidies in
terms of their adverse social and environmental impacts.
4.3.5 Environment
We will work to:
a) implement, as a matter of urgency, national legislation
to control the clearing of native vegetation, with
complementary provisions at State and/or local level;
b) integrate commercial wood production into diversified
agricultural enterprises, as well as providing marketing
mechanisms to facilitate this;
c) support the development of alternative fibre industries
where they are more ecologically sustainable;
d) provide funds for the planning and initiation of
ecologically sustainable industries at local and regional
level;
e) propose changes in the taxation structure for chemical
fertilisers and pesticides with the aim of supporting a
change to ecologically sustainable farming methods. Levies
on these products will be redistributed to the farming
community through education, information and other
appropriate programmes on integrated and non-chemical pest
management and sustainable farming practices.
f) maintain or restore the natural diversity and
productivity of soil in agricultural and pastoral areas.
g) provide information and low-interest loan incentive
programme to assist rural residents to:
• choose renewable energy systems for domestic and farm
power supplies; and
• adopt water conservation practices for domestic and farm
use.
Drugs Policy and Drug De-Addiction Policy
5.1 Principles
In a democratic society in which diversity is accepted, each
person has the opportunity to achieve personal fulfilment.
It is understood that the means and aims of fulfillment may
vary between people at different stages of their lives, and
may, for some people at particular times, involve the use of
drugs.
Classification and regulation of drugs should be based upon
known health effects with community education programme to
make factual information freely available.
Regulation should aim to maximise individual health and
social safety and well-being.
Programmes operating among users of addictive drugs should
focus upon harm minimisation and increasing their life
options.
5.2 Goals
We will work towards:
a) more appropriate classifications for drugs based upon
their effects upon health;
b) wide availability of relevant information about drugs;
c) decriminalisation of drugs;
d) making the connections between addictive drug use and
wider issues such as suicide, unemployment, homelessness,
lack of hope for the future; working towards solving these
problems; removing the focus on excessive drug use which is
a symptom rather than a cause; and
e) widely available community-based counselling and support
services for drug-users without condemnation, including
adequate follow-up.
5.3 Short term targets
5.3.1 Illegal drugs
We believe that softer, less addictive drugs should be more
freely available as research shows that such availability
mitigates against the use of hard drugs.
5.3.2 Regulated drugs
We will work to immediately set in process the following:
a) independent research into the effects and addictive
properties of drugs commonly prescribed by doctors for a
wide variety of causes from hyperactiveness in children to
stress and depression in adults, with a view to greater
restriction and regulation of those;
b) mandatory labelling and verbal advice by doctors as to
the effects and potential for addiction of prescribed drugs;
and
c) continued independent research into food additives to
ascertain their health effects, both short and long term,
and ensuring the publicising of results.
5.3.3 Freely available drugs
We will work to immediately set in process the following:
a) taking all possible steps to reduce the image tobacco and
alcohol have, especially for young people; this will include
banning advertising of tobacco and alcohol products and
restricting opportunities for sponsorship;
b) ensuring that smoking does not endanger the health of
others;
c) disallowing the use of drunkenness as an excuse to avoid
retribution in crimes of violence and negligence;
d) restriction of sale of alcohol to people under the age of
18.
5.3.4 Treatment of people with drug addictions
We will work to immediately set in process the following:
a) freely available treatment programme with adequate
follow-up;
b) treatment programme and facilities which sensitively
cater for individuals within different groups, women and
men, including older people, parents of children and the
young.
c) involving NGOs to locate drug addicts and bring
attitudinal and behavioural change among them with a view to
advising them to stop taking drugs.
d) bringing such drug addicts to the main stream by
providing them suitable training for making them social
activists in the areas of social justice and empowerment.
d) organising deaddiction camps by inviting medical experts
belonging to modern medicine as well as alternative,
complementary and energetic medicinal areas.
Environmental Protection Policies
1.1 Principles
We recognise that the Earth's life support systems are
fundamental to maximising human welfare.
In pursuit of our goals, the we will ensure equity and
social justice, and that those sectors of the community
least able to bear the cost of redressing environmental
degradation will not be disadvantaged.
In formulating an Environment Policy, we are striving for
ecological sustainability through:
a) the protection of biological diversity and the
maintenance of ecological integrity;
b) the use of material resources in accordance with the
Earth�s capacity to supply them and to assimilate wastes
arising from their use; and
c) equity within and between generations.
Where there are threats of serious or irreversible
environmental damage, decisions should err on the side of
caution, with the burden of proof resting with technological
and industrial developers to demonstrate that the planned
projects are ecologically sustainable.
To become ecologically sustainable, our society must change
over time from one which recognises no physical or
ecological limits, to one which lives within the capacity of
the Earth to support it and allows for the Earth to sustain
the diversity of living things. This means that ingenuity
must be used to do more with less, the trend to more
efficient use of physical resources and energy must be
accelerated, and the limits within which society and the
economy function must be explicitly recognised. To enable
targets to be set and progress to be measured, these limits
must be defined as early as possible. We set the following
goals and limits as essential for the achievement of
ecological sustainability in our country.
1.2 Goals
We aim to:
a) achieve an ecologically sustainable society, both in
India and globally, which lives within the capacity of the
Earth to supply renewable resources and to assimilate
wastes;
b) ensure that human activities maintain the biological
diversity of all named organisms at the level of subspecies
and of all other organisms, through the adequate protection
of the ecological communities of which they are part;
c) hold the amount of water captured for human use from
surface aquatic systems and provide environmental flows to
all river systems and their dependent ecosystems;
d) limit the amount of water drawn from groundwater systems
to rates not greater than they are replenished;
e) reduce emissions of Carbon Dioxide as well as other
greenhouse gases;
f) eliminate human-induced release of ozone-depleting
substances in the upper atmosphere;
g) reduce the total quantity of solid, liquid and gaseous
wastes (including those from non-point sources) annually
disposed into the environment;
h) maintain or restore the natural diversity and
productivity of soil in agricultural and pastoral areas;
i) reduce the total amount of land occupied by human
infrastructure (transport, buildings, roads) and agriculture
(grazing, cropping);
j) facilitate closer liaison among rural, urban, tribal and
indigenous peoples in India, such that all might benefit
from indigenous knowledge of our land in order to further
its management in ways which are sustainable;
k) provide for increased participation by local communities
in planning and implementing strategies to protect the
environment;
l) increase environmental awareness leading to a desire by
all Indians to protect the environment; and
m) apply the principle of intergenerational equity in all
environmental programmes.
1.3 Short Term Targets
1.3.1 Biological Diversity
We will work to:
a) ensure funding and enforcement of habitat recovery plans
for endangered species;
b) implement, as a matter of urgency, national legislation
to control the clearing of native vegetation, with
complementary provisions at state and/or local level; and
c) establish a comprehensive and viable system of
terrestrial and marine protected areas managed primarily to
protect biodiversity; the system will include all remaining
areas of high wilderness value, and will also protect wild
and scenic rivers which remain in essentially pristine
condition;
d) prohibit automatic mining rights and mining exploration
on agricultural land.
1.3.2 Forests and Wood Production
We will work to:
a) end logging of old growth and other high conservation
value native forests immediately, and over time complete the
phase-out of most logging from native forests, including
regrowth forests;
b) adopt a Wood Products Industry Plan that will accelerate
the transition from native forests to plantations by
encouraging the fullest possible domestic processing of wood
from plantations, and increased recycling. As a complement
to the plan, we will provide a package of retraining and
other assistance for workers facing displacement from the
native forest-based industry;
c) integrate commercial wood production into diversified
agricultural enterprises, as well as providing marketing
mechanisms to facilitate this; and
d) support the development of alternative fibre industries
where they are more ecologically sustainable.
1.3.3 Mining and Mineral Exploration
We will work:
a) to prohibit mineral exploration and mining as well as
extraction of petroleum and gas in nature conservation
reserves, including national parks, wilderness areas and
other areas of outstanding nature conservation value;
b) to ban all new sand-mining operations in the coastal
zone.
1.3.4 Marine Environments and Fishing
We will:
a) work to establish a comprehensive system of marine
reserves in Indian waters; and
b) for existing fisheries, work to immediately prohibit an
increase in level of harvest, and determine as a matter of
urgency the requirements for ecological sustainability and
regulate the catch accordingly, with a substantial safety
margin to ensure sustainability
1.3.5 Climate Change and Ozone Depletion
We will work to:
a) reduce emissions of Carbon Dioxide as well as other
greenhouse gases and to have clear national, regional and
local energy policies adopted to enable this target to be
reached;
b) support an international protocol that makes these
greenhouse gas emission targets binding for all
industrialised countries; and
c) phase out production of carbon tetrachloride, methyl
chloroform, CFCs and halons immediately, and HCFCs and
methyl bromide by 2020.
1.3.6 Machinery of Government
We will work to:
a) legislate to establish a Commission with independent
funding to examine and report on the environmental
performance of public authorities;
b) strengthen the Environment Protection Act 1986.
c) ensure the development of publicly accessible, well
resourced, compatible, coordinated networks of data
monitoring and data-based legislated State of Environment
reporting at local Government, state/territory or regional,
and national levels;
d) ensure the Government maintains and exercises those
constitutional powers which are applicable to the
environment, with State environmental policy to be
supervised and subject to a minimum set of stringent
national standards.
Coastal Zone Management Policies
2.1 Principles
Our policies for the management of our coasts are based on
the following general principles which underpin ecologically
sustainable development:
a) the protection of biological diversity and the
maintenance of ecological integrity;
b) the use of material resources in accordance with the
Earth�s capacity to supply them and to assimilate wastes
arising from their use;
c) equity within and between generations; and
d) public participation and involvement.
2.2 Goals
We aim to:
a) increase ecological, economic and social awareness of the
importance of coastal and inland waters and of human impacts
on them;
b) protect coastal ecosystems;
c) allow the replenishing of stocks of depleted aquatic and
coastal life;
d) reduce the harvest of all coastal resources to well
within an ecologically sustainable limit;
e) protect fish breeding areas;
f) reduce marine and other aquatic pollution, including from
diffuse urban and agricultural sources;
g) increase the involvement of local communities in the
management of coastal, onshore and aquatic resources;
h) ensure an integrated approach to management;
i) improve local, national and global coordination of
coastal management policies;
j) locate activities that are not coast-dependent away from
the coastal zone; and
k) develop long-term strategies to contain urban and tourism
development.
2.3 Short Term Targets
We will work to:
a) establish a comprehensive national system of marine
reserves in Indian waters by the year 2020;
b) for existing fisheries, immediately prohibit an increase
in level of harvest, and determine as a matter of urgency
the requirements for ecological sustainability and regulate
the catch accordingly, with a substantial safety margin to
ensure sustainability;
c) work with the States and Union Territories and/or
directly with local Governments to complete an environmental
audit of the coastal zone by 2020 and an action plan by
2022;
e) implement a national legislative / planning regime to
control land use and development in the coastal zone,
including a moratorium on new subdivisions until completion
of the coastal action plan;
f) ban all new sandmining operations in the coastal zone and
inland rivers.
Water Management Policies
3.1 Principles
Our policies for water are based on:
a) adopting a total catchment approach to the management of
water;
b) preserving biodiversity and ecological integrity;
c) recognising that the restructuring of the water supply in
India by introduction of free market competition is likely
to be accompanied by a severe loss of social and
environmental accountability and responsibility; and
d) equitable allocation of water amongst all users.
3.2 Goals
We aim to:
a) decrease per capita consumption of fresh water by
increasing efficiency of water use, and expanding
opportunities for re-use;
b) stop the discharge of sewage into aquatic systems;
c) maximise the capacity to reuse sewage treatment
by-products by reducing pollution at source, minimising
waste, and phasing out the discharge of toxic chemicals to
sewerage systems;
d) hold the amount of water captured for human use from
surface aquatic systems and provide environmental flows to
all river systems and their dependent ecosystems;
e) draw water from groundwater systems at rates not greater
than they are replenished;
f) ensure equitable access to adequate supplies of clean
water for human consumption;
g) apply the principles of least-cost planning to the
provision of water, drainage and sewerage services;
h) reduce erosion, sedimentation and pollution of
watercourses, wetlands and estuaries, by protecting and
restoring native riparian vegetation and improving catchment
management;
i) maintain public ownership and control over all major
water supply, distribution, drainage and disposal systems;
j) maintain and where possible increase the area of water
supply catchments that are free of logging, agriculture and
other land uses which degrade water quality
k) provide for full public participation in decisions about
water, drainage and sewerage; and
l) provide information and low -interest loan incentive
programme to assist rural residents to adopt water
conservation practices for domestic and farm use.
3.3 Short Term Targets
We will work to:
a) establish a major new national programme to restore
environmental flows to all river systems and improve water
quality and implement the programme through national
agreements between Central / State and / or local
Governments;
b) use all available powers to maintain major water supply,
distribution, drainage and disposal systems in public
ownership;
c) cancel all plans to build large-scale new dams; and
d) ensure that drinking water supplies meet or exceed WHO
(World Health Organisation) standards, and that their
quality is publicly reported regularly.
Energy Management Policies
4.1 Principles
Our energy related policy is based on these premises:
a) the price of energy should fairly incorporate the full
social, health and environmental costs of production and
use;
b) there is a finite limit to non-renewable resources
available for energy production;
c) the most commonly used methods of energy production have
serious, deleterious effects upon the planet, most notably
air pollution and contribution to greenhouse gases;
d) energy problems will not be solved by additional
conventional power generation capacity;
e) transition to ecologically sustainable energy systems
will be achieved through long term planning, research and
development, demand management, increased energy efficiency
and conservation, and greater reliance on renewable sources
of energy;
f) given the environmental impact of large scale dams for
hydro-electric schemes, and the high costs and risks to the
environment and human health associated with nuclear energy,
we do not consider that these systems form a viable
long-term basis for putting the energy sector on an
ecologically sustainable footing; and
g) achieving sustainability in the use and production of
energy will have ramifications for every sector of the
economy.
4.2 Goals
We aim to:
a) take a lead role internationally in promoting policies to
reduce the impact of climate change due to the enhanced
green house effect:
b) assist other countries to develop and meet greenhouse gas
emission targets through technology transfer and other forms
of assistance;
c) apply integrated resource planning principles to the
provision of all non-transport energy services. This is a
systematic way of providing energy services to society at
least cost;
d) provide for participation by local communities in
planning and implementing strategies to provide energy
services sustainably;
e) exercise restraint in use of non-renewable fossil fuel
reserves in order to leave adequate supplies for future
generations;
f) reduce dependence on fossil fuels by
• supporting the phase-out of coal and oil-fired power
stations and the development of renewable alternatives;
• decreasing reliance on private motor transport; and
• increasing energy efficiency;
g) address regional equity impacts of making the transition
to ecologically sustainable forms of energy production and
use, through long term planning and specific development
programme for affected regions. Some regions which are
currently heavily dependent on the extraction of fossil fuel
and the development and maintenance of power generation
facilities which use fossil fuel will suffer employment loss
in the transition;
h) establish strong national regulation over energy
production, distribution and supply to ensure that
integrated resource planning is implemented, to control
economic, social and environmental impacts in the public
interest and to ensure full community consultation;
i) provide incentives to encourage consumers to promote
alternative energy technologies;
j) introduce a comprehensive carbon levy; revenue from this
levy is to be used to fund public transport as well as the
development of alternative energy techniques such as solar
thermal power, photo-voltaics and wind power; there will
also be compensation for any regressive impact of this levy
on low income earners.
4.3 Short Term Targets
We will work to:
a) introduce a carbon levy;
b) use all available mechanisms to optimise electricity
generation, distribution and supply infrastructure;
c) introduce tight enforceable regulation of the electricity
supply industry to protect the public interest and the
environment;
d) reduce emissions of Carbon Dioxide and other greenhouse
gases and adopt clear national, regional and local energy
policies to enable this target to be reached;
e) support an international protocol that makes these
targets binding for all industrialised countries;
f) introduce national legislation to give effect to climate
change controls;
g) establish a Sustainable Energy Authority to coordinate
and oversee programme for research, development and adoption
of energy efficiency and renewable energy in India;
h) adopt mandatory energy labelling, and mandatory minimum
energy performance standards for all commercial and domestic
appliances, equipment and buildings;
i) oppose any new coal-fired power stations and large-scale
hydro-electric dams;
j) provide information and low-interest loan programmes to
encourage rural residents to choose renewable energy systems
for domestic and farm power supplies;
Waste Minimization and Management
5.1 Principles
Waste management is a growing issue. The accumulation of
rubbish presents aesthetic, social and environmental
problems and is representative of inefficient resource use.
Recycling technology, and profit from the resale of recycled
materials, are improving and this is to be encouraged. More
important, however, is the encouragement of avoiding waste
as well as reducing and reusing at both the manufacturing
and consumer levels. A comprehensive waste reduction
strategy should be developed addressing each stage of the
production and consumption cycle.
When it comes to implementing the strategy Governments have
largely relied on voluntary measures, which have proved
insufficient, particularly as far as the industrial sector
is concerned. We are proposing legal measures as well as
economic incentives to encourage waste minimisation.
5.2 Goals
The disadvantages of landfill disposal of waste are obvious
to most people. The loss of various resources is accompanied
by water pollution, odour and vermin. We support measures
that will reverse such a procedure. We want to be part of
building a society where:
a) individuals are aware of the importance of reusing
whatever can be reused and refusing whatever will eventually
go to landfills when another choice is available;
b) manufacturers move towards a whole life cycle approach to
resource management and ultimately toward closed loop
production systems;
c) in the short term, levies are imposed on non-recyclable
containers and other plastic and metal items, with a view to
the long-term phase-out of these items;
d) material that can be recycled is collected and then
actually used in the production of new goods; and
e) departments, offices and private citizens are given
financial incentives to use recycled material and
disincentives against their use are examined.
5.3 Short Term Targets
5.3.1 Non-Recyclables
We will support the phasing out of non-recyclable plastics
through various means, including the imposition of levies on
their use.
5.3.2 Encouraging Reuse of Containers
We will:
a) propose container deposit legislation to encourage the
reuse of glass containers; and
b) propose a levy on disposable plastic carry bags in shops;
this is to be paid by the customer, as a means of
discouraging wasteful plastic packaging as well as for
encouraging recycling of old bags.
5.3.3 Increasing Recycling
We will:
a) ensure the Government gives preference in purchasing
contracts to recycled products or products that can be
re-used (for example, recycled paper and the re-filling of
computer printing cartridges). The preferred purchasing will
be extended to low energy rated products such as equipment
that has energy saving features;
b) propose mandatory recycling of waste paper from
Government departments and other big paper users;
c) investigate what happens to material collected as
recyclables to ensure they are in fact being recycled;
d) propose special facilities for the collection of heavy
metals contained in fluorescent tubes and non-rechargeable
batteries;
e) implement a levy for non-rechargeable batteries to make
rechargeable batteries more cost competitive; and
f) propose the establishment of tyre recycling facilities.
5.3.4 Composting
We will:
a) encourage home composting;
b) support local Government provision of composting bins
both for collection and for on-site usage; and
c) examine mechanisms for removing disincentives.
5.3.5 Disposal of Harmful Substances
We will
a) support measures to collect, and whenever possible
recycle, material for which dumping can be harmful to fauna
or flora;
b) work to establish a National Waste and Pollution
Inventory and legislation requiring companies to report any
roxic substances released into air, soil or water, with
details about when, where and how emitted. The data base
should be accessible to the public; and
c) require industry to work towards elimination of toxic
waste.
Agricultural Production and Quality Control
6.1 Principles
Our policy for land management and agriculture is based on:
a) recognising the need for flexibility and diversity in
agriculture for environmental and economic reasons;
b) recognising the central role of ecologically sustainable
agricultural production to regional economies and the
nation;
c) preventing significant or lasting negative impacts on
soil and water quality and biodiversity;
d) recognising India's national and international moral
responsibilities as a food producer;
e) supporting trading patterns and local controls which
enable environmental and food quality standards to be
maintained and improved; and
f) concern for the welfare of animals used in agriculture.
6.2 Goals
We aim to:
a) build on participatory processes which improve land and
water catchment management;
b) ensure that economic viability does not force
exploitation of labour;
c) ensure that agriculture takes full account of the need
for water management as an input to farming and as a
resource vital to others;
d) encourage forms of primary production and rural land-use
that conserve soil and water, maintain biodiversity, and use
minimal amounts of non-renewable energy, agrochemicals and
water;
e) encourage the development of value-adding and quality
agricultural products;
f) encourage agricultural systems, enterprises and processes
which are resilient and diverse;
g) introduce policies to reverse land degradation (erosion,
salinity, acidification, nutrient loss, soil structural
decline, loss of native vegetation) and ensure that land
management practices are compatible with programmes to
restore degraded ecosystems and habitat;
h) reduce the dependence of agriculture on chemicals, and
provide accurate information about them to farmers and
consumers;
i) ensure that the use of genetic engineering is strictly
controlled, particularly the transfer of genetic material
between species, with the onus of proof on the proponent;
j) require food that has been produced as a result of
genetical engineering to be labelled accordingly;
k) improve the welfare of animals used in agriculture;
l) ensure that responsibility for sustainable land
management is shared by businesses which process and sell
produce, or supply inputs, and by consumers, as well as by
landholders and all levels of Government;
m) encourage systems which maintain socially and
economically diverse and vibrant rural communities;
n) encourage the revitalisation of rural companies and
ensure adequate services for physical and social needs;
o) provide for participation in planning and implementing
strategies for ecologically sustainable agricultural
production;
p) facilitate dialogue between conventional and modern
farmers to assist the exchange of land management skills;
q) move towards regional levels of planning and organisation
for the management of natural resources;
6.3 Short Term Targets
We are working to establish a clear regulatory environment
for agricultural businesses, through national legislation,
complemented by state and/or local provisions. Areas to be
regulated include:
• clearing, management and restoration of native vegetation;
• importation, propagation and movement of exotic plants and
animals; and
• mandatory notification, assessment and monitoring of all
genetic engineering proposals, including environmental
impact assessment.
We will work to:
a) introduce enforceable national standards for the
licensing and use of agricultural chemicals. Such standards
shall be compatible with or better than the most rigorous
standards for specific chemicals with related use-paths
elsewhere in the world;
b) ensure the adoption of national, legally enforceable
codes of practice to ensure that animals used in agriculture
have the ability to satisfy their natural physical and
behavioural needs;
c) target direct funding and other forms of economic
assistance to enhance achievement of ecologically
sustainable land management;
d) propose changes in the taxation structure for chemical
fertilisers and pesticides with the aim of supporting a
change to ecologically sustainable farming methods. Levies
on these products will be redistributed to the farming
community through education, information and other
appropriate programmes on integrated and non-chemical pest
management and sustainable farming practices;
e) systematically and regularly review the efficacy of
existing agricultural assistance as well as rural land
management programme;
f) significantly enhance funding for research and programme
which provide control of environmental weeds and
environmentally sound and humane methods for control of
feral animals;
g) monitor land degradation and biodiversity on rural
private land at a national level;
h) initiate a comprehensive, uniform national mapping of
land systems and biota, and their condition, as a base for
preparing regional plans for sustainable land management;
i) ensure comprehensive review and restructuring of the arid
lands pastoral industry;
j) propose research, promotion and training in farm
practices including effective forms of biological pest
control that reduce the use and impact of chemicals;
k) immediately transfer responsibility for land protection
to the Environment portfolio; and
l) implement an action plan for the retirement and/or
conservation covenanting of land deemed ecologically
unsuited to continuing agricultural use, or of significant
ecological value.
Industrial Development and Entrepreneurship
7.1 Principles
We hold that:
a) India must find creative solutions to the urgent global
problem of developing products and processes to meet an
increasing population's material needs while protecting the
natural environment on which all economic activity and
social well-being ultimately depends;
b) Governments should provide a clear national regulatory
framework for environmental protection, and adjust economic
incentives accordingly, to encourage industry to commit to
major, long-term ecologically sustainable projects;
c) strong regulation can assist business to become more
competitive;
d) Governments should play an active role both in mediating
negative social and economic effects which may result from a
shift to ecologically sustainable industries and in
developing new opportunities;
e) clean production technology which seeks to minimise
potential problems at their source is preferable to costly
and often ineffective clean-ups;
f) industry has a crucial role in advancing sustainable
development through the adoption of appropriate technology
and practices;
g) industry can become more efficient and competitive by
adopting Green objectives to reduce raw material consumption
and reduce pollution;
h) investment in education and training at all levels and
maintenance of the nation's research facilities at world
best standards will provide the human and intellectual
capital required to compete in high-skilled, high
value-added and innovative green industries; and
i) decisions relating to the impact of industrial activities
on the environment are complex and must be supported by
accurate, detailed and timely data.
7.2 Goals
We aim to:
a) phase out tax breaks, subsidies and other Government
policies that encourage resource waste, pollution and
environmental degradation;
b) offer positive incentives like tax deductions, rebates
and enhanced depreciation allowances to businesses investing
in technology or capital expenditure which reduces resource
use, waste and pollution;
c) phase in price adjustments for energy, water and landfill
that equitably incorporate the social, health and
environmental costs of production and use;
d) promote environmental auditing procedures and best
practice management to utilities, Government enterprises and
private sector businesses;
e) encourage unions to pursue environmental improvement
plans in the context of enterprise bargaining to enable all
employees to participate in and benefit from workplace
environmental performance;
f) press manufacturers to move towards a whole life cycle
approach to resource management and ultimately toward closed
loop production systems;
g) encourage industry to take maximum responsibility for the
reduction, sale or recovery of by-products so that external
waste treatment becomes the instrument of last resort;
h) incorporate the polluter-pays principle into national
legislation;
i) assist consumers to make environmentally conscious
evaluations of goods and services by providing accessible,
practical, comparative information, including whole of life
cycle assessments, and by further strengthening the National
Eco-labelling Scheme to define green products;
j) institute preferential purchasing by Governments for so
defined "green" products;
k) give top priority to research that facilitates the
achievement of Ecologically Sustainable Development (ESD),
with particular emphasis on energy saving technologies and
renewable energy sources;
l) fund research into the linkages between threats to
biodiversity and ecological integrity and particular
industries or industrial processes;
m) implement a national approach to environmental monitoring
and reporting;
n) phase out the exportation of toxic and putrescible waste
to landfill; and
o) encourage environmental performance reporting in
accounting information and company annual reports.
Guidelines need to be established for environmental data
labelling on goods and services, including such information
as depletion of resources, emissions and waste. All spheres
of Government should make mandatory the inclusion of
environment performance and environment data labelling in
tenders from the private as well as public sector.
7.3 Short Term Targets
We will work to:
a) establish a National Ecologically Sustainable Industry
Assistance Programme with funding derived from directed
superannuation investment and national industry partnership
funding;
b) announce a Sustainable Industries Plan, setting out
directions, targets, benchmarks, time frames and funding;
c) establish uniform national environmental regulatory
standards for air and water quality, including waterways;
d) establish uniform national legislation to ensure clarity
and enforcement of environmental protection legislation;
e) implement national strategies for the treatment of
hazardous and intractable wastes, with appropriate funding;
f) establish a National Waste and Pollution Inventory and
legislation requiring companies to report any toxic
substances released into air, soil or water, with details
about when, where and how emitted. The Inventory will
include transfer data (i.e. statutory authority emissions
such as sewage, waste, etc.). The data base will be
accessible to the public;
Population Education and Stabilization
8.1 Principles
Neither the planet, nor any country, can sustain continued
human population growth. Four Earths would be required for
all human inhabitants to live if population grows as the
present rate. However, the relationship between people and
environments is a complex one, not reducible simply to
carrying capacity, but mediated by economic, social,
political, cultural and technological considerations. The
Indian Government should consult with the widest possible
range of interest groups to arrive at a population policy
which respects human rights.
The basis for India's population policy, both domestic and
global, must be ecological sustainability, intergenerational
equity and social justice. A precautionary approach is
required in order to take into account the consequences of
human impact on the environment.
In order to achieve a sustainable population, action must be
taken on consumption levels and technology use as well as
population size. We must generate less waste and implement
technologies, such as those based on renewable energy, which
are more environmentally benign.
The consumption patterns are contributing to global as well
as to local environmental problems and we have a
responsibility to current and future generations to ensure
that we do not knowingly degrade their world. As Indians we
also have a responsibility towards non-human species, many
of which have already become extinct or endangered.
Government policies and taxation systems are tools which can
be used to change consumption patterns over the medium to
long term, and to protect and manage ecosystems vulnerable
to human activity.
India must contribute towards achieving a globally
sustainable population and solving the macro aspects of
demographic transition of civilisational regions as part of
international responsibility. We should set an example by:
a) managing our own population growth in accordance with
more equitable consumption patterns in relation to the
international context; and
b) redirecting the bulk of aid towards eradicating poverty
and towards those programmes which empower women.
In attaining a sustainable population India must shift its
involvement in a competitive world economy to a more
cooperative, regional, self-sufficient economy based on
equality and human rights.
8.2 Goals
An Indian population policy should consider the distribution
of human settlements rather than just concentrate upon
population size at the national level. The continuing
de-settlement of rural areas must be considered in the light
of ecological and social sustainability and efforts must be
set in place to reverse it in those areas where settlement
is ecologically benign. The ecological and social viability
of ares expected to experience great growth needs to be
safeguarded, and appropriate planning processes set in
place. Human settlements should be designed and built to
minimise environmental and maximise social well-being.
Investing in the social well-being of the entire population
should be the main aim of Government, so that there are
publicly provided services of the highest possible standard.
These services should include education, infrastructure,
health, employment and income support.
8.3 Short Term Targets
We will work towards:
a) ensuring that Indian family planning programme, deliver
services in the context of reproductive health programme
which increase the power of girls and women to determine
their own reproductive lives, and increase the understanding
of men of their reproductive responsibilities
b) envisaging a marketing approach to family planning
policies.
c) evolving a new communication strategy for family planning
and population control for reaching the diverse committees
in different States and Union Territories of India.
Constitutional Reforms
1.1 Principles
We believe that:
a) Parliament is the central authority of representative and
responsible Government;
b) each person should have one vote, that all votes should
be of equal value, and that proportional representation best
reflects the wishes of the electorate in the composition of
Parliament and State Assemblies;
c) each citizen has both the right and the responsibility to
participate in the processes of Government;
d) India's constitution and democratic structures should
help to build an ecologically sustainable and socially just
society, with a global consciousness and a long term
perspective;
e) India's constitution should express our aspirations as a
community and define our rights and responsibilities as
individuals and as members of the community, as well as
establish the powers and duties of Government; and
f) India's constitution and public institutions need some
changed, which should be brought about through an ongoing
participatory process.
1.2 Goals
We propose that the following areas be enshrined in the
constitution more clearly:
a) Civil and Political Issues
• life, liberty and security;
• legal recognition and equality;
• voting and standing for election;
• privacy;
• police custody;
• that relating to an alleged offender;
• standard of criminal procedure;
• that relating to the victim;
• property;
• procedural fairness;
• that particular to a child;
• freedom
• of religion;
• of thought, conscience and belief;
• of speech and other expression;
• of association;
• to peaceful assembly;
• of movement and residence;
• development.
• from discrimination;
• from slavery; and
• from torture, experimentation and treatment;
b) Economic and Social Issues
• education;
• adequate standard of living;
• work;
• legal assistance;
• freedom of family structure; and
• adequate child care.
c) Community and Cultural Issues
• living in a safe society;
• collective and individual development;
• culture;
• environmental protection and conservation; and
• ecologically sustainable
1.3 Short Term Goals
We will:
a) propose the development of an international Framework
Convention on Sustainable Development which is made more
precise by the addition of protocols, for example dealing
with environmental health and environmental due process;
b) oppose attempts to undermine the domestic implementation
of India's international obligations arising from the
ratification of treaties, whilst working towards a process
for domestic ratification of international treaties;
c) support the right of people from the age of 16 years to
vote and to hold public office, in recognition of the
increasing awareness of and responsibility towards current
issues of young people;
d) introduce rules such that people who are found to have
acted in a corrupt way be barred from ever holding public
office again and as well, that they forfeit any
superannuation payments they may have made while holding
that office and that they lose the right to any termination
payments for which they would otherwise have been eligible;
and
e) work for appropriate and adequate consultation to better
gauge opinions on issues of concern.
Local Self-Government
2.1 Principles
We believe that fundamental changes to the structure of
Government are vital if we are to achieve true democracy in
this country. If Government is to be of, for and by the
people, it must start at the local level and it is at this
level that the power must remain.
Whatever the final shape of the reorganisation of the Indian
system of Government, we support the preservation of a
system of local Government which reflects the desire for
local community identity and self-determination. We believe
that power should reside in the most localised sphere of
Government that is able to deal with the issue.
2.2 Goals
While we support local autonomy, we also acknowledge that
giving unbridled power to local councils could lead to
further problems, especially irreversible environmental
ones.
We propose:
a) a Code of Ethics and a Bill of Rights and
Responsibilities based on green principles to ensure that,
among other things, local activities are socially
advantageous and environmentally benign;
b) a review of local Government electoral processes, with a
view to recommending proportional representation;
c) a review of the revenue base of local Government; and
d) better coordination with other levels of Government to
avoid duplication and unnecessary waste of resources.
2.3 Short Term Targets
In recognising that local Government must play an expanded
and more autonomous role while maintaining its
accountability if we are to achieve a truly democratic
system of Government in India, we propose:
a) financial support for those elected to local Government,
in recognition of the part they must play in
decision-making;
b) increased involvement of local Government at other levels
of Government;
c) that State of the Environment reporting include criteria
for measuring the environmental impact of developments;
d) that those people who are found to have acted in a
corrupt way be barred from ever holding public office again
and as well, that they forfeit any superannuation payments
they may have made while holding that office and that they
lose the right to any termination payments for which they
would otherwise have been eligible;
e) that local councils require all new buildings,
subdivisions and developments to conform to Ecologically
Sustainable Development (ESD) principles;
f) a regular flow of information to the community via
community radio, newsletters and noticeboards to give equal
voice to a range of ideas and to encourage community
participation in local Government;
g) that all spheres of Government take immediate steps to
familiarise all citizens with their rights and with all
aspects of the present electoral system; and
h) that there be appropriate and adequate consultation to
better gauge opinions on issues of concern.
Community Participation in Government
3.1 Principles
We are working according to these principles:
a) the legitimacy of community participation in the making
of law and policy should be established as an underpinning
principle of all actions of Governments;
b) all individuals and community groups should be given the
opportunity to participate in decisions which affect them;
c) the contribution of diverse groups provides a valuable
addition to available information;
d) the needs of future generations should be recognised in
contemporary decision-making;
e) decisions should be made at the most appropriate level;
in some cases this will include groupings not currently
given decision-making status, such as the neighbourhood;
f) policies, strategies and frameworks should be developed
which enable civic infrastructure to facilitate community
participation in the business of Government;
g) every effort should be made to give marginalised groups
opportunities to be effectively involved in decision-making.
This will entail longer timelines and the introduction and
strengthening of community development practices. Outreach
beyond written submissions and public forum techniques will
be required;
h) involvement in community consultations should be
recognised as work. Support should be provided to community
organisations to participate in consultative processes;
i) community participation in decision-making should be an
ongoing process, rather than a one-off event which leaves
communities out of reviews and changes to policies;
j) the ability of community groups and individuals to gain
access to information which will empower them to participate
effectively is crucial to meaningful participation; and
k) Governments, of all spheres, should produce and follow
guidelines to ensure that the community representatives whom
they consult on a day to day basis reflect accurately the
views of their constituencies.
3.2 Goals
The following goals are set by us:
a) In the long term, wherever possible, decision-making
should be based on bio-regional considerations and patterns
of social interaction;
b) because of the importance of everybody taking part in
political life, the we will work for the principle that
leave without pay is automatically granted for anybody
standing in an election for public office;
c) community services and local environmental policy should
be provided by the closest possible sphere to the consumers
of the services;
d) the central Government�s domestic role should be to
ensure equitable distribution of resources and information,
to coordinate services which cut across state boundaries and
to ensure that principles of ecological and social
sustainability are followed by local Governments; and
e) less formal organisations at the level of neighbourhoods
country towns, particular interests and issues, etc, should
have access to all spheres of Government through formal and
informal consultative and review procedures.
3.3 Short Term Targets
We set the following targets:
a) the move towards a new form of Government should be based
on wide information-sharing and consultation with all
constituencies of India's population;
b) processes of policy review and decision-making by
Government and its institutions should be made more open and
accessible to the public;
c) Freedom of Information legislation should be widened to
make relevant information more accessible and to reduce the
cost of attaining information by community groups;
d) those public servants and journalists, etc, who publicise
sensitive information of benefit to the community should be
encouraged rather than disadvantaged for efforts to inform
the public of actions which are not in the community
interest;
e) democratically constituted groups which work on behalf of
the wider community, or identified constituencies within it,
should be adequately resourced to enable them to fulfill
their functions;
f) consultative periods should be well advertised and of
sufficient length to enable all those interested to
participate;
g) relevant documents should be available in places
accessible to all members of the public; shopfronts should
be set up for this purpose;
h) public meetings should be held at varying times in
appropriate places to enable attendance by all affected. In
many cases it will be important to provide childcare and
transport, as well as access for the disabled for maximum
involvement of all constituencies; in some cases, it will be
preferable to talk to people in their homes or habitual
meeting places rather than to set up a meeting and expect
them to attend;
i) information should be presented clearly, graphically and
free of jargon;
j) the development of a free-access citizen information and
governance participation facility on the Internet should be
promoted;
k) existing community networks should be identified and
strengthened through community development.
Economic Understanding
1.1 Principles
We are committed to four pillars of Green Economics:
1.1.1 Ecological Integrity
We affirm the inherent worth and interconnectedness of all
living things. Biodiversity is an essential component of
human welfare, yielding both utilitarian and existence
values. The intrinsic value of biodiversity, in its own
right, is also emphasised by us.
Society needs to uncouple the traditional relationship
between economic growth and increased resource use, so that
irreparable damage to nature is avoided and the depletion of
the natural resource base is slowed. The impact of economic
activity must be kept within environmental limits,
particularly the capacity of ecosystems to process wastes.
Integration of economic, social and environmental
imperatives must replace the narrow pursuit of economic
growth as currently defined. Many environmental problems are
global in scale, therefore the maintenance of ecological
integrity requires the adoption of a global perspective.
1.1.2 Equity
Social responsibility implies that people should contribute
in proportion to their ability and resources, and that the
community should ensure that no-one is forced to go without
the necessities of life. The phasing out of unsustainable
activities should not further deprive people who do not have
sufficient means to live. These responsibilities apply at
the individual, local, national and international levels.
In ensuring equity within the current generation, we must
treat future generations equitably. This implies solidarity
with deprived groups in our country as well as with
disadvantaged countries and nations elsewhere. It also
implies solidarity with future generations. Each generation
should receive an endowment of social and environmental
assets that allows for human needs to be met and development
options to be pursued. Because the negative consequences of
human activity on the ability of future generations to meet
their needs are not fully understood, the precautionary
principle should become an important decision-making tool.
1.1.3 Empowerment and Choice
Social, political and economic institutions must allow
individuals and communities to determine their own
priorities, while ensuring that we have the ability - as a
wider community - to meet our national and international
obligations.
We also recognise that the market does not provide
sufficient tools for informed rational choice which would
maintain a long term perspective and lead to equitable
outcomes.
1.1.4 Caring and Cooperation
The fulfillment of human potential and the enrichment of
lives are best achieved by people living and working
together, and guided by common goals. These goals should
respect and enhance the integrity and diversity of human and
ecological communities and recognise their global linkages.
Economic activity involves the cooperation of many different
individuals and groups in the production, distribution and
consumption of a wide range of goods and services. The focus
of activity should be on cooperation and opportunities for
mutual benefits, rather than on competition and control that
typically benefit powerful minorities. Cooperative
principles should also apply to the protection and
management of the global commons and resources.
1.1.5 Provision of Services by the Public Sector
We believe that a strong public sector is a prerequisite for
a healthy civil society and that some services, because of
the community service obligations required of them and the
essential nature of the services, should be undertaken by
public sector agencies. Ownership by the Government does not
preclude some such agencies being run on a corporatised
basis, but does mean that fulfilling of community service
obligations may mean that their profits would not be as
great as they would be without such obligations. This
reduced revenue is accepted as a necessary cost in a civil
and equitable society. These community service obligations
may include providing services at reduced rates to the
disadvantaged in society, for example, the aged or sick, and
providing services to rural and remote communities.
Such services, which are often natural monopolies because of
the efficiency of having a single or well coordinated
distribution system, include, but are not necessarily
limited to, water supplies and distribution, electricity
services, employment services, social and cultural services,
phone and postal services, education, health, judiciary,
town planning, environmental management, policing and
custodial services, the radio and television services,
public transport and interstate rail services, national
parks, and defence. Of course public services should
continue to provide and to extend its services to the public
and to the Government executive, with increased public
involvement in Government decision making and provision of
services as an important mechanism for ensuring the
appropriateness and effectiveness of Government policies and
action.
1.2 Goals
We aim to:
a) keep natural monopolies and other essential public
services under public ownership and re-establish such
ownership as necessary;
b) ensure the level of services in rural and remote
communities is, as far as practicable, comparable with those
provided in metropolitan areas and such as to ensure the
vitality and strengthening of rural communities and the
quality of life in those communities.
At a national level we should be working towards a
sustainable society in which quality of life is considered
to be of the utmost importance. To this end, policy
priorities are:
a) better distribution of work and income;
b) a more equitable taxation system; and
c) an improved social safety net.
An imperative is the adoption of a set of policy guidelines
for the costing of environmental impacts and for the
movement of the economy towards the sustainable use of
India's renewable resources.
We support continued public ownership and control of public
sector enterprises especially services such as power, water
and telecommunications.
At the same time, we emphasise the importance of an
international approach to addressing social and
environmental problems. Global cooperation must be directed
at:
• implementing the principle of intergenerational equity in
considering social and environmental conditions;
• bringing an end to the profligate use and pollution of the unpriced global commons (atmosphere and oceans), and scarce
resources; and
• addressing the problems of poverty and imbalance in
resources.
At the same time, however, it is recognised that national
sovereignty is important in enabling effective global
cooperation.
1.3 Short Term Targets
We are committed to the following:
a) the abandonment of economic growth (as conventionally
measured), as the principal index of welfare, in favour of
alternative indices, to be developed and integrated at
national, state and regional level, and that regularly show:
• changes in the quality of life of the population;
• changes in the distribution of income and wealth; and
• changes in inventories and flows of environmental
resources.
b) the adoption of taxation policy as a principal tool for
achieving sustainable economic development.
c) focusing on taxing natural resources (ecological taxes)
as a necessary departure from the emphasis on the taxing of
incomes and labour. These policies include:
• the internalisation of the massive external costs
associated with India's industrial economy; and
• the need for a fair distribution of national income and
wealth.
d) the targeting of spending policies to:
• meet the basic needs of all Indians;
• provide incentives for the substitution of renewables for
non-renewable resources;
• support the restructuring of industry; and
e) that trade, and trade agreements, entered into by India,
are subject to the priorities of human welfare and
ecological sustainability.
Tax Reforms
2.1 Principles
Our taxation policies constitute an integral part of
economic policies. We call for the Indian Government to
focus on particular principles to guide taxation policies:
a) the need for a fair distribution of national income and
wealth;
b) the fact that environmental resources are community
resources;
c) the adoption of incentives for sustainable use and
penalties for unsustainable use of natural resources;
d) adequate provision of resources for public services;
e) the support of full employment,
f) the double benefit of reducing taxes on labour and
increasing taxes on resource use and pollution; and
g) the discouragement of speculation.
2.2 Goals
We aim to use taxation as an efficient tool for achieving
objectives relating to social equity and environment. This
can be carried out either by using tax revenue to finance
beneficial reforms or by applying taxation as a steering
instrument in itself.
It should be a responsibility of the Government to educate
the community about the social benefits of the taxation
system and the citizens' responsibility to contribute
through the taxation system.
2.2.1 Taxation as a Revenue Instrument
We reject the regressive fiscal policies of the old parties.
We see fiscal policy playing a vital role in reconstructing
the Indian economy on a socially and environmentally
sustainable basis. It is important that the revenue share of
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is raised.
Our fiscal policy aims to raise a sufficient revenue base
to:
a) create a sustainable economy with appropriate levels of
development in environmentally sound industries;
b) create sustainable communities based on principles of
social justice, and ensure equal access to community
services such as schools, adequate health care, safe streets
and reliable public transport;
c) provide a strong financial basis for effective management
of public sector expenditure and debt;
d) provide revenue for a budget that can sustain healthy
programme for third world aid and for nature conservation;
and
e) provide a platform for ethical capital investment in
community amenities and infrastructure.
2.2.2 Taxation as a Steering Instrument
A Green economy implies that taxation be used as a steering
instrument in the following ways:
a) ecological taxation for the protection of nature so that
our generation can leave a healthy ecological system to
future generations. The tax system should encourage
environmentally positive behaviour and penalise
environmentally destructive behaviour. It should provide
incentives for sustainable use of natural resources;
b) progressive taxation as part of a policy for national
equity;
c) the burden of taxation should be levied on the
consumption of scarce material resources and financial
speculation rather than on labour;
d) tax should provide a mechanism to limit foreign debt and
foreign speculation; and
e) tax should encourage domestic savings, employment and
productive investments.
2.3 Short Term Targets
We will support tax increases sufficient to support a strong
budget with environmental and social goals.
2.3.1 Personal Income Tax
Marginal tax rates for individual income earners need to be
made more progressive. At present, the tax payers on low to
middle incomes pay more tax in proportion to their income
then people on high incomes having a fairly better knowledge
and planning skills for tax savings. This is not favourable
for the majority of Indians.
We recognise that the taxpayers have not been generally
responsible for the avoidance of tax which has led to the
erosion of India's revenue base.
We also believe that the number of tax payers can increase
exponentially if proper education regarding paying income
tax is provided to all persons having some earning. This
includes individuals, business organisations incorporating
proprietary, partnership, cooperative, private as well as
public limited companies. There should be simple procedures
for paying income tax so that anybody can put the right
amount of tax in the Government's bank accounts for
developmental work. People have a fear that if they pay
income tax even at the standard slab fixed by the
Government, they will be harassed by the tax authorities and
that they will have to pay more taxes in the long run.
2.3.2 Indirect Taxation Reform
We propose a reform to improve the existing sales tax system
so as to:
a) incourage more efficient resource use eg. by the reuse of
material and equipment;
b) increase the efficiency and transparency with an emphasis
on taxes with an ecological component; and
c) make taxation more progressive through higher rates for
luxury items;
2.3.2 Eco-taxes
We regard ecological tax reform as the key element of a tax
reform package.
Eco-taxes seek to incorporate the costs of resource use and
disposal into prices to encourage efficient resource use and
to reduce pollution.
We support the introduction of eco-taxes, although we
acknowledge the fact that environmental values cannot be
reduced rupees and paise alone.
Eco-taxes aim to address:
1. the problem of many resources being consumed at an
alarming rate; and
2. the problem of increasing pollution, causing
deterioration of air, water and soil.
We believe that the application of appropriate tax rates and
tax mix will encourage intergenerational equity.
We will work to develop a package of levies to provide
incentives and penalties for individuals and industry, to
encourage the adoption of waste minimising technologies and
the production of recycled and recyclable goods. These
include:
a) resource levies to be applied to primary commodities
including minerals, coal and timber. Those levies should be
calculated on volume of resource extracted rather than on
profits sometimes generated;
b) levies on the extraction of forest and water resources to
reflect their critical environmental values as well as
other, including intrinsic, values;
c) pollution levies on the emission of poisonous substances
such as sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and heavy metals
into the environment;
We will also
a) offer tax incentives for the transition to non-polluting
processes and technologies;
b) eliminate subsidies and tax exemptions for ecologically
damaging activities such as resource consumption and
pollution; and
c) ensure that ecotax revenues are used to offset taxes on
labour in order to maximise the double dividend obtainable
from ecological tax reform and encourage employment and
productive investment.
2.3.3 Transport
We will:
a) work towards a change of the current indirect tax system
for cars and trucks to favour more energy-efficient
vehicles;
b) propose changes to the system of fringe benefits taxation
so that driving of employer provided vehicles is
appropriately and equitably taxed;
c) propose a shift of charges for motor vehicle registration
and compulsory third party insurance to a fuel tax, so that
car owners only pay in relation to the amount of travelling
they do, with compensation to be assessed on the basis of
income and place of residence; and
d) maintain excise on fuels but substantially reduce the
rebates to the mining and forestry industries.
2.3.4 Energy
We will propose changes in the taxation structure in the
energy sector to support the aims described in the Energy
policy framework.
a) improve and expand public transport;
b) develop alternative energy techniques such as solar
thermal power, photovoltaics and wind power;
c) reduce taxes, such as payroll tax; on employment;
d) compensate low income earners for the regressive impact
of the levy.
2.3.5 Agriculture
We will propose changes in the taxation structure for
chemical fertilisers and pesticides with the aim of
supporting a change to ecologically sustainable farming
methods.
2.3.6 Urban Planning
The growth of our cities is often haphazard, with negative
consequences for people and for the environment. We will
support:
a) tax incentives for environmentally-sound residential
developments; and
b) removal of hidden and explicit incentives for urban
sprawl.
Finance, Debt Management and Inflation
3.1 Principles
A deregulated financial system is incompatible with social
and environmental sustainability. In order to address social
and environmental needs, the Indian Government must interact
with the international financial system on its own terms.
This will require:
a) national economic sovereignty (ie democratic control of
the economy, not market control;
b) domestic funding of Government deficits;
c) an effective system of foreign exchange management;
d) reduction in foreign ownership and debt; and
e) movement towards a sustainable financial system which
enables the real economy to be maintained decade after
decade at its full employment potential without recurring
inflation and over-indebtedness.
3.2 Goals
The objectives of the policy include:
a) reduction of foreign ownership of Indian enterprise;
b) more equitable employment and income distribution;
c) control of interest rates and debt;
d) low inflation;
e) full employment underpinned by a Guaranteed Adequate
Income;
f) well funded public infrastructure;
g) appropriate economic monitoring, measurement, and
accounting practices;
h) reduction of private and public sector debt.
3.3 Short Term Targets
a) detailed monitoring and regulation of foreign capital;
b) investment of foreign capital in import replacement
industries and enterprises consistent with national
environmental and social priorities; and
c) strict monitoring of export and import prices to reduce
transfer pricing by multinationals.
We will support the establishment and use of community
controlled investment facilities which direct investments to
eliminate reliance on foreign borrowings by both the public
and private sectors. Investments in ethical enterprises
which emphasise both social and environmental sustainability
will be encouraged. We will explore a range of opportunities
to assist these measures and support:
a) campaigns encouraging citizens and organisations to place
their savings in ethical investment organisations;
b) the right of credit cooperatives to invest in productive
enterprises;
3.3.4 Inflation
We will support disaggregating the causes of inflation so
that distinctions can be made between cost increases which
are socially and environmentally beneficial, such as
including the real costs of natural resources like water,
and those which are not.
Global Trading and Investment Relations
4.1 Principles
4.1.1 Objectives
We support a policy of managed international trade and
foreign investment based on the general recognition that
nation states have a right and a duty to ensure that their
consumption and production, including both imports and
exports, is sustainable.
These principles, which are fundamentally different to the
those of the proposed Multilateral Agreement on Investment
(MAI), require that international trade and foreign
investment support the following objectives:
a) protecting local employment and labour conditions;
b) reducing economic and political vulnerability;
c) endouraging diversification of industry;
d) permitting the development of local technologies; and
e) protecting the environment.
4.1.2 Benefits of Trade
We recognise that foreign trade and investment are
beneficial in terms of:
a) transferring skills and technology not normally available
in an economy;
b) allowing the importation of strategic goods and services;
c) encouraging innovation and the adoption of new practices
and higher standards;
d) encouraging efficiency through the adoption of
'international best practice' and the importation of
technology which makes the local production of new goods and
services possible; and
e) giving developing countries in particular, fair
opportunity to trade with developed countries.
4.1.3 Problems with Trade
We, however, are wary of the possible negative influences of
poorly regulated foreign trade and investment such as the
Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI) which may
include:
a) loss of national economic sovereignty, particularly with
regard to employment, taxation, inflation, tariff and wages
policy;
b) a reluctance by nations to take unilateral environmental
initiatives for fear that they might unduly erode a nation's
economic competitiveness;
c) making an economy less diverse and more vulnerable
through encouraging it to specialise in those industries in
which it has competitive export advantage while abandoning
those industries that cannot compete against foreign
imports;
d) erosion of local culture in the face of imports that have
a strong cultural element such as films, electronic media,
music and food;
e) forcing countries to adopt environmentally unsus-tainable
or socially unjust practices which damage the global commons
in order to be able to earn foreign exchange;
f) forcing many countries, including India, into
ever-increasing foreign debt leading to spiralling overseas
interest payments;
g) inducing a global increase in transport use which is both
inefficient and destructive to the environment;
h) allowing transnational corporations to increasingly
dominate global trade and investment which in many cases is
anti-competitive; and
i) leaving many developing countries at the mercy of IMF and
World Bank required restructuring, often resulting in social
polarisation.
We support international trading systems and associated
institutions in which nation states work to maximise global
equity and ecological sustainability. We also encourage
exchange which will enhance the development of economies and
societies that are ecologically sustainable, diverse,
self-reliant, and therefore less vulnerable to external
political and economic pressure.
4.2 Goals
We recognise that trade and investment issues must often be
dealt with on a case-by-case basis. Given the diversity of
social and environmental costs and benefits that can apply
to each trade and investment issue, and recognising the
risks and benefits of foreign trade and investment, we will
pursue policies to achieve the following goals:
a) to limit trade in goods and services that are produced by
methods that are environmentally unsustainable or socially
unjust;
b) to promote trade associations and participate in
international trading systems in order to enhance the
achievement of this goal;
c) to increase India's self-reliance by limiting net foreign
debt and current account deficits; and
d) to promote the regulation of transnational corporations.
The achievement of these goals will be facilitated not only
through international trade policy but also by supporting
the following short term targets.
4.3 Short Term Targets
4.3.1 International Context
International trade and investment can be positive in terms
of countries benefiting from the initiatives and lower
production costs of other countries and generally promoting
greater global cooperation, but they can be negative in
terms of fostering economic vulnerability and consuming a
large amount of global transport and communications energy.
Countries like India should never be isolationist in their
global trade and investment policies and should always be
prepared to negotiate at international forums. But countries
like ours should not negotiate from a position of weakness;
they should not be so dependent on the global economy that
they will take whatever terms are offered. Instead they
should negotiate from a position of strength where, if needs
be, they can be economically self-reliant. We believe that
international trade and investment should always be
transparent and fully accountable and should not be
controlled by trading blocks.
We also believe that international trade and investment should generally be carried on within a global environmental imperative to make the consumption of resources sustainable.
Trade liberalisation should never be allowed at the expense
of the environment.
4.3.2 Fair Trade and Reform of the WTO
We support reform of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and
the International Labour Organisation to ensure:
a) full recognition of the overriding necessity of
environmental and social agreements;
b) the modification of multilateral trading agreements to
allow nation states to impose internationally acceptable
environmental and social practices;
c) the promotion of moves at the WTO and other relevant
organisations which increase the food security of poorer
countries and help them stabilise and improve prices for
their commodities;
d) the support of poor countries for growing their own food
as a priority over growing tobacco and other products for
export to industrial countries;
e) trade agreements on Intellectual Property Rights that
support the right of developing countries to acquire the
technology they need at a cost they can afford and receive
fair remuneration for the genetic resources found in their
territory or developed or conserved by their people;
f) a revision of WTO processes and procedures to ensure
transparency and include participation by Non-Governmental
Organisations (NGOs) as well as other representatives of
civil society;
g) the encouragement of the use of counter-trade in the form
of swap arrangements between two or more countries that do
not have sufficient foreign exchange to pay for imports; and
h) the development of preferential trading status based on
principles of ecological sustainability and social justice
and aid.
We will also support:
a) a comprehensive ban on the movement of hazardous waste
(including nuclear waste) and hazardous waste recyclables;
b) the development and transfer of technologies needed to
achieve this; and
c) a review of agriculture subsidies in developed countries,
in terms of their adverse social and environmental impacts
on other developed and also developing nations.
4.3.3 Transnational Corporations
Transnational corporations now control about two-thirds of
all international trade and most international investment
and with the introduction of the Multilateral Agreement on
Investment their power domination would further increase.
They have become a powerful force in the world economy, and
often play one country off against another to secure maximum
financial advantage.
We will:
a) promote the regulation of transnational corporations in
terms of environmental impact and sustainability, social
impact, labour relations and democratic participation;
b) promote the import of only those goods from developing
countries that satisfy basic criteria of decent wages,
working conditions, sufficient food supply and environmental
sustainability in the country of origin;
c) support the prohibition of the import of goods that are
produced through the exploitation of children and;
d) investigate means through which both the Government and
the United Nations can improve the business practice of
transnational corporations including regulation through
anti-monopoly legislation in India;
4.3.4 National Context
We believe that the current liassez-faire attitude to
international currency transactions needs to be reformed and
that the Government has a role in limiting national foreign
debt for having a better image of India. Researches should
be conducted with the help of universities as well as
institutions of national importance for having a national
policy of development without taking international loan with
a view to reducing the foreign debt. We will institute an
inquiry into the means available to achieve a regulated
limitation of the national foreign debt which may include
the following:
a) tighter control by the Government of India, including the
establishment of an independent regulatory authority that
would scrutinize all foreign investments with a clear mind
for assessing such investments and their different types of
consequences;
b) the introduction of import taxes and customs duties; and
c) work to be done at the international level to achieve
reform of the financial system;
Human Rights and Duties Education
1.1 Principles
We believe that it is essential to:
a) ensure that basic human rights are respected in all
countries;
b) avoid compromising on human rights for economic or
political expediency;
c) recognise democratic institutions as a fundamental human
right; and
d) work towards the sovereignty and self-determination of
entities with historical, cultural and ecological identity.
1.2 Goals
We will pursue policies that:
a) restrict cooperation with governing regimes that violate
human rights;
b) actively engage with other countries to promote human
rights;
c) bring diplomatic and commercial pressures on regimes that
violate human rights, to ensure that they respect the basic
rights of their citizens;
d) keep the interests of disempowered communities foremost
in all dealings with countries in which human rights
violations occur;
e) support the end of colonialism and press for resolution
of colonial conflicts through the UN framework;
f) develop a more distinctive and effective role for the
International Court of Justice in the field of human rights;
and
g) support, through the UN framework, democratic and
economic reforms in countries coming out of totalitarian
control.
Environmental Sustainability
2.1 Principles
We support the conservation of the Earth�s environment and
its biodiversity, both as a value in itself and as essential
for human survival and happiness.
2.2 Goals
We will:
a) support international and national moves to halt
deforestation in India as well as the rest of the world and
help reforestation; this involves both cessation of
unsustainable logging and more efficient use of land for
human activities by encouraging the reduced consumption of
meat and dairy products, especially in the richer countries;
b) support international moves to limit land degradation;
c) support international conventions to stop over-fishing in
the oceans;
d) support international moves to reduce pollution of the
seas and the atmosphere;
e) support moves to end trade in hazardous waste;
f) support moves to end exploitation of and trade in
endangered species;
g) support the transfer of environmentally sustainable
technologies to developing countries; and
h) promote the establishment of an Environmental Council at
the UN with similar decision-making powers to the Security
Council, but dealing instead with environmental issues of
global significance.
2.3 Short Term Targets
We will support:
a) urgent measures to stop the exploitation of rainforests,
which has resulted in both the loss of a rich biosystem and
the displacement and possible extinction of the native
peoples of the forests;
c) efforts to end the dumping of nuclear waste in the
oceans;
d) effective measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and
use of ozone-depleting substances;
e) legislation to require Indian companies, Government
agencies and business enterprises, operating overseas to
observe social and environmental standards no less stringent
than those required in India.
International Debt Crisis
3.1 Principles
We recognise that repayments of past loans have so
outstripped new loans that the net transfer of money is from
the developing world to the developed.
3.2 Goals
We will intensively lobby to:
a) cancel all debts of developing countries;
b) achieve radical reform of the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund or establish a new international
lending institution that would take over the
responsibilities of these institutions, to be governed by a
board with gender balance as well as equal representation
from both developing country debtors and western lenders;
and
c) encourage developing countries to pursue strategies of
economic development which are highly self-reliant and which
prioritise the production of goods and services from local
sources.
Peace and Security
4.1 Principles
We are committed to:
a) developing fair and just international relations with
other countries, peoples and regions;
b) building positive peace into our international security
relations;
c) resolving conflict rather than merely deterring war
through the maintenance of traditional military structures;
d) ensuring the greatest possible transparency in India's
foreign and security relations, domestically as well as
internationally;
e) working with individuals and organisations which openly
and democratically work for such an objective at a local,
regional, national and international level;
f) working towards a policy framework of sustainable
international relations, strongly supported by nonviolent
strategies of international cooperation, conflict
prevention, international mediation and conflict resolution,
and which recognise the local, national and international
dimensions of conflict in our region;
g) capability for the foreseeable future, subject to
eventual regional-wide demilitarisation;
h) reforming the Indian Defence Forces to ensure that they
are trained and equipped for more sustainable national and
international security roles aimed at ensuring peace; and
i) invisaging an ecologically sustainable post nuclear "New Intenational Political Order" on the matrix of Civilisational Homes (like EU) superceding the present
nation - state arrangement.
4.2.1 Working towards Regional and Global Demilitarisation.
We will:
a) participate in global regime initiatives to monitor and
reduce the manufacture and export of biological, chemical
and nuclear weapons technologies;
b) support a global nuclear weapons Comprehensive Test Ban
Treaty (CTBT), with particular reference to nuclear weapons
testing in the Asia-Pacific region;
c) support global nuclear non-proliferation, and
comprehensive measures to dismantle all nuclear weapons and
their target systems, through convening a UN-sponsored
International Peace Conference on general nuclear
disarmament;
d) support a global ban on the militarisation of space.
4.2.2 Combating the International Arms Trade and Provision
of Military Assistance.
We will support policies to:
a) ensure that India will not produce weaponry or components
for export;
b) compile a register of all dual-use (civilian-military)
technology which may be exported from India, and restrict
the trade with reference to a broad range of security
considerations (such as the human rights record of our
trading partners);
c) encourage other states to phase out external military aid
in the Asia-Pacific region;
d) end arms trade fairs in India and coordinate with
neighbouring states on similar measures; and
e) establish a realistic, comprehensive register of the arms
trade in the Asia-Pacific region, and work to develop
alternative regional and UN-sponsored disarmament
initiatives with a capacity for binding verification.
4.2.3 Regional Confidence-building and Peace-building
We will support policies that:
a) develop regional security relations which build peace and
confidence, and work towards resolving conflicts before they
evolve into violent international disputes; and
b) recognise that the basis of regional peace and security
is a sustainable framework of human rights protection and
promotion, just and equitable regional trade arrangements,
generous and appropriate overseas aid programme and strong
multinational environmental safeguards; and
c) ensure that the Asia-Pacific states, and their
constituent peoples, have open access to dependable
international legal dispute mechanisms.
4.2.4 Regional Conflict-Prevention
We will encourage:
a) the development of an inter-related set of global
security campaigns through the Ministries of Defence,
Foreign Affairs and Education;
b) effective diplomatic intervention in potential conflict
situations, through India's network of regional diplomatic
ties, and through regional institutions and the UN where
appropriate; and
c) conflict-preventive peacekeeping deployments for
interceding in potential conflict situations, wherever
appropriate, in the form of monitors, police, aid and
assistance personnel or peacekeeping forces, with all-party
support managed through relevant regional organisations or
the UN.
4.2.5 Linking Peacebuilding with Peacekeeping and
Peacemaking
We will support policies which:
a) manage India's foreign and security relations in ways
which recognise that peacebuilding and peacemaking are
crucial elements of any regional conflict management
framework, and that peacekeeping has the potential to
operate at an interface between the two;
b) develop an integrated strategy linking peacebuilding,
peacekeeping and peacemaking approaches to conflict
management;
c) establish an appropriate peacekeeping strategy to be
developed both nationally and through the UN; and
d) respond to the urgent need to comprehensively develop
international peacemaking capabilities, both in new regional
institutions and through a reformed UN.
4.2.6 Sanctions Enforcement Action
We will work to ensure that trade embargoes:
a) are only conducted within a UN mandate;
b) are closely associated with an appropriate strategy of
conflict resolution; and
c) are rigorously enforced in order to achieve their goals
as rapidly as possible.
4.2.7 Military Enforcement Action
We support a comprehensive strategy of nonviolent conflict
management as the most effective means of promoting peace
and security in the international arena; in which military
enforcement action is only seen as appropriate in securing
effective UN sanctions against states which seriously
violate international peace.
4.2.8 Establishing an Agency for Monitoring Demilitarisation
We will support policies to:
a) establish an Agency for Monitoring Demilitarisation.
• monitoring and/or coordinating regional arms control and
disarmament measures;
• monitoring and combating the arms trade;
• monitoring weapons testing and military exercises;
• coordinating regional arms conversion strategies; and
b) develop a culture of nonviolent conflict management and
peace education throughout the world.
There are many more ideas and innovations available with the
Indira Gandhi Technological and Medical Sciences University,
Ziro, Arunachal Pradesh and the same may be had and
exchanged / transferred by contacting on the following
address :
The Secretary to the Hon'ble Chancellor
Indira Gandhi Technological and Medical Sciences University
Ziro, Arunachal Pradesh - 791120, India
Email : [email protected]