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n a new essay, Pico Iyer says our lives are shaped by unexpectedness.
Nothing has been truer of 2016. England voting to exit the European Union,
Donald Trump winning the US presidential election, the worsening Syrian
refugee crisis, unabated terrorist attacks across the world and India declaring 86 per cent of its currency illegal were only some of the highlights. It was a
truly topsy-turvy year. Everything that the pundits predicted of the world was
upended. The consequences of all that happened will be played out in the coming year, and it may not be a pretty sight. It seems that it will be the Year of
Living Dangerously but it is also true that every ending has a new beginning .
In that spirit, we have a great collection of essays from the finest scholars of
the world who point us towards what is new and newsy in the Brave New World.
On December 31, Prime Minister Narendra Modi called the public response to
demonetisation nothing short of a satyagraha. UCLA anthropologist Akhil Gupta
acknowledges the transformative nature of that decision but points to Cuba and
two parallel movements that made Fidel Castro such an enduring iconthe mass
mobilisation that got citizens involved in the task of raising literacy and the government-initiated institution-building that ensured equitable access to health,
provision of good primary healthcare, and training of a large cadre of medical
professionals. For demonetisation to morph into a long-term
war on corruption, Gupta says certain wide-ranging structural changes are required in India which need tough political and bureaucratic reforms.
In the global arena, the big event was the unexpected win
of business tycoon Donald Trump as President of the United
States and according to international affairs expert, Kishore
Mahbubani, it could be the best thing to happen to India, as
it repositions itself as a geopolitical equal to both America
and China. This will not be easy. Americas GNP is $18 tril- OUR JANUARY 31,
2000 COVER
lion, Chinas is $ 11 trillion while Indias is only $2.1 trillion.
By turning adversarial against China, says Mahbubani, Trump has effectively
put China and America at two opposite ends of a see-saw. India should seize the
opportunity by leaping on to the middle of the see-saw, even as it grapples with
the bitter aftertaste of its overtures to Pakistan going up in flames. Mahbubani
assigns a new meaning to a familiar acronym CIAChina ,India, America. There
are other trends to watch out for in 2017the retreat of liberalism, the rise of
artificial intelligence and the decline of internationalism. The economy remains
a concern and Credit Suisses Neelkanth Mishra flags four continuing effects
of demonetisationon the real estate market, the informal economy, banking
economy and revenue collection.
2017 will also witness politicians being forced to engage with domestic forces, with as many as seven state elections coming up, including in Uttar Pradesh
where a family drama has captured eyeballs with its daily sack-and-salvage
operations, and in Gujarat which saw unprecedented demands for backward
status from seemingly better-placed castes, which raises a fundamental question about the nature of affirmative action in India. The implementation of the
Goods and Services Tax Act will test the notion of cooperative federalism, one
of Prime Minister Modis favourite mantras. It is perhaps no accident that this
years theme for the World Economic Forum in Davos is responsive leadership.
Every political leader wants his nation to aspire to and achieve greatness
from Trumps Make America Great Again slogan to Boris Johnsons claim
that Brexit would be Britains Independence Day. But how many can summon
the will to bridge the distance between rhetoric and reality, making inclusive
development and equitable growth more than mere slogans? Those who want
to track the answers to that question and many more, use this special issue as
your own personal GPS to 2017. It will get you there.
(Aroon Purie)
JANUARY 16, 2017 u INDIA TODAY
10
INSIDE
STATE OF THE STATE
15
GUJARAT
54
Highway to
Growth
12
We will go
across again
GLASS HOUSE
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Political parties fight about cash and
cashless takes a Bollywood twist
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their stories is heartbreaking
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Banking on E-cash
JANUARY 2, 2017
Virtually There
One of the governments
main justifications for demonetisation was to induce a national shift
toward digital transactions (Banking on E-Cash).
This is possible only when
the country has high internet speeds and robust
cyber security. India lags
behind Sri Lanka and
Bangladesh in terms of
download speeds and tops
the world in terms of
cyber crimes. Many
Indians are wary of digital
transactions for fear of
being hacked, or theft of
personal data. The government needs to frame
effective laws to protect
online consumers if it
wishes to realise its goal.
Otherwise, the idea of a
cashless economy will
prove to be the foolish
utopia described by
former finance minister
P. Chidambaram.
SALONI CHAUHAN, Patna
A Step in
the Right
Direction
At a time when the parliamentary logjam has
wiped out almost the
entire winter session of
Parliament, it is heartening to see legislation
like the Rights of Persons With Disabilities Bill being passed
(Not Quite Enabling Legislation). The amended list of disabilities
ensures that the survivors of acid attacks are protected, which
will be widely regarded as a positive step. However, there is also
a need to bring in cultural changepeoples attitudes toward
the disabled need to evolve. Laws must work in tandem with a
collective mindset that demands equal rights and spaces for all.
The role of education and awareness in creating such a sensibility cannot be overemphasised.
J. AKSHOBHYA, Mysuru
is enough to go cashless
is naive. The government
itself seems uncertain of
how to ensure that millions of underprivileged
folks gain access to such
modern ways of doing
things. The shift to a digital economy will be worth
nothing unless every citizen can enjoy the fruits of
development.
P.A. JACOB, Muscat
FROM THE
ARCHIVES
invoked
to select
the are
nextshaped
n a new essay, Pico
Iyer says
our lives
by unexpectedness.
Looking
to the Future
chief.
Nothing has beenservice
truer of
2016. England voting to exit the European Union,
As a society given to rituals
Donald Trump winning
the USCHILIMBI,
presidential election, the worsening Syrian
LT COL. SUSHIL
and timelessness, India is not
refugee crisis, unabated
Mumbaiterrorist attacks across the world and India declarnaturally inclined to introing 86 per cent of its currency illegal were only some of the highlights. It was a
spection.
A certain ad hocism
Editors:
Kaveree Bamzai
(Special Projects),
Ajit Kumar Jha (Research)
truly topsy-turvy year.
the pundits predicted of the world was
SUBHASH
CHANDRA
AGRAWAL,
TheEverything
Opposition,that
especially
has defined the collective
Group Creative Editor: Nilanjan Das; Group Photo Editor: Bandeep Singh
upended. The consequences
of allhas
thatnohappened
will
be played
out inaccusthe comthe Congress,
right
DelhiEditors: Kai Jabir Friese, Rajesh Jha
Managing
mentality
of a people
Executive Editors: Damayanti Datta, S. Sahaya Ranjit,
ing year, and it maytonot
be a pretty
sight. It seems tomed
that it to
will
be
the
Year
of
criticise
the appointSandeep Unnithan
letting events shape
First
among
Deputy
Editors: Prachi
Bhuchar, Uday Mahurkar, Manisha Saroop
Living Dangerouslyment
but itofisLt
also
true that
every ending
has a new
beginning
.
General
Bipin
their
destiny.
Indians
have
: MG Arun H
: Amarnath K. Menon C
: Asit Jolly
M
Equals
In
that
spirit,
we
have
a
great
collection
of
essays
from
the
finest
scholars
Rawat
as
army
chief.
It
Senior Editors: Shweta Punj, Sasi Nair, J
: Rohit Parihar
readily accepted and adapted of
UP andthe
onward
Senior Associate Editors: Kaushik Deka
world
who
point
us
towards
what
is
new
and
newsy
in the
Brave
New World.
was
the
Congress
that
The
Indian
Army
is
fully
M
: Suhani Singh, Kiran Dinkar Tare; p
: Amitabh Srivastava
to change
but
have shown
a
The development
schemes 31, Prime
Associate
Editors: Shougat Dasgupta,
Sinha
On December
Minister
NarendraofModi curious
called the
public
response
first broke
the tradition
traditionalist,
and Chinki
there
is
reluctance to
initiate to
: Romita Sengupta; B
: Rahul Noronha;
K
and initiatives
launched by nothing
demonetisation
shortseniority,
of a satyagraha.
anthropologist
Akhil Gupta
following
when UCLA
ofJacob;
not
T no question
: Jeemon
B re: Ananth Krishnan
it. Instinctively,
the country
UP chief minister
Akhilesh the transformative
Assistant Editor: p : Aditi S. Pai
acknowledges
nature of that decision
but
points
to
then-prime minister
specting seniority, espehas preferred traditionCuba
and and
Photo Department: Vikram Sharma (Deputy Photo Editor),
Yadav showtwo
thatparallel
he is movements
madechose
Fidel Castro
such
an
enduring
iconthe
Indirathat
Gandhi
to
cially
when
it comes
to
Rajwant
Singh Rawat
(Principal
Photographer),
habit to radicalism. It isnt mass
Kekhriezhazo Miachie-O (Senior Photographer), Chandra Deepworking hard to transform
mobilisation that got
citizensan
involved
in the task of
raising literacy
and the govpromote
admittedly
the
armys Minternal
hierKumar
(Photographer);
: Mandar Suresh
Deodhar
conservatism.
Intellectual
Uttar Pradesh into Uttam
(Chief Photographer), Danesh Adil Jassawala (Photographer);
ernment-initiated institution-building
that ensured
equitable
access
to health,
deserving Lt Gen. S.K.
archy
(New Chief on the
laziness
would
be
a
better
a
: Shailesh B Raval (Principal Photographer);
Pradesh (East and West).
: Subir Halder
(Principal Photographer);
K Block).
provision of good primary
and training
of
a
large
cadre
of
medical
Sinha tohealthcare,
the post of army
However,
since
description.
C
: N G Jaison (Senior Photographer)
UP is progressing swiftly,
professionals.
For
demonetisation
to
morph
into
a
long-term
chief.
The
political
squabthe
selection
process
Photo
Researchers:
Prabhakar
Tiwari (Chief is
Photo Researcher),
So
it
is
after
50
years
of
the
and it may not be long
Shubhrojit Brahma (Assistant Photo Researcher)
war
on
corruption,
Gupta
says
certain
wide-ranging
strucbling
over
this
issue
is
the prerogative of the
Republic.
Speaking
in
the
Chief of Graphics: Tanmoy Chakraborty
before it loses its tag of
turalstate.
changes
in India
which
need tough
politi- Assembly, S.
against the
national
intergovernment,
one
preArt Department:
Sanjay Piplani
(Senior
Art Director);
Constituent
being a BIMARU
In are required
Jyoti K Singh, Anirban Ghosh (Art Director),
cal
and
bureaucratic
reforms.
est,
and
should
have
been
sumes
that
all
parameRadhakrishnan spoke of a
Vikas Verma, Rahul Sharma, Vipin Gupta (Associate Art Director);
the future, it may also be
Bhoomesh Dutt Sharma (Senior Designer)
In the global
arena,
the big
event was
the unexpected
winthat would break
avoided.
Postings
in deters, including that of
new order
beneficial
to
bifurcate
the
Production Department: Harish Agarwal (Chief of Production),
business
Trump
as President
fence forces
must
not be of the
seniority
in service, must
theUnited
mouldan expression
Naveen
Gupta (Chief Coordinator),
state for theofsake
of fur- tycoon Donald
Vijay Kumar Sharma (Senior Coordinator)
States and
according
to international
affairs expert,
Kishore
made
hostage to votehave been considered.
that
held out the promise of
ther development.
As has
Publishing Director: Manoj Sharma
Mahbubani,
it
could
be
the
best
thing
to
happen
to
India,
as and constant
bank
politics.
LT
COL.
RANJIT
SINHA,
Kolkata
dynamism
been
seen
in
other
cases,
Associate Publisher: Anil Fernandes (Impact)
IMPACT TEAM
it repositions
as a geopolitical
equal to bothchurning.
AmericaThe optimism
AGRAWAL, Delhi
smaller states
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Senior General Manager: Jitender Lad (West)
OUR JANUARY
31,
to manage and
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China. This will not be easy. Americas GNP isproved
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next
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Upendra Singh (Bangalore), Velu Subramaniam (Chennai)
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in
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chief
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This
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the
second
time
in
Kaushiky Chakraborty (East)
being said, By
given
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India settled
intohas
its new
orturning
against
China, says
Trump
effectively
number
ofOfficer:
responses,
the past
few months
that Mahbubani,
Group
Chief Marketing
Vivek Malhotra
Assistant General Manager: Garima Prashar (Marketing)
and population,
UP is also
thodoxies.
The should
detached
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put
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and
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at
two
opposite
ends
of
a
see-saw.
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seize
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military
politics
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Sales and Operations: D.V.S. Rama Rao, Chief General Manager
a major contributor
to theby leaping
Deepak
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countrys GDP
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Mahbubani
Manish
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What is required
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the state administration
to
on controls.
Baboo rule
are other trends
tochoose
watch the
out leader
for in 2017the
retreat
of liberalism,
the rise of
such a big decision is
of the
determinedly
executeintelligence
the
that fearThe
of colonial
romantics
artificial
and the
decline
internationalism.
economy
remains
taken. Is it based on set
armed
forces,
andof
considprojects it has begun, and
Lord
Curzon
and Rudyard
a concern and Credit
Suisses
flags
four
continuing
effects
parameters? Or is it a
ering
that weNeelkanth
have seenMishralike
to ensure that there are no
Kiplingbecame
the unappeof demonetisationon
real estateinmarket,
the
informal economy,
banking
comparative table of perhugethe
deterioration
our
setbacks to the progress
Volume XLII Number 3; For the week
tising base beneath the demeconomy and revenue
collection.
formance
of generals
pre-Friday
relationship
with Pakistan,
January
10-16, 2017,
published on every
already achieved.
ocratic
icing.
Thedomestic
Hindu rate
2017 will also witness
politicians
being forced to engage
with
forcpared
byMedia
babus
that
it is critical
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12
by Swapan Dasgupta
Januar y 2000
(Aroon Purie)
JANUARY 16, 2017 u INDIA TODAY
50
GLASS HOUSE
by SANDEEP UNNITHAN
SEEING RED
E
DYNASTY,
INTO TWO
DIPLOMATIC
PUSH
With nearly 0.3 million
Telangana-ites, mostly
from Hyderabad, forming Saudi Arabias
second-largest Indian expat community, chief minister K.
Chandrasekhara Rao
is urging the desert
kingdom to set up
a consular office in
Hyderabad. The MEA
has already agreed to
the proposal; and the
ball is now in the Saudi
court. KCR is pitching
for more countries to
open up consulates in
Hyderabad, which currently has five.
GLASS HOUSE
BENARASI
I
GAUNTLET?
n a new essay, Pico Iyer says our lives are shaped by unexpectedness.
Nothing has been truer of 2016. England voting to exit the European Union,
Donald Trump winning the US presidential election, the worsening Syrian
Editor-in-Chief: Aroon Purie
refugee crisis, unabated terrorist attacks across the world and India declarGroup Chief Executive Officer: Ashish Bagga
Group Editorial Director: Raj Chengappa
ing 86 per cent of its currency illegal were only some of the highlights. It was a
Editors: Kaveree Bamzai (Special Projects), Ajit Kumar Jha (Research)
truly topsy-turvy year. Everything that the pundits predicted of the world was
Group Creative Editor: Nilanjan Das; Group Photo Editor: Bandeep Singh
upended.
The Banerjees
consequences
of all that happened will be played out in the comManaging Editors: Kai Jabir Friese, Rajesh Jha
ont
let Mamata
plain
NOTHING
TO
Executive Editors:
Damayanti Datta,
S. Sahaya Ranjit,
ing year,
may
not are
be ano
pretty sight. It seems that it will be the Year of
white
saris and
fool it
you.
They
Sandeep Unnithan
DISCUS
Deputy Editors: Prachi
Bhuchar, Uday Mahurkar, Manisha Saroop reflection
Living
Dangerously
butchief
it is also true that every ending has a new beginning .
of the
West Bengal
: MG Arun H
: Amarnath K. Menon C
: Asit Jolly
M
In
that
spirit,
we
have
a great
Senior Editors:
Shweta
Punj, Sasi
J
: Rohit Parihar
ministers fashion designing skills.
Didi collection of essays from the finest scholars of
It never
pays
toNair,
mess
Senior Associate Editors: Kaushik Deka
the
world
who
point
us
towards
what is new and newsy in the Brave New World.
has
now
fixed
her
painters
eye
on
with
a discus
thro
M
: Suhani Singh,
Kiran Dinkar
Tare;wer.
p
: Amitabh Srivastava
Associate Editors: Shougat Dasgupta, Chinki Sinha
On
December
31,
Prime
Minister
Narendra Modi called the public response to
the
Benarasi
saris
that
Bengali
brides
Especially
its
: Romita
Sengupta; Bwhen
: Rahul
Noronha;
K
demonetisation
short
T
: Jeemon
Jacob; B
: Ananth Krishnan
wear on
their weddingnothing
day. The
sarisof a satyagraha. UCLA anthropologist Akhil Gupta
CWG gold
medallist
Assistant Editor: p : Aditi S. Pai
acknowledges
the transformative
nature of that decision but points to Cuba and
will now
be made by state
handloom
Krishna Poonia, also
Photo Department: Vikram Sharma (Deputy Photo Editor),
two
parallel
movements
that
made
Fidel Castro such an enduring iconthe mass
Rajwant
Singh
Rawat
(Principal
Photographer),
corporation,
Tantuja.
A
state
minister
Rajasthan PCC secreKekhriezhazo Miachie-O (Senior Photographer), Chandra Deep
mobilisation
that
got
citizens
involved
in the task of raising literacy and the govhints
that
its
because
the
saris
come
Kumartary.
(Photographer);
M
:
Mandar
Suresh
Deodhar
She recently gave
(Chief Photographer), Danesh Adil Jassawala (Photographer);
ernment-initiated
institution-building
that ensured equitable access to health,
from Prime
Minister Narendra
Modis
chase
and(Principal
nabbed
a
: Shaileshto
B Raval
Photographer);
: Subir Halder (Principal Photographer);
K
provision
of
good
primary
healthcare,
and training of a large cadre of medical
constituency. Having taken him on
of the
men
C
:one
N G Jaison
(Seniorthree
Photographer)
professionals.
For
demonetisation
to
morph
into a long-term
Photo Researchers:
Prabhakar
Tiwari
(Chief
Photo
Researcher),
over
his
demonetisation
move,
will
harassing two girls
Shubhrojit Brahma (Assistant Photo Researcher)
war
on
corruption,
Gupta
says
certain
wide-ranging
strucDidi
now
wage
a
trade
war?
Chief of at
Graphics:
Tanmoy
Chakraborty
a railway crossing
tural changes are required in India which need tough politiArt Department:
Sanjaydistrict.
Piplani (Senior
Art Director);
in
Churu
The
Jyoti K Singh, Anirban Ghosh (Art Director),
cal and bureaucratic reforms.
Vikas Verma,
Sharma,
Vipin Gupta
(Associate Art Director);
manRahul
was
handed
over
Bhoomesh Dutt Sharma (Senior Designer)
In the global arena, the big event was the unexpected win
to the police and the
Production Department: Harish Agarwal (Chief of Production),
of
business
tycoon Donald Trump as President of the United
Naveen Gupta
(Chief
Coordinator),
girls escorted safely
Vijay Kumar Sharma (Senior Coordinator)
States and according to international affairs expert, Kishore
back
home.
Publishing Director: Manoj Sharma
Mahbubani, it could be the best thing to happen to India, as
Associate Publisher: Anil Fernandes (Impact)
IMPACT TEAM
it repositions itself as a geopolitical equal to both America
Senior General Manager: Jitender Lad (West)
Rashtriya Janata
Dal chief
Lalu
and China.
This
willPrasad
not be Yadav,
easy. Americas GNP is $18 tril- OUR JANUARY 31,
General Managers: Mayur Rastogi (North),
2000 COVER
Upendra Singh (Bangalore), Velu Subramaniam (Chennai) whose youngest daughter Raj Lakshmi is married to
lion,
Chinas
is
$
11
trillion
while
Indias is only $2.1 trillion.
Kaushiky Chakraborty (East)
Mulayams
grand-nephew
Tej
Pratap
Singh,
recently
By turning adversarial against China, says Mahbubani, Trump has effectively
Group Chief Marketing Officer: Vivek Malhotra
Assistant General Manager: Garima Prashar (Marketing)
donned theput
peacemakers
hat to counsel
China and America
at twoMulayam
opposite ends of a see-saw. India should seize the
Sales and Operations: D.V.S. Rama Rao, Chief General Manager
Singh
Yadav
and
son
Akhilesh
over
the
telephone.
Lalu
Deepak Bhatt, General Manager (National Sales)
opportunity by leaping on to
the middle
of the see-saw, even as it grapples with
Vipin Bagga, Deputy General Manager (Operations)
even tweeted
ice-breaking
theabout
bitterhis
aftertaste
of itsdiscussion
overtureswith
to Pakistan going up in flames. Mahbubani
Manish Kumar Srivastava, Regional Sales Manager (North)
Rajeev Gandhi, Regional Sales Manager (West)
father and son,
when
Akhilesh
wentto
toavisit
Mulayam
assigns
a new
meaning
familiar
acronym CIAChina ,India, America. There
Arokia Raj L., Regional Sales Manager (South)
ormer Kerala CM
at
his
residence.
are other trends to watch out for in 2017the retreat of liberalism, the rise of
Oommen Chandy has
But
on
January
1,
artificial intelligence and the decline of internationalism. The economy remains
SIT-IN SAT OUT
never
had a role in Congress
quietly
hung
a concern and Credit Lalu
Suisses
Neelkanth
Mishra flags four continuing effects
decision-making
and rarely
the
peacemaking
More than 100 ad
of demonetisationon the real estate market, the informal economy, banking
speaks
in
the
assembly.
So
Volume
XLII
Number
3;
For
the
week
hat
when
Akhilesh
hoc schoolteachers
economy and revenue collection.
January 10-16, 2017, published on every Friday
his New Years Eve attack on
sidelined
his
father.
demanding
permanent
2017 will also witness politicians being forced to engage with domestic forcEditorial Office Living Media India Ltd., India Today Group Mediaplex,
the PM awarding the curreFC-8, Sector-16A, Film City, Noida - 201301; Phone: 0120-4807100
His only
jobs gave security the
es, with as many as seven
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ncy printing contract to a
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tion
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national politics, is it?
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of
cooperative
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years theme for the World Economic Forum in Davos is responsive leadership.
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Phone: 23401657,
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ister23400479,
staged
a dharna
INpolitical
MISDODGES
ingenuity
metto
itsand
match
in thegreatness
law
Every
leader wantsIndian
his nation
to aspire
achieve
Fax: 23403484 39/1045, Karakkatt Road, Kochi 682016; Phones: 2377057,
2377058 of
; Fax:his
2377059
2/C, Suryarath
Bldg, 2ndin
Floor, Behind White House,
own.
He
rang
from
Trumps
Make
America
Great
Again
slogan
to
Boris
Johnsons
claim
Panchwati, Office C.G. Road, Ahmedabad-380006; Phone: 26560393, 26560929;
Fax: 26565293
Livingon
Mediathe
India Ltd.
All rights reserved throughout
2017Copyright
sitting
road
that Brexit would be Britains Independence Day. But how many can summon
the world. Reproduction in any manner is prohibited.
vigilance
arrested
An executive
Printedoutside
and published Raj
by Manoj
Sharma on behalf
Bhavan
till of Living Media
theBihar
will to
bridge sleuths
the distance
between rhetoric and reality,
makingengineer
inclusive
India Limited. Printed at Thomson Press India Limited,
18-35 Milestone,
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Faridabad-121007, (Haryana)
Block
Education
Officer
Indrajit
in
Patna
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probe
the
Chandigarh
development
and
equitable
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slogans?
Those
want
and at A-9, Industrial Complex, Maraimalai Nagar, District
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(Tamil Nadu). Published
at K-9, Connaught
got
the
protesters
out
Rana
on
December
28
for
accepting
for
impersonating
a
to
track
the
answers
to
that
question
and
many
more,
use
this
special
issue
as
Circus, New Delhi-110001. Editor: Aroon Purie.
does not
takehis
the responsibility
for returning unsolicited
of
home.
a
cigarette
packet
stuffed
with
minister
in
a
call
to
an
your
own
personal
GPS
to
2017.
It
will
get
you
there.
publication material.
www.indiatoday.in
umbai
yderabad
handigarh
aipur
umbai
atna
olkata
hopal
hiruvananthapuram
eiJing
une
umbai
hmedabad
SUBIR HALDER
olkata
hennai
CHANDY RISING
l
l
l
l
l
l india today
IAS officer
(Aroon Purie)
JEEMON JACOB, ANSHUMAN TIWARI, KAUSHIK DEKA, AMARNATH K. MENON, ASIT JOLLY, RAHUL NORONHA, ROMITA DATTA. AMITABH SRIVASTAVA, ROHIT PARIHAR
16
70
Akhilesh Yadav turns the tables in the bitter SP family feud to emerge defini
4
MULAYAM CAMP
1. Sarla Yadav
Wife of Shivpal,
she is not
active in
politics now
but has very
good relations
with Akhilesh
2. Sadhna Yadav
Mulayams second
wife is known for
backroom politics.
Has good contacts
in the Vaishya
community. Is now
campaigning for
daughter-in-law
Aparna
3. Ankur Yadav
Son of Shivpal,
he shares a good
rapport with
Akhilesh but
cannot go
against his father
4. Aparna Yadav
Wife of Prateek Yadav,
she has sided with
Shivpal; is SP candidate from Lucknow
Cantt assembly seat
5. Shivpal Singh
Yadav Mulayam is
heavily dependent on
his brother Shivpal for
running the party.
Shivpal has good relations with other
regional parties
6. Prateek Yadav
Mulayams younger
son from wife Sadhna
is into real estate
business. Though not
in politics, he has
differences with
Akhilesh. His house is
adjacent to Shivpals
1. Dimple Yadav
Akhileshs wife has
good relations with
Mulayam and Sadhna,
but now firmly stands
by her husband.
Mulayam made her
fight LS election from
Kannauj in 2012
STRIPES
3
4
AKHILESH CAMP
2. Dharmendra
Yadav Son of
Mulayams younger
brother Abhay Ram
Singh Yadav, and MP
from Badaun
3. Ram Gopal Yadav
Son of Mulayams uncle Bachchi Lal Yadav,
he has differences
with Shivpal. Was
responsible for choosing SP candidates in
2014 LS elections
4. Akshay Yadav
Son of Ram Gopal,
and MP from
Firozabad
5. Tej Pratap
Singh Yadav
Grandson of
Mulayams elder
brother Ratan Singh
Yadav and son-inlaw of RJD chief
Lalu Prasad Yadav,
he is the MP from
Mainpuri
6. Arvind Yadav
Son of Mulayams
cousin Geeta Devi,
he is close to Ram
Gopal. A member of
the UP Legislative
Council, he was
expelled by Shivpal
for six years
| By Ashish Misra |
MANEESH AGNIHOTRI
BJP
BSP
10
NEWSFLICKS SPARK
2017
BATTLE OF BALLOTS
UTTAR PRADESH
PUNJAB
403
117
139mn
224
80
Others
24
Shiromani
Akali Dal
56
Congress
Uttar
Pradesh
12
Others
40
Punjab
GUJARAT
60
assembly seats
182
4.8
mn
voters
voters
2012 RESULT
2012 RESULT
21
9
1.8mn
BJP
Others
Uttarakhand
Others
assembly seats
voters
MANIPUR
1.1mn
Independent
31
BSP
assembly seats
32
Congress
BJP
46
BJP
GOA
Congress
voters
2012 RESULT
2012 RESULT
SP
BJP 47
7.1mn
voters
2012 RESULT
28
assembly seats
19.6mn
voters
Congress
70
assembly seats
assembly seats
BSP
UTTARAKHAND
Goa
42
Congress
Trinamool
Congress
NPF
Others
2012 RESULT
BJP
115
Congress
61
Manipur
4
7
DOWNLOAD FROM
Others
Gujarat
OR
SMS NF TO 52424
WE WILL GO
ACROSS AGAIN
24 Safdarjung Road, the official residence of the vice-chief of army staff,
thrums with activity early on a foggy
January morning, just days after
General Bipin Rawat assumed office
on New Years Day as Indias 27th
chief of the army staff. (His official 4
Rajaji Marg residence is under renovation.) His twin Dachshunds, Dash and
Tickle, shoot around like little guided
torpedoes clad in identical red-andblack-trimmed winter fleece. Staff
officers and Tavor rifle-wielding bodyguards of the special forces flank the
fleet of black armoured Scorpios waiting to make the short two km drive to
his office deep within the sandstone
corridors of South Block. The general
appears in the verandah of his home,
proffers a firm handshake. Hes of
medium height, stockily built, with salt
and pepper hair and a neatly trimmed
white moustache. He listens carefully,
looks you in the eye when he speaks,
and the clearly articulated sentences
are delivered like a military drum roll.
He clearly plays on the front foot. There
is simply no question that will induce
any hesitation on his part, from tackling
China and Pakistan, surgical strikes,
the controversial Cold Start war doctrine to the polemic around his selection as army chief, superseding two
senior army commanders. As he sat
down for an extensive interview with
Executive Editor Sandeep Unnithan,
General Rawat revealed why he was
supremely confident of navigating the
minefield that lies ahead in his threeyear tenure. Excerpts:
What do you see as your main security challenges and how do you plan
to handle developments like the reorganisation of Chinas armed forces?
The primary role of the armed forces is
the defence of the borders, preparation
13
have been spelt out by my predecessor [Gen. Dalbir Singh] and we are
continuing with the same vision and
thrust areas because I feel they have
been thought through and holistically
define the armys requirements.
14
WARS WILL BE
INTENSE AND
SHORT... WE HAVE TO
BE AWARE OF THAT.
WHATEVER ACTION
WE TAKE WILL HAVE
TO BE QUICK
THE
ELEPHANTS
ARE OUT
Its not the happiest of new years
by a long shot, but after 2016, it
could only get better. Right?
15
LIBERALISM
By MUKUL KESAVAN
16
absolute majority that Modi had won was an expression of the material aspirations of a young electorate.
ROGRESSIVES ARGUED THAT it was a
mistake to see Modis political success as
rooted in his claim to be an economic
moderniser. His success lay in mobilising
the electorate in the name of the nation, a nation
defined by a nativist majority beset by threats from
without and within. His visceral appeal is majoritarian; economic progress, certainly, but for a narrowly
defined people mobilised against the enemies of the
nation. In Modis case, these are treacherous
Muslims and deracinated secularists, while for
Erdogan, Turkeys enemies are Kurds, Armenians
and, above all, its own secular, godless Europeanised
elites. We are the People, Erdogan likes to say at
public rallies. Who are you?
The similarities to Trumps central message are
striking. A coastal elite, obsessed with racial, religious and sexual minorities, neglected hard-working
white people and turned them into strangers in
their own country. If his hostility to NAFTA (North
American Free Trade Agreement) and the TPP
(Trans-Pacific Partnership) was aimed at harnessing the resentment of de-industrialisation amongst
working class communities in the rust belt, his public bigotry about Mexicans and Muslims and the
17
18
WAR ON CORRUPTION
By AKHIL GUPTA
19
WAR ON CORRUPTION
20
KEYNOTES
1 Social mobilisation, as in
the Swachh Bharat
campaign, has to be
accompanied by
bureaucratic reform
2 Bureaucratic and
political corruption are
inextricably linkedand
must be tackled together
3 No anti-corruption effort
will succeed if it relies
largely on repression
and control, rather than
involving the people in a
central way
21
POLITICS
By SANJAYA BARU
The Lucknow
Gambit
The UP election results will set the template for 2017. A BJP win could hasten
the Congress decline, nix Third Front ambitions. But if it loses...
22
POLITICS
KEYNOTES
24
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By NEELKANTH MISHRA
A Long Watch
The uncertainties of 2016 linger and things will only
get worse before they get better
HERE IS AN ENDEARING naivet to
the belief that humans are so predictable that one can forecast their collective behaviour a year in advance.
Economies, like Newtonian objects, do
not change momentum without new
forces being applied, making predictions somewhat tricky, particularly as major forces are
generally not known in advance. As we saw in 2016,
unexpected developments across the world (demonetisation, Trump and Brexit, to name a few) not only shook up
conventional thinking, forcing analysts to revisit the first
principles of economics and politics, but also left all forecasts made last year in the dust. And yet there is some
value in looking through the windscreen.
The first forecast for 2017, however unhelpful for
those desirous of clear visibility, is of significant policy
uncertainty. The momentous changes of 2016, both local
and global, have not played out fully yet, and the earth
passing a certain point in its orbit around the sun does
not change much.
Locally, it is far from clear that the government is done
with its fight against black moneychanges in the budget or continuing administrative measures to improve tax
compliance could impact the course the economy takes.
At a more basic level, the feeling of being disoriented is
generally not good for markets and for investment plans.
The beginning of GST could also be disruptive: positively
for some industries and enterprises and negatively for
some others. But who gets slotted in which basket is still
uncertain, as it is unclear which items would attract what
GST rate, the detailed rules that need to be followed, as
well as administrative division of work between Central
and state governments. One can also not be sure of the
political response to the UP election verdict in March, as
the election itself could throw surprises. It is the most
important state election for the ruling party after the
26
27
By LOUISE
TILLIN
FEDERALISM
FEDERAL
FAULTLINES
28
Centre-state relations are becoming increasingly politicised in ways that threaten to undermine the promised
goal of a more cooperative form of federalism. This also
raises questions about how far the Niti Aayog is able to
function as a neutral platform for Centre-state dialogue
and policy discussion. For instance, in its first meeting,
the Niti Aayog governing council, which includes all CMs
and state governors, established groups to explore and
report on three priority areas for Centre-state cooperation: skills development, Swachh Bharat and the rationalisation of centrally sponsored schemes. Chief ministers of
all 29 states, the NCT of Delhi plus the Union territories of
Puducherry and the Andaman and Nicobar islands were
represented on one of the three sub-groups.
Initially, two of the three sub-groups were due to
be convened by CMs belonging to Opposition parties
(the Congresss Siddaramaiah from Karnataka and the
CPI(M)s Manik Sarkar from Tripura). Unceremoniously,
two weeks after their formation, news came that these
committees were instead to be convened by regional allies
of the Central government (Punjabs Parkash Singh Badal
and Andhra Pradeshs N. Chandrababu Naidu), along with
the third committee chaired by the BJPs own CM Shivraj
Singh Chouhan from Madhya Pradesh.
Since the three groups reported in late 2015, there
have been no other comprehensive consultative platforms. Those which have been established, such as the
small committee on digital payments launched in the
wake of demonetisation and convened by Naidu, look
even more partisan. The CMs of Bihar and Tripura pulled
out of the committee soon after it was established.
Naidu is the non-BJP chief minister most vigorously committed to the platform of cooperation with the
Centre. This is a reprise of a role he played in the earlier
NDA regime of 1999-2004. Andhra is fast becoming the
poster-child of competitive federalism too. The state came
firstwith Telanganain the governments 2016 index
of implementation of business reforms action plans (the
index mirrors the World Banks ease of doing business
index). Of the top 12 reforming statesthe leadersall
KEYNOTES
29
By ROHINI
SOMANATHAN
RESERVATIONS
30
31
RESERVATIONS
KEYNOTES
32
By KISHORE
MAHBUBANI
GEOPOLITICS
KEYNOTES
34
35
INDIA-PAKISTAN
By SHASHANK JOSHI
LINE OF NO
CONTROL
HOUGH 2016 HAS BEEN a geopolitical annus horribilis all round, it is easy to forget that it was not
supposed to be so. Ab to yahaan aana jaana laga
rahega (Now there will be much coming and
going), remarked Prime Minister Narendra Modi
to his counterpart, Nawaz Sharif, during his 2015
Christmas Day visit to Lahore. Aap ka ghar hai
(This is your house), replied Sharif, perhaps channelling the heady
optimism of another celebrated meeting in that city 16 years beforehand. There was indeed much aana jaana over the year.
Unfortunately, most of it was carried on by jihadists and special forces, resulting in the worst period for India-Pakistan relations since the
Mumbai attacks of 2008. How did we arrive at this point?
A week after Modis triumphal visit, as the New Year dawned, normal service was resumed. Early on January 2, six heavily armed terrorists breached the Pathankot air force station in Punjab and killed
seven members of the security forces. That, however, was far from
the end of the story. Never in living memory have India and Pakistan
handled such an attack, obviously of Pakistani provenance, with
such maturity, calm and pragmatism. The two national security advisors, spy and soldier, spoke to each other within hours of the attack
and met in Paris. The Indian government allowed a five-member
Pakistani team to visit the air base itself in March.
Pakistan had been handed a golden opportunity, by the most
hawkish Indian government in over a decade, to break the familiar cycle of atrocity, denial, obfuscation and misdirection that has
bedevilled the relationship. Tragically, this opportunity was spurned.
The hapless Sharif, sincere in his efforts to throw India a bone, was
36
37
INDIA-PAKISTAN
KEYNOTES
38
By SARANG
SHIDORE
40
WEST ASIA
KEYNOTES
41
42
By SHYAM
SARAN
INTERNATIONALISM
The Future is
Still Global
In the face of a backlash against globalisation,
the community of nations needs to revive the
institutions of internationalism
NDIA CONFRONTS A
WORLD OF paradoxes.
There is a reassertion of
nationalist sentiment in
countries across the
globe, accompanied by
sharpening political and
social polarisation. This contradicts the reality of the increasingly globalised and densely
interconnected world we inhabit today. Our
destinies as countries and peoples are more
intertwined, and the cross-border and crossdomain challenges we confront today are
more numerous and salient than at any time
in human history. This unfolding and inescapable reality is the result of the rapid technological changes which pervade our lives.
The globalisation of our economies is a consequence of this change. The new reality
compels collaborative responses from the
international community and institutions to
enable them to deal effectively with contemporary challenges. And yet we seem to be
regressing into an outdated frame of reference where the competitive impulses of
nation-states continue to dominate.
The nation-state endures and will
continue to do so in the foreseeable
future. However, the concept of national
43
INTERNATIONALISM
44
happening across the world, and there is a fragmentation of the global space accompanied by a polarisation of attitudes in country after country. The yearning
for national control, the harking back to an imagined
historical, social and cultural identity such as we have
seen in the Brexit vote in the UK, and the more recent
elections in the US, will inevitably end in frustrated
expectations. For the West, globalisation was embraced
as long as it reinforced Western ascendancy, but it
became threatening when it spawned other centres of
political and economic power. Making America great
again in the same mould as in the post-World War II
era is no longer possible. Nor is the China Dreamas
articulated by Xi Jinpingpossible, because that is
KEYNOTES
1
Globalisation has
made the world more
interconnected than
at any time in history
The challenges we
face today require a
coordinated international response
If these challenges
are not appropriately
met, we face worldwide crises
45
AUTOMATION
By ROHAN N. MURTY
Why Software
Hasnt Won... Yet
46
KEYNOTES
48
CLIMATE CHANGE
By VICTOR SHAHED
SMETACEK
Beating the
Retreat of Ice
49
CLIMATE CHANGE
CLIMATE EDUCATION
50
CURBING EMISSIONS
KEYNOTES
1
Investing in nuclear
energy will pose waste
disposal hazards
REMOVING CO 2
SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE
internal combustion engines from the cities and replacing them with electric engines within reach? The process
of countrywide electrification offers enormous growth
potential and employment for a workforce ranging from
unskilled labour to highly trained experts. The technology
for implementing the transition to decentralised energy
capture is already developed, so why wait for the future?
The vision of a solar-powered India is the type of decentralised self-sufficiency that Gandhi dreamed of and that
is now within reach of the entire population, rendered
possible by modern, smart technology. There is enormous
scope for innovation in the field of solar-generated electricity and its storage, which will lead to creation of new
products for new markets. The Indian diaspora could be
persuaded to contribute to this monumental effort.
N THIS BRIGHT NEW LIGHT, investing in
nuclear power plants is repeating the same
mistake made at the dawn of the fossil fuel
eradisregard of the fate and future impact
of the waste products. Radioactivity is a form of energy
humans cannot feel, hence easily misjudge. Germany is
currently facing the onerous task of dismantling its reactors and disposing of their wastes. Apart from the enormous costs to be borne by the taxpayers, deciding where
51
FREEDOMS
By RUCHIR JOSHI
A Year
Best
Forgotten
And going by the few who did have
it good in 2016, theres more bad
news on the way
52
53
Shining a W
Light on
Gujarat
THE INDIA TODAY STATE OF
THE STATE STUDY IS BOTH A
REPORT CARD AND A ROADMAP
FOR GUJARAT TO FOLLOW
By Kaushik Deka
54
GUJARAT CHIEF MINISTER VIJAY RUPANI WITH INDIA TODAY EDITOR-IN-CHIEF AROON PURIE, GROUP EDITORIAL DIRECTOR
(PUBLISHING) RAJ CHENGAPPA AND THE DISTRICT MAGISTRATES AND POLICE SUPERINTENDENTS OF THE AWARD-WINNING DISTRICTS
BEST PERFORMING
DISTRICT
MOST IMPROVED
DISTRICT
OVERALL
AHMEDABAD
KACHCHH
Education
Rajkot
Kachchh
Gender Equality
Valsad
Valsad
Road
Panchmahal
Panchmahal
Urbanisation
Kachchh
Ahmedabad
Health
Bhavnagar
Bhavnagar
Sabarkantha
Gandhinagar
Agriculture
Kheda
Jamnagar
Income
Ahmedabad
Kachchh
for Education
improve efficiency and delivery when he was chief minister. This pushed the state on the path of growth, he
said, and we are continuing in that direction.
The daylong event saw several stimulating panel
discussions on Gujarats growth trajectory. Politicians,
bureaucrats, policy experts, filmmakers and actors commented on and debated what more the state needs to
do to balance economic growth and social indicators.
The state seems to have woken up to this sore point in
its growth narrative and is taking corrective measures.
Last years budget allocated 48 per cent of the total
funds to the social sector; this year too it will be in the
same range, Gujarat Chief Secretary J.N. Singh said.
With the entire country discussing demonetisation,
the issue came up several times during the interactions.
Dismissing criticism that it has stalled economic activity, resulting in job losses, the chief minister said, Note
ban caused inconvenience to people initially. But let me
assure you, there has been no layoff in any industry in
Gujarat, including the diamond industry.
55
56
Highway to Growth
The economic growth story of Gujarat is let down somewhat
by the states showing on social parameters
58
coastline1,600 kmcontribute to
its rapid growth? Gujarat has served
as an integral native trading hub for
centuries, one of the most dominant
in the Arabian Sea. After all, in India,
most coastal states have shown higher
growth than the BIMARU (an acronym
for Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan
and UP, referring to their poor economic standing) states. A coastal state
has the twin advantages of greater
global access as well as lower transportation costs. Other coastal states,
such as Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu
Patan
Kachchh
Sabarkantha
Mehsana
Aravalli
Mahisagar
Gandhinagar
Morbi
Ahmedabad
Surendranagar
Panchmahal
Dahod
Anand
Jamnagar
Dwarka
Kheda
Rajkot
Porbandar
Amreli
Chhota
Udaipur
Vadodara
Botad
Narmada
Bharuch
Bhavnagar
Junagadh
Surat
Gir Somnath
Tapi
Navsari
Dang
Valsad
State Beats
the Nation
Gujarat means growth
16
Gujarat
12
8
GDP (% increase
on a year earlier)
India
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
2014*
SHAILESH RAVAL
59
-7.3
-4.4
-5.5
-3.6
Note: 1) Change is measured as log per cent change in levels of each category
2) Positive change is better for GSDP, Education Attainment; negative change better for Infant Mortality Rate
3) Education Attainment is defined as the average number of years of education completed by 15 to 64-year-olds
4) Infant Mortality Ratio is the number of infant (less than one year old) deaths for 1,000 live births
5) Comparator states for Gujarat: If 1999 is taken as the base year, there are six states very similar to Gujarat.
Comparison according to seven socio-economic indicatorsper capita GDP, poverty rate (Suresh Tendulkar definition),
education (years of education attained by a male and the ratio of female-to-male education), infant mortality rate
(male infant mortality rate and the ratio of female-to-male mortality rate) and the sex ratio at birth
-0.5
2.6
2.6
1.9
2.2
Kerala
Tamil Nadu
-2.3
Himachal Pradesh
Punjab
-4
Haryana
Maharashtra
3.4
2.2
Gujarat
Change in Infant
Mortality Rate (Females)
1999-2011
6.1
Change in Education
Attainment (for females)
1999-2011
5.7
5.6
5.5
6.3
6.5
Methodology
he State of the State study for Gujarat was done in nine categoriesincome, education, gender equality for education, health,
law and order, roads, urbanisation, agriculture and overall. In each
category, there were two segmentsbest performing at a particular point of time and most improved over a period of time. Data
on GDP and composition of GDP was taken from the Census and Economic
Information Centre, which in turn obtains it from the Union statistics and programme implementation ministrys website. Data available only till 2013-14.
Assembling district-level data, especially for GSDP, is a challenge. It was collected by Oxus, an agency run by Dr Surjit Bhalla, from well-known sources,
such as the National Sample Survey, Census, and standardised for comparison. The rankings were done using the Borda method, in which voters rank
options or candidates in order of preference. The most recent year was used
to rank the best district. The difference between the most recent category and
past value (1999-2000) was used to rank the most improved district.
60
OVERALL
OVERALL
MOST IMPROVED
KACHCHH
District Snapshot
RANKING
1 AHMEDABAD
2 RAJKOT
3 KACHCHH
4 SURAT
5 GANDHINAGAR
RANKING
1 KACHCHH
2 AHMEDABAD
3 RAJKOT
4 GANDHINAGAR
5 SURENDRANAGAR
District Snapshot
SHAILESH RAVAL
available. In the case of Gujarat, ideally one should compare all 33 districts.
Seven of these districts were created
in 2013, and eight were created over
the period of 1997 to 2010. Data for
the recent seven is not available. For
the eight districts created earlier, data
is available sporadically. Thus, the district analysis presented in this report is
for the 18 original districts.
Gujarat versus six states
How well has Gujarat performed in
terms of GSDP growth, education,
health and in other key categories can
be best assessed by comparing its performance with that of other states; in
61
EDUCATION
SHAILESH RAVAL
MOST
IMPROVED
KACHCHH
BEST
PERFORMING
RAJKOT
RANKING
1 RAJKOT
2 AHMEDABAD
3 BHARUCH
4 JUNAGADH
5 VADODARA
District
Snapshot
Rajkot has overtaken
Ahmedabad and Vadodara
in school education in the
past decade, emerging as
the leading district in education. In the past, students
from Ahmedabad and
Vadodara dominated the
merit list in the state examinations. Now, Rajkot students have taken over,
both for standard 10 and
12 state education board
exams. The proliferation of
private schools and 18
engineering colleges has
raised the educational bar in
the district
62
RANKING
1 KACHCHH
2 GANDHINAGAR
3 JAMNAGAR
4 RAJKOT
5 AHMEDABAD
SHAILESH RAVAL
EDUCATION
District
Snapshot
GENDER EQUALITY
FOR EDUCATION
MOST IMPROVED
VALSAD
District Snapshot
The seeds of social awareness
sown by Gandhians among the
districts tribal people were
further strengthened by an emphasis on girl child education.
Around 29 secondary education
schools have been established under the national secondary education mission in the past three years.
The district also has two model
schools for girls and four BEd
colleges, besides nine non-engineering colleges. After the BJP
came to power in the state, the primary education infrastructure received a significant boost
GENDER EQUALITY
FOR EDUCATION
achievement (highest class attainment) is a much better index of educational attainment than provided
by the literacy variable. Literacy tells
whether a person is literate; educational attainment offers a measure of
educational achievement.
In 1999-2000, Gujarat had about
the same educational level (average
educational achievement of 5.3 years)
as Haryana, Punjab and Tamil Nadu.
In 2011-12, the state improved its
average education level to 6.3 years;
however, this improvement was the
RANKING
1 VALSAD
RANKING
1 VALSAD
2 RAJKOT
2 BANASKANTHA
3 JAMNAGAR
3 SURENDRANAGAR
4 KACHCHH
4 KACHCHH
5 AHMEDABAD
5 GANDHINAGAR
63
ROADS
ROADS
MOST IMPROVED
PANCHMAHAL
District Snapshot
Even though its a district dotted with remote
villages and has four out of its seven talukas
listed as backward, Panchmahal boasts of a
powerful road network. The village road
network, which connects 600 villages,
extends to 5,647 km and includes 1,181 major district roads. The robust road network
makes it easier to carry out rescue operations
during floods. The district has around 633
km of state highways, including 84 km of
four-lane roads
District Snapshot
RANKING
1 PANCHMAHAL
2 KACHCHH
3 MEHSANA
4 KHEDA
5 SABARKANTHA
SHAILESH RAVAL
RANKING
1 PANCHMAHAL
2 KHEDA
3 VALSAD
4 SABARKANTHA
5 AHMEDABAD
THE STATE HIGHWAY NEAR GODHRA IN THE PANCHMAHAL DISTRICT
64
the Eastern Corridor. The demarcation is done on the basis of income and
poverty levels in 1999, weighted by
the population of each district. Such
an exercise shows Central Gujarat as
most prosperous, followed by Western
Gujarat and the Eastern Corridor (see
graphic: Centre Drives Growth). Any
regional data provided is computed
as a simple average of all the districts
in the region.
Overall income: Since overall income
comprises three categoriesreal
wages, per capita household consumption and absolute level of povertywe
look at all of these individually. The
most prosperous area, Central Gujarat,
HEALTH
MOST IMPROVED
BHAVNAGAR
District Snapshot
SHAILESH RAVAL
HEALTH
BEST PERFORMING
BHAVNAGAR
District Snapshot
Bhavnagar has done remarkably in implementing
the states health programmes. The regions record in providing immunisation and aiding institutional deliveries has been impressive.
The Mukhyamantri Amrutum and Mukhyamantri
Amrutum Vatsalya schemes, providing free treatment for major ailments, such as kidney/
heart failure or cancer, to those below the
poverty line or earning less than Rs 1.2 lakh a
year have been successfully implemented
66
RANKING
1 BHAVNAGAR
RANKING
1 BHAVNAGAR
2 SURAT
2 SURAT
3 AMRELI
3 KACHCHH
4 KACHCHH
4 PANCHMAHAL
5 MEHSANA
5 AHMEDABAD
Corridor districtsBhavnagarhas
witnessed a significant drop in IMR.
Overall rank: Central Gujarat is the
best in level of development. It also
shows the highest improvement among
the three regions. The conclusion is
based on achievements in income,
health and education. Western Gujarat
and the Eastern Corridor take the second and third positions respectively.
Gender equality in education: There
are three measures for educational
achievement in 2011years of education (male), years of education (female),
MOST
IMPROVED
GANDHINAGAR
BEST
PERFORMING
SABARKANTHA
RANKING
1 SABARKANTHA
2 VALSAD
3 JUNAGADH
4 KHEDA
5 BHAVNAGAR
District
Snapshot
Feuds among tribal groups
and poverty contribute significantly to crime in the district. The region had a trend
of relatives of murder victims often leaving the
bodies to rot on the road for
months to build pressure
for compensation. Of late,
such crimes have
dropped by 8 per cent.
Crimes perpetrated
against women after
branding them as witches
have also reduced considerably. Sound policing has
made the district the safest
in the state
RANKING
1 GANDHINAGAR
2 SURAT
3 SABARKANTHA
4 BHAVNAGAR
5 SURENDRANAGAR
Gandhinagar residents
follow the practice of informing the police when
stepping out of the city
so that their homes can
be kept under watch. The
practice began after a spurt
in thefts during school vacations, when many families
prefer to go travelling.
Incidents of chain-snatching had also increased in
the recent past. The installation of CCTV cameras
at key junctions across
the city has brought
the crime graph down
considerably
SHAILESH RAVAL
District
Snapshot
District-level performance
This section will analyse performance
in terms of levels, circa 2011, and the
next section will look at performance
as measured by changes (or growth)
between 1999 and 2011. All rankings
are on the basis of the 18 districts for
which consistent data are available:
Ahmedabad, Amreli, Banaskantha,
Bharuch, Bhavnagar, Gandhinagar,
Jamnagar, Junagadh, Kachchh,
Kheda, Mehsana, Panchmahal, Rajkot,
Sabarkantha, Surat, Surendranagar,
Vadodara and Valsad.
67
SHAILESH RAVAL
URBANISED AHMEDABAD ALONG THE SABARMATI RIVER
URBANISATION
RANKING
1 AHMEDABAD
2 RAJKOT
3 SURAT
4 KACHCHH
5 BHAVNAGAR
Industrialisation in Sanand and VithalapurMandal-Viramgam in recent years has contributed heavily to urbanisation in the district.
Ahmedabad city arguably has the countrys
most successful bus rapid transit system.
The city is dotted with skyscrapers, thanks to a
real estate boom. The governments efforts at
redeveloping slums have paid off. Western
Ahmedabad, developed around the
Gandhinagar-Sarkhej highway, is the first
area in India where urban planning
preceded a construction boom
URBANISATION
68
RANKING
1 KACHCHH
2 BANASKANTHA
3 BHARUCH
4 GANDHINAGAR
5 RAJKOT
Rankings by level2011
Income: In 2011, for the three
income variables (real wages, real
per capita income, and level of absolute poverty), Ahmedabad is the number one district. It has a score of 8 (the
best score possible is 3, a rank of 1 in
each category), followed by Kachchh
(score of 11). At third place is Rajkot
with a score of 12.
Education: There are three measures for educational achievement
in 2011years of education (male),
years of education (female), and
female education as a fraction of
male education. The best score is a
sum of ranks of 3. For the first category, Gandhinagar ranks the highest. Ahmedabad ranks the highest for
the second category of female years
in education. Valsad ranks the highest
for the third category. If we look at the
overall education, incorporating all
three, Ahmedabad holds the top position, followed by Rajkot and Bharuch.
It is interesting that Ahmedabad and
Rajkot are tied at an overall score of 8,
and some distance behind is Bharuch.
In the race for best district, it would
appear that for income and education, Ahmedabad is in the lead.
Health: IMR is the major indicator
of health in 2011. Bhavnagar has the
lowest IMR of 8.3. This is followed
by Surat at 11 and then, after a long
gap, Amreli, Kachchh, and Mehsana
at 27.5, 28.4 and 30.5 respectively.
Overall rank: The overall ranking
is estimated as the sum of ranks for
income, education and health. The
implicit weighting is that each category has one-third weight. However, as
we have noted above, no matter what
the weights, Ahmedabad is the unambiguous winner. The best (minimum)
possible sum of the ranks is 73
(income) + 3 (education) + 1 (health).
Ahmedabad scores 23. Next is Rajkot
(28), then Kachchh (38).
Law and order: While there is data
for various crime variables from 1999
to 2011, the ranking for crime is not
included in our assessment for the best
district. Nevertheless, an assessment
of how each district has performed
with respect to crime is relevant. Four
indicators are combined to obtain an
AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTURE
MOST IMPROVED
JAMNAGAR
SHAILESH RAVAL
RANKING
1 KHEDA
2 SURAT
3 BHAVNAGAR
4 SABARKANTHA
5 JUNAGADH
District Snapshot
Horticulture and micro-irrigation transformed farming
RANKING
in Jamnagar, which in the
1 JAMNAGAR
past mainly produced cot2 JUNAGADH
ton and groundnut. Pomegranate and watermelon
3 BHAVNAGAR
cultivation has grown by
4 RAJKOT
50 per cent in the last
5 AMRELI
five years. About 0.379
million hectares of cultivable area in the district is under drip and sprinkler irrigationa 10-fold jump since 2000.
Cotton is grown on 0.17 million hectares and
groundnut on 0.131 million hectares. All 0.15
million farmers in the district are covered
under the soil health card scheme
75
INCOME
District
Snapshot
SHAILESH RAVAL
MOST
IMPROVED
KACHCHH
BEST
PERFORMING
AHMEDABAD
RANKING
1 AHMEDABAD
2 KACHCHH
3 RAJKOT
4 JUNAGADH
5 GANDHINAGAR
District
Snapshot
Ahmedabad has always been
the leader of Gujarats diamond polishing industry.
The Narmadas waters,
brought in by the Fatehwadi
canal, increased agricultural
prosperity. Chemical and textile units in the Gujarat
Industrial Development
Corporations estates in
Vatva and Naroda created
jobs. The Nano car unit transformed Ahmedabad into an
auto hub. The VithalapurMandal Special Investment Region contributed
to the phenomenal rise
in incomes
70
RANKING
1 KACHCHH
2 AHMEDABAD
3 SURENDRANAGAR
4 BHAVNAGAR
5 BHARUCH
A FACTORY IN KACHCHH
SHAILESH RAVAL
INCOME
LEISURE
BOOKS
YEAR
Books
INDIAN READERS HAVE PLENTY
TO LOOK FORWARD TO IN 2017
FICTION
72
book portrays a young woman bullied out of life as an academic and writer by her abusive husband, a university
professor for whom a marriage contract is akin to indentured labour. Other notable novels include Shanthi
Sekarans Lucky Boy, her second, expected in January. A
teacher of creative writing, based in Berkeley, Sekaran is
not particularly well known in India but she asks an interesting question of economically successful Indian immigrants to the USwho have long been portrayed as the
model minority. How does your good fortune reflect in
your attitude towards other immigrants? A debut novel
by another Indian American writer, Rahul Mehta, out in
February, tells the story of a young boy coming to terms
with being gay. Set in India and rural New York in the
1980s and 1990s, No Other World has already been
called a work of astonishing emotional subtlety. It
shows that while some jaded readers complain about diexperiaspora fatigue, there are parts of the immigrant experi
ence that remain underexplored. Incidentally, Sahitya
Akademi award-winner Jerry Pintos new novel, Murder
in Mahim, out on January 12, is a murder mystery set
among gay men in Mumbai.
NON-FICTION
73
LEISURE
BOOKS
THE
INTERNATIONAL O
PRESS
74
GLOSSARY
by DAMAYANTI DATTA
Yesterday,
Today & Tomorrow
COCO CHANEL
French fashion designer, style icon and founder of the House of Chanel,
who had the biggest influence on how modern women should look, act
and dress in the 20th century. In 1917, when femininity was bound to long
tresses, Coco chopped her hair short (with the avowed explanation that her
house had caught fire and also singed her curls). The look soon became all
the rage. And in the century since, the bob has never gone out of fashion,
becoming an enduring symbol of independent, spirited women
STEPHEN HAWKING
The University of Cambridge is gearing up to celebrate the
75th birthday of the legendary astrophysicist (born January
8) who changed our understanding of space, time and the
origins of the universe, despite an incapacitating disease.
His A Brief History of Time, translated into 40 languages,
has sold about one copy for every 750 people around the
world and has influenced the minds of a generation as few
other contemporary titles have done
CHE GUEVARA
MATA HARI
MARTIN LUTHER
On October 31, 1517, a 34-year-old man defiantly
nailed a copy of his 95 Theses to the door of a
church, denouncing the excesses of the Catholic
Church. It triggered the Protestant Reformation
in Europe and made him one of the most
significant figures of western history
KARL MARX
Expelled from Germany, France and Belgium as a
notorious revolutionary, he settled down in
London in 1849. This is where he emerged from
his political and spiritual isolation and produced
his most important work, Das Kapital, the working
class bible, in 1867. September 14 is the 150th
anniversary of its publication
PABLO PICASSO
One of the greatest and most influential artists
of the 20th century, he painted his most famous
work, Guernica, 80 years ago in 1937, as a
reaction to Nazi bombing of the Spanish town of
Guernica. The grey, black and white, 11 feet tall
and 25.6 feet wide mural-sized canvas, painted
in oil and preserved at the Museo Reina Sofia in
Madrid, is one of the most celebrated anti-war
symbols and an embodiment of peace
EYECATCHERS
SURAJ SHARMA
The Life of Pi actor is making his Bollywood debut
in the Anushka Sharma-produced Phillauri
FILMMAKER
KONKANA SENSHARMA
Her polished directorial debut, A Death in the
Gunj, boasts one of the finest acting ensembles
CINEMA
ACTRESS
NIDHHI AGERWAL
A Bengaluru beauty like Deepika Padukone, Agerwal has reportedly made a strong first impression with Munna Michael
MUSIC
DANCE
TEJAS MENON
VISHAL
KRISHNA
RAFTAAR
FASHION
GARIMA ARORA
FOOD
DESIGN
PAYAL KHANDWALA
PAYAL
KHANDWALA
The Mumbai-based
de-
AYUSH
KASLIWAL
The
Mumbai-based
dessigners
work is fuss-free,
igners
work
is
fuss-free,
fierce and feminine with
fierce
and feminine with
easy separates.
easy separates
ASHIESH SHAH
The Bismillah
Khan Yuva Puraskar
awardee combines
the best of Sitara
Devi and Gopi
Krishna in a vigor-ous, crowd-pleas-ing Kathak style
PRATEEKSHA
KASHI
Daughter and student of
renowned Kuchipudi
dancer Vyjayanthi Kashi,
Prateeksha, 26, is a charismatic artiste well-versed
in group, duet and solo
Volume XLII Number 3; For the week January 10-16, 2017, published on every Friday Total number of pages 100 (including cover pages)
78
DIGITAL EDITION
www.indiatoday.in
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JANUARY 2017
JANUARY 2017
JANUARY 2017
ART SPECIAL
9 TRENDS
IN DIGITAL
EDUCATION
RAISING
THE BAR
WHAT TO KNOW BEFORE
APPLYING TO LAW SCHOOL
Not for sale. To be circulated free with India Today in Mumbai, Delhi & NCR, Chennai, Bangalore,
Kolkata, Hyderabad and Pune. Supplement to India Today issue dated January 16, 2017
BODY OF WORK
A CLASS
UNDERWAY
AT REFORMS
PHYSIOTHERAPY
AND PILATES
THE
SHAPE
MAKERS
FUN WAYS TO STAY FIT
IN THE CITY
JANUARY 2017
BODY OF WORK
ART SPECIAL
(Aroon Purie)
JANUARY, 2017 u INDIA TODAY SPICE 1
CONTENTS
January 2017
14
BODY OF ART
ART SPECIAL
JANUARY 2017
BODY OF WORK
THE ACTOR AS PERFORMER, AND
OTHER UNCONVENTIONAL ART
ON THE COVER
Hrithik Roshan
COVER IMAGE
BANDEEP SINGH
STYLED BY
SUKRITI GROVER
CLOTHES BY
TOMMY HILFIGER
MAKE-UP
VIJAY PALANDE
HAIR
AALIM HAKIM
BOLLYWOOD ACTOR
HRITHIK ROSHANS
IDEA OF ART
EQUALS PASSION
CONTENTS
| January 2017 |
TIMELESS
PASSION
36
24
ODE TO THE LEGENDS
SUDARSHAN SHETTY
REDISCOVERS THE ART
OF STORYTELLING
ART OF
THE MATTER
CULTURE IS THE DRIVING
FORCE OF BMW
34
CONTENTS
| January 2017 |
18
BEYOND DEFINITIONS
THE KOCHI MUZIRIS
BIENNALE ESTABLISHES THAT
ART CAN TRANSCEND THE
FRONTIERS OF EXPRESSIONS
BANDEEP SINGH
4 INDIA TODAY SPICE u JANUARY, 2017
CONTENTS
| January 2017 |
40
THE ART OF CRAFT
EMBODYING ART IN THE
SPIRIT OF FASHION
29
BREITLING EXPRESSES
ITS LOVE OF AVIATION
THROUGH WATCHES
38
GENTLEMEN, START
YOUR ENGINES
MUSTANG CELEBRATES 50 YEARS OF
ICONIC DESIGN AND INNOVATION
HOTSHEET
54
LASTLOOK
HOTSHEET
PURSUIT OF EXCELLENCE
Compiled by Chumki Bharadwaj and Srishti Jha
The worlds leading art house Christies witnessed its fourth successive India sale with works of classical,
modern and contemporary art from India sold for more than `72.16 crore. Forty-one works from the private
collection of Abhishek and Radhika Poddar led the sale, selling for `29.06 crore. Meera Mukherjee and
Hemendranath Mazumdars works had record breaking numbers. Held at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel,
Mumbai, the top two lots in the modern and contemporary section were both untitled works by V.S.
Gaitonde, the highest lot selling for more than `15 crores and the second, from the Poddar Collection, selling
for more `11 crore. Three lots in the sale were sold for more `10 crore. In the classical section, the top lot
of the sale was a folio from an iconic Pahari series of Ragamala paintings attributed to the small Himalayan
foothill of Basohli, which sold for `93.25 lakh. An unusually large and exceedingly rare stone figure of a
Mother Goddess, possibly a Matrika, circa 6th century, sold for `43.75 lakh. This was followed by an art
forum hosted by Christies at the Serendipity Art Festival in Goa on December 20. Auctions in this category
will be held in 2017 in New York, London and Mumbai.
For more information log on to www.christies.com
HOTSHEET
WOMEN
OBJECT OF DESIRE
SOMETHING BLUE
Embrace the subversive
spirit of leather with the
blue lambskin belted waist
dress from Nina Ricci featuring a V-neck, a
concealed front
fastening, a bow ribbon,
long sleeves, a flared
skirt, a pleated design
and front flap pockets.
Price $5,795
Availability www.more.com
FEET FIRST
These Made in Italy Aquazzuras Pasadena
sandals in soft suede with detailed cutouts
create an ornamented composition. The chic
signature ankle ties are minimal and beautiful.
Price $785
Availability www.net-a-porter.com
BAG IT
Timeless, distinctive and art in itself, the
Lady Dior bag is imbued with Diors
couture spirit. This taupe
lambskin bag has an iconic Dior Cannage stitching with an intricately embroidered address tag.
Price On Request
Availability Dior Boutique, DLF Emporio,
Vasant Kunj, New Delhi
HOTSHEET
TOP FIVE
DE VINCENZO
PLEATED FRONT SKIRT
1 MARCO
2
1
HINDMARCH
2 ANYA
LEATHER POUCH
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SEQUINED
SILK BOMBER JACKET
3 ASHISH
WHITE
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GOLD RING
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8 INDIA TODAY SPICE u JANUARY, 2017
HOTSHEET I JEWELLERY
ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
STATEMENT PIECE
PINK HAZE
Delicate, yet playful, is the best
possible description for this
delightful diamond necklace in
pink gold from Forevermark. This
collection presents winning cocktail
pieces for the wedding season.
Whats more, this particular neck
piece has a detachable variation
that makes it versatile too.
Price `7.35 lakh
Availability Authorised Forevermark
Jewellers or www.forevermark.com
COLOUR IS CUE
There is something almost
primal about the blood red
lure of the ruby; a quality well
captured by these Mozambique
ruby dangler earrings from
Entice. Crafted in white gold,
each of the mesmerising rubies
is hemmed by white diamonds
that bring out the
dazzle.
Price On Request
Availability Entice
Boutiques in India
HOTSHEET I ACCESSORIES
MOUNTAIN HIGH
The House of Fendis
leisurewear collection for
Fall/Winter 2016-17 injects
a high dose of edgy fun into
both apparel and accessories.
Combining high-tech
materials and workmanship
with luxurious style, imbued
with a touch of eccentricity,
it offers wardrobe choices for
those who wear fashion as
fun. Fur is a big part of the
collection, as obvious in
these pink and black fur
trekking shoes.
Price `1.42 lakh
Availability Fendi.com
DANDY COOL
STIRRING MEMORY
Montegrappas Brain Pen is probably
its most cerebral creation, so successful
was the resultant pen that its sister, The
Memory Pen, was conceived. Produced in
pearl yellow celluloid, with sterling silver
or solid 18k gold parts, yellow was chosen
because it is the colour most associated
with memory through the ages. Limited
to 300, the solid gold version will be
offered in a series of 20 each of fountain
pen and rollerball.
Price On Request
Availability Montegrappa Boutiques
FETISH
METEOR SHOWER
The new Moonwatch from Omega actually offers a meteorite dial made from a solid piece of extra-terrestrial stone
The secrets of the universe remain a mystery; decoding it completely may still be light years away,
but you can attempt a second best by wearing a real piece of space on your wrist. This exceptional
Moonwatch model, added to the Omega collection, combines elements of celestial inspirations.
The highlight of this watch is its incredible meteorite dial. In each timepiece, the dial has been
made from a solid piece of extra-terrestrial stone. Omegas meteorite dial has been sourced from
slices of the Gibeon meteorite that fell in prehistoric times in Namibia. The Widmansttten pattern,
named after the Austrian scientist who discovered it, refers to the ribbon-like flecks that are found
in this kind of meteorite after an acid etch. What makes this even more exclusive is that not only
is the pattern clearly visible, but it is unique to each model. With the Speedmasters hoary connection to space, this timepiece is a marvellous tribute to past collections. Clearly, space isnt the final
frontier any more. Price on request; Available at brand boutiques across India
PERFORMANCE
ART
H A S YA
SHRINGAR
B H AYA N A K
VEER
roshan caught in
a playful moment
with his dog
V I B H AT S A
A D B H U TA
RAUDRA
VAT S A LYA
The fitness enthusiast in him idolises Sylvester Stallone. Other names cited include
Raj Kapoor his vulnerability struck me; Jerry Lewis in my childhood, I used to
watch him every day and of course Michael Jackson. I feel such a deep sense of
respect and gratitude for these artists who have inspired me, adds Roshan.
Most will see 2016 as a lamentable year for Roshan, who found himself
making headlines for all the worng reasons. Mohenjo Daro, his solitary release,
failed to live up to the epic expectations attached to it, becoming one of the biggest
duds this year. Then there was the legal quagmire with Kangana Ranaut that Roshan found himself engulfed in and that kept the
tabloids busy with umpteen stories of He Said, She Said. Youd think that Roshan
wouldnt look back fondly at the year, cited by TV host John Oliver, and rightly so,
as one of the worst in recent times. The chaos in life actually is cathartic to find
your centre, he says. The film business has the potential to be very turbulent.
There are no guarantees here. But Roshan isnt uneasy. I would go one step
bit too far and say that I think I have cracked it. I am really feeling a sense of so
much contentment and peace, and feeling great about who I am, what I am doing, where I am and where I am going. This awareness Roshan says came just
within this year [2016]. What happened to lead to it? I dont know...Probably it
is inner evolution or whatever you call it. May be it is also failure or the extra chaos
that removes the layers and you can actually find yourself.
Roshan and his fans will hope that 2017 is better. The actor will be busy from
the get go with Kaabil releasing on January 25, a film produced by his family
banner, Filmkraft. Directed by Sanjay Gupta, Kaabil sees Roshan play a visuallyimpaired man with revenge on his mind after a personal tragedy. I see Kaabil
as a small film with a large heart, he says. It will be competing with Shah Rukh
Khan-starrer Raees for eyeballs, a scenario Roshan admits would hurt the financial
prospects of both films. But Roshan isnt the sort to sit back and think about what
could have been. He is assured, calm and collected. In my entire life I dont think
there has been a single moment that something has impacted me and it has not
had the same effect on other people, he says showing faith in his forthcoming
releases merits. Which is why I have never been disappointed in my life.
I always make peace with the results of my creative process. Theres another
potential quote for the wall.
JANUARY, 2017 u INDIA TODAY SPICE 17
RAUL ZURITA, 66
Poet and artist, Chile
Sea of Pain, an installation where
Zurita has poured seawater into an old
warehouse at Aspinwall at the third
edition of Kochi-Muziris Biennale.
Return to
LOSS
TWO POETS, A DANCER AND AN INSTALLATION ARTIST CHALLENGE THE
NOTION OF ART IN THE THIRD EDITION OF KOCHI-MUZIRIS BIENNALE
TEXT BY CHINKI SINHA
PHOTOGRAPHS BY BANDEEP SINGH
Outside the warehouse at Aspinwall, Kochi, the poet who was born in Santiago, Chile, is
untying his shoelaces before stepping into the sea, a tomb to Galip Kurdi, the Kurdish refugee
child who drowned in the waters off Turkey. A woman hitches up her dress and asks if the
water is dirty. The poet Ral Zurita looks away and walks into the man-made sea. He stands
there in the middle exposed, vulnerable and open to interpretations as all poets are. The
poem at the end of the make-believe sea, Sea of Pain, is ancient. The poet says it took him 66
years to think about it.
He writes No one can mimic his final image moored face down at the waters edge. No artist
can provide that low blow. Ah, the world of art, the world of images, billions of images. The
words of a poem are cleaner, more pure. Zurita studied engineering and became a poet. The
It was in response to the coup in Chile in 1973. He saw bodies being dumped in the sea. He
wrote verses commemorating the deaths. He offers no answers in a
post-truth world. He only offers hope.
If the Sea of Pain could drown us then and there, wed be released of a million guilts. The poet
holds his pen steady. For minutes, the pen rests in his hand. Parkinsons hadnt come in the
way. He had once said My disease feels beautiful to me. In the ephemeral sea, his wife steps
in with a camera. Later, he looks at her and smiles and says love is you.
Poet Sharmistha Mohantys installation is an in-between space, a meeting ground of
everythingshe works with time and reality and their shifting natures. Yardena Kurulkar
returns to the memory of an old wooden cupboard in an installation (she has three at the
Kochi-Muziris Biennale) where her Jewish family would keep their sacred texts. The dance
of longing is performed by Padmini Chettur and her group of five who have chosen texts
from Anais Nin, Junot Diaz and Jeanette Winterson among others to perform on. The slowness mimics the distance and the longing of the heroine, who doesnt cut a sorry figure but a
strong-willed woman who can dare to love another woman or leave a man who betrays.
There is a lot of poetry and performance at the Kochi-Muziris Biennale, the third edition of
which is on till March 29, 2017. At its helm, artist Sudarshan Shetty has established that art
can transcend frontiers of expressions. Through the poet who lives and works in Mumbai, the
contemporary dancer from Chennai and the installation artist who finds meaning in a
cupboard, he is remaking the old into something vital and vibrant.
SHARMISTHA MOHANTY, 47
Poet and writer, Mumbai
Her installation is a convergence
of sound, installation and text, a
place where forms meet and multiply. It is a room where one can
sit for hours looking out at the sea
with the words coming
at you with the poets velvety
voice reciting, What you hear
is what you hear.
PADMINI CHETTUR, 43
Contemporary dancer, Chennai
Her performance Varnam at David Hall for the third edition of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale is ephemeral but
one that is haunting as it sets out to explore a new iteration of the heroine who is abandoned by her lover. It
is a critique of classical Indian dance. Theres eroticism, theres lesbian love and theres the strength of the
woman who leaves home after her husband falls in love with another.
YARDENA KURULKAR, 42
Artist, Mumbai
In 15 frames, a heart dissolves in an art installation called
Kenosis, which documents the process of the disintegration
and the emotion in the light of decay. In another installation called Taphephobia, a wooden cupboard is covered
with fresh flowers. The door is ajar and blue velvet is placed
inside. Hundreds of porcelain nails tumble out of the cupboard. The installation seeks to establish that nails can be
broken and what is alive is also at the precipice of death.
LEGENDS
RETOLD
BY MOEENA HALIM
(mumBai) , which
SONNETS
IN STONE
ONCE A PILE OF RUBBLE, THE
MADANA GOPALASWAMY TEMPLE
HALL OF MADURAI HAS NOW
FOUND A HOME AT THE
PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART
MAITHILI PAREKH
Art Historian
a Place of celeBratioN
hall from The madanagopalaswamy Temple in
madurai, circa 1560, wiTh
graniTe figure pillars,
lion capiTals, and carvings
of hindu Tales
BRAND I PRODUCT
ROAD TO PERFECTION
50 YEARS OF MUSTANG CELEBRATES POWER,
PERFORMANCE, REINVENTION AND DESIGN
TODD WILLING
Director, Design
Ford Asia Pacific
BRAND I PRODUCT
Dearborn, Michigan.
Born against the backdrop of arguably
the most tumultuous decade of modern
times, the First Generation Mustang
(1964 -1973) was an automotive
manifestation of the iconic 60s rebellion
in itself. Mustang played to the 60s counter culture of individuality and free-spirit
through a youthful appeal and a unique
personality. The introduction of the
Mustang created a new class of automobile which came to be known as the pony
car. Mustangs styling, with its long hood
and short deck, proved wildly popular
and inspired a host of other automobile
generations. This period also saw the
Mustang race with great success in the
Mustang Milestones
1964
Ford introduces Mustang to
the world at the Worlds Fair in
Flushing Meadows, New York,
on April 17, 1964.
1966
Mustang sales pass the one
million mark in March.
1968
The 302-cid V-8 replaces the
289 midyear, and a mediumriser version of Fords premiere
race engine, the 427-cid V-8 is
offered as a $622 option.
1969
New models added to the lineup include the 290-horsepower
Boss 302, the 375-horsepower
Boss 429, plus the Mustang
Mach 1 and the Grande
luxury model.
1978
The new King Cobra model
is the first Mustang to wear
a 5.0 badge, the metric
equivalent of 302 cubic
inches, in the form of a
decal affixed to its rearward
facing hood scoop.
1984
Fords Special Vehicle
Operations creates the
Mustang SVO, which features
a turbocharged and intercooled
2.3-liter four-cylinder, bigger
tires and brakes and a
dual-wing rear spoiler.
1998
Output of the Mustang GTs
4.6-liter V-8 increases to
225 horsepower.
2003
The Mustang Mach 1 model
returns with a 305-horsepower
V-8 engine and the signature
ram-air Shaker hood scoop.
2008
The 9 millionth Mustang, a GT
convertible, is sold to
an Iowa farmer.
2015
All-new Ford Mustang debuts
GOING
DUTCH
A TASTE OF DUTCH HOSPITALITY 39,000 FEET ABOVE THE GROUND
BY KARISHMA GOENKA
sleeping quarters
aboard the klm 787
dreamliners new
business class
DESIGNER DELICACIES
The on-board menu curated by Michelin
starred Dutch chef Jacob Jan Boerma has something for everyone. Starting with a cold soup,
it moves up the gourmet food chain to braised
beef and smoked salmon. The apple pie pampered with fresh cream is the sweet dnouement to a braise-worthy meal. KLM showcases
the work of some of the finest Dutch designers.
It shows up not just in their food but also wine
collection which is curated by wine specialist
Hubrecht Duijker served in charming stemware crafted by Marcel Wanders. Every little
element is an overwhelming nudge to Dutch
ancestry and culture. There was an adorable
safety video featuring delftware animation
that underlined their effort to be better, while
being rooted in their heritage. Whats more,
everyone got to go home with a gin-filled
miniature Delft house.
ONE FOR THE PLANET
For those careful of their
carbon footprint, KLM proves quite the guiltfree ride being one of the most
environment friendly. A conscious effort to reduce fuel consumption and CO2 emissions,
through use of bio-fuels in certain sectors is
de rigueur; carpets are made from recycled air-hostess uniforms and the entire 787
aircraft is built to be recyclable at the end of its
life. Now thats called flying high.
JANUARY, 2017 u INDIA TODAY SPICE 33
ART I INTERVIEW
FRANK SCHLOEDER, ACTING PRESIDENT, BMW INDIA ON WHY THE BRAND SUPPORTS ART
BY CHUMKI BHARADWAJ
Frank Schloeder,
PreSident (act.),
BMW GrouP india
In 2007, we
celebrated the
first BMW Art Car
exhibition in India
featuring the works
of art of Andy Warhol
and Roy Lichtenstein,
two of the most
renowned American
pop artists of the
20th century.
FRANK SCHLOEDER
President (Act.),
BMW India
tive Spanish surrealism. This very aesthetic of technology and nature, in perfect tandem, is one of the many things that mark the
innovation code of all BMW cars today.
BMW India has also been a partner of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale
since its first edition in 2012. The Biennale endeavours to create a
cultural impact both locally and globally, bringing international artists to India and providing a worldwide platform for Indian artists. It
encompasses different forms of expression, including painting, installations, dance, poetry, literature and theatre. It uses heritage properties and galleries in Fort Kochi and Ernakulam like Aspinwall House,
Pepper House, David Hall, and Durbar Hall. These locations serve as
melting pots of creativity, dialogue and interpretations. The BMW Art
Talk is held at the start of the biennale that brings together artists from
all mediums with the general public to have an interactive dialogue
exploring various facets of art and the factors influencing it. Whats
unique and important about both these platforms is that they do not
restrict patronage of art to connoisseurs and are able to establish an
emotional connect with the general audience. They create a ripple effect which has a very positive impact in increasing the appreciation for
art among the masses. The more exposure the art and the artist get,
the more the world of art gains!
What are the parameters that outline BMWs engagement with an
art project?
We set no limits; unrestricted freedom of creative potential is of utmost importance, which is equally crucial for the field of art as it is for
ground-breaking innovations within a successful business enterprise.
What will BMW showcase at the India Art Fair 2017?
The 13th BMW Art Car, a work of art by prominent Italian artist,
Sandro Chia. According to the artist, the automobile is a soughtafter possession in society and all eyes are upon it. People look
closely at cars. The one I have painted reflects their gaze. Like
a mirror, it confronts the people who look at it. India Art Fair
2017, which begins on February 2, also provides us with a unique
platform to showcase our take on co temporary luxurythe allnew BMW 5 Series, the most progressive sports-business sedan
offering unique driving dynamics in combination with the most
innovative assistance systems.
JANUARY, 2017 u INDIA TODAY SPICE 35
HERITAGE I EXHIBITION
WATCH I BRAND
TRAILB
CONTEMPORARY HOROLOGY
EFFORTS OF
BY SAROSH MODY
BLAZER
OWES MUCH TO THE GROUND-BREAKING
WATCHMAKER A L BREGUET
Breguet ClassIque
ChronometrIe 7727
Breguet ClassIque
tourBIllon eXtra-thIn
automatIC 5377Br
Breguet ClassIque
ComplICatIon le
musICale 7800 Br
BRAND I PRODUCT
SKY
ISNT THE
LIMIT
LUXURY
WATCHMAKER
BREITLING TAKES
ITS LOVE FOR
AVIATION
SERIOUSLY. ITS A
LOVE THAT BEARS
TESTIMONY IN ITS
DISTINCT PRODUCT
PORTFOLIO
BOB RUPANI
BY ADII DANDE
BREITLING SA
High Flyers
Breitling navitimer
Cosmonaute 1962
Uncompromising Pioneering
ICONIC
TIMEPIECES
Navitimer
(1952)
The Navitimer was
adopted by pilots
because of its circular
slide rule serving to
perform the entire range
of calculations relating to
airborne navigation.
Chronomat
44 GMT
(2012)
A travellers chronograph,
the piece enables instant
adjustment to the time
and date of the place
where one is arriving.
Emergency (2013)
Worlds first wristwatch
with a built-in personal
locator beacon, based on
the international CospasSarsat System.
Exospace B55
(2015)
Quite literally, a
smartphone placed in a
watch with Calibre B55
movement.
Unwavering Quality
Breitling Chronomtrie at la
Chaux-de-fonds, switzerland
art
where
thou
WEAVING TALES
rt comes with many realisations, dreams and imaginations. Fashion shares the emotion that art
builds in many ways and the two often merge. Delhi-based Manjunath Kamaths art is larger than
life with a love for primary colours and striking shapes. The empty space is insightful and the use
of motifs symbolising nature, weaves a different narrative each time, summoning reality and fantasy to
the same room. Delhi-based Puneet Kaushiks art installation is a tale of mixed mediums. His work
represents organic in the context of crafts, materials, textiles and structures. His use of wool, jute fibre,
cotton, crocheted steel, cotton wicks with latex and paper dipped in latex gives sculpting a fresh
perspective. Based in London, Sir Peter Cooks art incorporates his architectural subjects and his love
for detail. Minimal and dense at the same time, his work looks at the technical and industrial elements
of art. Delhi-based Manisha Parekhs work is evocative, abstract and rooted. She looks at different
materials and surfaces along with different cuts and shapes. The interpretations are open-ended and
create space for more mediums to participate. Thukral and Tagra who work from Gurgaon, balance
fine art and popular culture embodying aspects like globalisation and consumerism in a quirky way.
As art becomes more accessible, the personification of it is worth the wait. Fashion recreates art with
fabric, adornment, mood and inspiration.
BACK TO ROOTS
Industrial designs have space in the wardrobe and how. Breaking down structures,
remaking them while redefining the components in a simplified way brings the
right kind of transformation.
CLOSE TO NATURE
LEARNING
THE SWISS WAY
INSIDE SWITZERLANDS SWISH BOARDING
SCHOOLS, WHERE THE PRIVILEGED STUDY
BY SHELLY ANAND
Le rosey campus,
roLLe, is spread
over 75 acre
AIGLON COLLEGE
FACT FILE
Students sit the full
International Baccalaureate (IB) or French Baccalaureate; lessons are in
English and French
Fee 110,000 CHF
(`74 lakh) per year
At 1180 Rolle & 3780
Gstaad, Switzerland
Tel +41 21 822 55 00
www.rosey.ch
VILLARS
Fact File
Students undertake
the IGCSEs before
completing IB diploma.
Teaching and learning
is in English, learning
French is compulsory.
Fee
102,600 CHF
(`69 lakh) for
upper boarding;
94,800 CHF
(`64 lakh) for
middle school
At
Avenue Centrale 61;
Chesieres,
Switzerland
Tel
+41 024 496 6161
www.aiglon.ch
there iS StreSS
on individual
training needS
of StudentS
at aiglon
Fact File
The school follows two
academic programmes;
the international
section has English
as teaching medium,
whereas it is French for
the French section
Fee
98,500 CHF (`66 lakh)
per year for boarding
and tuition, plus 25,000
CHF (`16 lakh) for extras like skiing, uniform,
expeditions, excursions,
pocket money, and
health insurance
At
Route du Village 1, CH1884 Villars-sur-Ollon
Tel
+ 41 24 496 26 26
www.beausoleil.ch
BRILLANTMONT T
INTERNATIONAL
SCHOOL LAUSANNE
Fact File
Only school
which offers
British A levels;
all classes are
in English
Fee 70,000 to
76,000 CHF (`47
lakh-`51 lakh) per
year; 8,000 CHF
(`5.39 lakh) per
year for extras
At Avenue Secretan
16, 1005 Lausanne,
Switzerland
Tel + 41 21 310 0400
www.brillantmont.ch
students get
to indulge in
outdoor activities
Fact File
Academic courses
extend across
sections; German,
International (British and American),
Italian, Swiss
Fee
84,000 CHF
(`56 lakh)
per academic
school year
At
Hohenweg 60, 9000
St Gallen, Switzerland
Tel
+ 41 71 277 77 77
www.instrosenberg.ch
LASTLOOK
DIGITAL EDITION
www.indiatoday.in
7 7 0 2 5 4
8 3 9 9 0 9
LIVING
DANGEROUSLY
yearend COVER.indd 1
04/01/17 6:12 pm
PLEASE CONTINUE
TO YOUR FREE MAGAZINES
JANUARY 2017
JANUARY 2017
JANUARY 2017
ART SPECIAL
9 TRENDS
IN DIGITAL
EDUCATION
RAISING
THE BAR
WHAT TO KNOW BEFORE
APPLYING TO LAW SCHOOL
Not for sale. To be circulated free with India Today in Mumbai, Delhi & NCR, Chennai, Bangalore,
Kolkata, Hyderabad and Pune. Supplement to India Today issue dated January 16, 2017
BODY OF WORK
A CLASS
UNDERWAY
AT REFORMS
PHYSIOTHERAPY
AND PILATES
THE
SHAPE
MAKERS
FUN WAYS TO STAY FIT
IN THE CITY
RAISING
THE BAR
Not for sale. To be circulated free with India Today in Mumbai, Delhi & NCR, Chennai, Bangalore,
Kolkata, Hyderabad and Pune. Supplement to India Today issue dated January 16, 2017
JANUARY 2017
9 TRENDS
IN DIGITAL
EDUCATION
LEGALLY BOUND
contents
COVER STORY
The legal profession has undergone a strategic and substantial change. Although it
takes some time to make your name in the field initially, rapid growth of the
corporate legal sector and outsourcing of legal processes has given birth to a
number of specialisations for students aiming to make a mark for themselves.
SKILLS
20
MODERNISING LEARNING
17 | Start-up Spotlight
SHUTTERSTOCK
Printed
and
published
by
Manoj
Sharma
on behalf of Living Media India Limited. Printed at
Thomson Press India Limited, 18-35 Milestone, Delhi
Mathura Road, Faridabad-121007, (Haryana) and published
at K-9, Connaught Circus, New Delhi. Editor: Kaveree Bamzai.
LEARNING
THE LAW
Stay ahead and gear up to ace the popular competitive
law entrance tests to get into your dream college
BY AKSHITA KHOSLA
SHUTTERSTOCK
SYMBIOSIS ENTRANCE
TEST (SET)
With a total of 720 seats at its three
campuses in Pune, Noida and
Hyderabad, Symbiosis International
University, Pune, offers admissions
to law aspirants through the
Symbiosis entrance test. The offline test
is followed by a personal interview and
writing ability test.
Important dates The application
starts in February and the exam is
conducted in May
Eligibility criteria Class 12 with
minimum 45 per cent
.
NEW
ON THE BLOCK
WELINGKAR SIGNS MOU
WITH ISRAELI UNIVERSITIES
Welingkar Institute of Management
Development and Research, Bangalore, signed two memorandums of
understanding (MoU) with University of
Haifa and the Interdisciplinary Centre
(IDC) Herzliya, Israel, for educational cooperation in the field of technology, agri-
FELLOWSHIP ALERT
Thomson Reuters Foundation
Fellowship for Journalism
The Thomson
Reuters Foundation Fellowship,
UK, offers experienced journalists an
opportunity to undertake research
projects on a variety of subjects. Six
fellows will be selected for one or two
terms of a fully-funded fellowship.
They will receive a living allowance of
1,500 per month. Journalists from
any country are eligible. The deadline
for application is January 31, 2017.
Details can be found at https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/node/46
SHUTTERSTOCK
COVER STORY
THE SCIENCE
OF LAW
n just under three decades since the establishment of the first National Law University (NLU) in Bangalore in 1987, law has become the
fastest growing sector. According to an estimate by the Bar Council
of India, there are around 1.5 million registered advocates in the
country today, in addition to around 950 law schools and five lakh law
students. Every year, approximately 70,000 law graduates join the
profession. The number of law school applicants goes up by 25 per cent
on an average, says Shashikala Gurpur, Dean and Principal, Symbiosis
Law School, Pune. Last year, more than 45,000 students sat for the
Common Law Admission Test (CLAT), which was conducted by Rajiv
Gandhi National University of Law, Delhi. Traditionally, students could
only take up litigation by specialising in either criminal or civil law. This,
however, has changed with a rapid growth of the corporate legal sector
and outsourcing of legal processes. Now, specialisations such as arbitration
law, banking law, environmental law, intellectual property and
international law are the fields that have opened up a number of
career options for students.
A PRABHAKAR RAO
COVER STORY
10
Top
Law Colleges
DELHI, DELHI
USP Combines teaching of black letter
law with social impact of law
http://www.du.ac.in/
GANDHINAGAR
USP Offers online diploma programmes
for intellectual property, internet law,
and entrepreneurship management
www.gnlu.ac.in
UNIVERSITY, ALIGARH
USP Conducts legal literacy and awareness programmes in remote areas
www.amu.ac.in
BANGALORE
USP Have a student:teacher ratio
of 10:1 for LLM
christuniversity.in/school-of-law
COLLEGE, PUNE
USP Uses information and communication technology in teaching and research
http://www.bharatividyapeeth.edu/
ABHIJIT PATIL
WHICH COURSE
TO CHOOSE?
Students interested in taking up law
as a career can either pursue a threeyear LLB course after graduation in
any discipline or a five-year BA LLB
after class 12. The introduction of the
five-year-integrated programme had
a profound impact on legal education
as it allowed students to choose law
as a career right out of high school,
says Dabiru Sridhar Patnaik, Director,
Centre for Post Graduate Legal Studies, Jindal Global Law School, Sonipat.
Nowadays, the integrated course is
more popular than the three-year
programme as it covers practical
training, which includes court attendance, hands-on-training at legal aid
centres, research projects, specialisations, and internships. The number
of courses a law student can take has
increased. These are not only the
core courses as mandated by the Bar
Council of India, but other courses,
which cover areas like public law, private, commercial law and even clinical
practices, says Patnaik.
In case of the LLB course, which is
also offered by some universities in a
part-time format for working profes-
of their choice. CLAT scores are considered by all NLUs and some private universities as well. It tests a students aptitude through different questions in five
sectionsEnglish, General Knowledge,
Legal Aptitude, Logical Reasoning and
Mathematics. Some private universities,
like Symbiosis Law School, Pune, and
Amity Law School, Noida, also conduct
their own entrance examinations on
similar lines as CLAT.
Preparation for entrance exams
can be done via the classroom, online
coaching or through self-study. One
can take a year-long coaching class or
opt for a crash course that is about a
month-and-half long. The advantage with coaching is that it gives you
precision in terms of what to learn and
speeds up learning. In law exams, it is
important to know what not to study
and this is where coaching helps, says
Vijay Karan Singh, a final year stuNILOTPAL BARUAH
MARKET WATCH
There is talk of
expanding the scope of
legal practice in India by
allowing entry of foreign
law firms. This will create
better job opportunities
for students and will
lead to an improvement
in legal services, says
Dabiru Sridhar Patnaik,
Director, Centre for Post
Graduate Legal Studies.
Jindal Global Law School,
Sonipat. Legal process
outsourcing (LPO) firms
have started recruiting
young law graduates to
deal with clients based in
the US and UK.
COVER STORY
JINDAL GLOBAL LAW SCHOOL, SONIPAT, FACILITATES REGULAR STUDENT AND FACULTY EXCHANGE PROGRAMMES
10
Top
www.symlaw.ac.in
BANGALORE
christuniversity.in/school-of-law
www.ilslaw.edu
COLLEGE, PUNE
www.bharatividyapeeth.edu
www.amity.edu/als
MAJOR CHALLENGES
u Lack of adequately trained faculty is one of the biggest challenges
being face by law schools today
- Dabiru Sridhar Patnaik, Director, Centre for Post
Graduate Legal Studies, Jindal Global Law School, Sonipat
u Lawyers from smaller cities are not able to practice in metros
because of language barrier
- S Sachidanandam, Visiting Faculty,
National Law University (NLU), Delhi
u There is a delay in the justice delivery systems, deplorable BarBench relationships, accumulation of outdated laws, and lack of
political will for legal and judicial reforms
- Mukund Sarda, Dean, New Law College,
Bhartiya Vidyapeeth Deemed University, Pune
11
COVER STORY
SIPRA DAS
12
TOP 25 L AW C OLLEG ES
OVERALL RANK
LAW
2014
2015
2016
BENGALURU
QUALITY
REPUSTUDENT
OF
TATION OF
CARE
ACADEMIC
COLLEGE
INPUT
INFRASTRUCTURE
JOB
PLACEMENT
PERCEPTUAL
RANK
FACTUAL
RANK
OVERALL
SCORE
100.00
86.72
85.75
73.24
70.15
65.79
12
12
11
11
10
11
65.41
13
14
14
13
14
14
61.43
14
10
10
12
61.12
13
14
10
15
15
15
15
15
15
58.30
11
13
11
13
55.37
12
10
10
11
10
11
10
11
55.27
13
15
53.17
16
16
14
17
17
20
17
20
18
10
49.34
21
11
15
12
12
12
12
12
12
14
48.90
22
15
16
DEHRADUN
16
17
16
16
18
16
17
38.03
19
17
21
22
21
23
21
22
16
37.61
17
17
18
14
13
13
14
13
13
18
36.30
20
20
19
17
16
17
17
16
17
20
31.78
20
19
19
17
19
16
19
19
31.74
22
21
20
20
17
20
18
20
22
27.97
23
21
22
23
22
21
21
21
23
22
26.60
25
23
25
25
25
25
25
25
21
26.19
24
23
24
21
21
23
22
21
21
24
22.73
24
25
23
24
24
23
24
24
25
20.80
BENGALURU
**** National Law Institute University (NLIU), Bhopal, National Law Institute University, Jodhpur and Faculty of Law, University of Calcutta, Kolkata are not featured in this Ranking as they could not share the
factual data on time
13
COVER STORY
SHUTTERSTOCK
14
TWO OF A KIND
International law can be
divided into two categories
private and public. While the
former deals with foreign
laws and relevance of foreign
courts jurisdictions, the
latter is associated with the
term International Law or
the Law of Nations, representing the body of customary and conventional rules
that legally bind states.
WHAT IT COVERS
International law education covers global legal
frameworks with regard to
interaction between states,
international organisations,
human rights, diplomacy,
the role played by international law in the redistribution of wealth across the
world, a law student requires
expertise and detailed
knowledge of the law concerning international trade.
WHERE ARE THE JOBS
The global financial services
market will continue to
experience growth fuelled
by mergers and acquisitions.
This inevitably will create a
range of career opportunities for law students with the
United Nations, WTO secretariat, international conventions, regional organisations,
universities and international
law firms.
SHUTTERSTOCK
THE WORLD OF
LEGAL EAGLES
2
TABREZ AHMAD
Constant guidance
Companies and governments across the world
require constant legal
guidance for execution of
corporate functions such as
collaborations, mergers and
acquisitions, joint ventures,
10
15
COVER STORY
BRUSH UP YOUR
SKILLS
BY NEERAJ SAXENA
mpressed by a lawyers
oratory and analytical
skills in court? Theres
much more than what meets
the eye. Close observation
will reveal unique traits and
a personality that a lawyer
may or may not possess but
must eventually develop.
The long and often abstruse
route begins well before law
school; a challenging career
with indefinite working
hours forces one to develop
a critical eye and a sceptical
attitude that can question
the opponents moves. Know
what it takes to be a successful lawyer even if youre
still in school.
Ability to take
sound decisions
The ability to draw reasonable, and logical conclusions
from limited information is
another essential trait of a
lawyer. Before pointing out
flaws in the opponents
argument, one must be
ready with a counter argument. Identifying potential
areas of weakness beforehand is a plus point. A skilled
lawyer is expected to be decisive; one often has to take
important judgement calls
with little time to ponder.
Research and
Analytical skills
Lawyers need to absorb large
quantities of information
and this makes analytical
skills extremely important,
particularly in situations
when there is more than
one reasonable conclusion,
or more than one precedent
applicable to resolving a
situation. Ability to research
quickly and adequately is
essential to understand the
clients needs and to prepare
legal strategies.
People skills
Lawyers work with people,
on behalf of people, and the
decisions also affect peoples
lives. This makes excellent
people skills crucial for aspiring lawyers. These comprise
Independent attitude
As a young associate, much
of your time will go in
research with little or no
assistance at all. If you are
the kind who is always
looking for support, change
yourself, as you will be
expected to fend for
yourself most of the times.
16
SHUTTERSTOCK
Effective communication
and listening skills
A lawyer should not only be
articulate but also possess
good written communication
skills that will allow him to
write clearly, persuasively
and concisely. To communicate effectively, one must be a
good listener, which will help
in scrutinising situations.
START-UP SPOTLIGHT
AGENTS OF CHANGE
Start-ups revolutionising the chaotic legal sector with help of technology
BY ADETE DAHIYA
AADVO, DELHI
Founders Vivek Nani, 24; Vishesh Dora, 25
What is it?
The legal ecosystem, Aadvo, simplifies the chaotic process of
managing legal transactions into a single tool. Launched in
December 2016 and founded by Vishesh Dora and Vivek Nani,
Aadvo acts as an advocates online office by fulfilling all needs from
communication to maintaining files and, tracking billing actions and
receivables. The platform works on an algorithm basis which
connects clients to the most suitable lawyer according to their needs.
Aadvo lets lawyer-client relationship be effective, efficient and
transparent through a shared space between the two, says
Vishesh Dora, co-founder.
The growth
According to Dora, The legal industry seems clean but is
disorganised for an outsider. The real growth will be when we can
provide people with more references and legitimate options.
The challenge
With everything happening at the click of a button, the legal
industry is not far from being revolutionised. The only challenge is
how fast will people be able to adapt to new technology, says Dora.
The future
Our first target is to be a part of every lawyers office in the country.
We also aim at making citizens more aware legally, he adds.
LAWRATO, DELHI
RAJWANT RAWAT
What is it?
A people-friendly digital platform, LawRato offers free
private consultations with verified and credible legal
experts. This one-of-its-kind marketplace was started in
2014 to simplify the process of finding a lawyer without
having to run to courts. LawRato works for both lawyers
and for people seeking advice. While it lets legal experts
build their credibility online, it provides citizens with free
and fast solutions for complex legal issues. Screening
lawyers and verifying user ratings is our platforms USP,
says Nikhil Sarup, one of the founders.
The growth
LawRato has witnessed over 22 per cent month-overmonth growth across users, queries, and orders. With
1.5 lakh page views, we help over 8,000 users get specific
legal advice, says Sarup.
The challenge
According to him, Absence of consumer awareness
handicaps us. Most people do not want to research for
their specific needs and end up relying on references.
The future
We aim to launch low-cost packages for common legal
requirements, says Sarup.
START-UP SPOTLIGHT
VAKILSEARCH, CHENNAI
Founder Hrishikesh Datar, 28
What is it?
A boon for small-scale businesses, Vakilsearch offers legal and professional
services to start-ups in Chennai, Bangalore, Delhi, Hyderabad, and Mumbai.
Primarily a technology company, it manages clients intellectual property,
provides compliance services, manages their accounts and prepares contracts
and agreements. The start-up was founded by National Law School, Bangalore,
prodigy Hrishikesh Datar five years ago and claims to provide services that are
priced 40 per cent to 70 per cent less than a local offline lawyer. Vakilsearch has
already worked with some well-known start-ups that include Taxi For Sure,
Grofers, Chaayos, Housing and Big Basket.
The growth
From a small office in Chennai with three people, Vakilsearch has grown to a
team of 200 people, providing services to around 25,000 clients every year.
The challenge
We faced problem in figuring out what exactly will people be ready to pay for
online. Finding and developing the right technology to ensure smooth running
of operations was also a difficult task initially, says Datar.
The future
We aim to simplify legal aspects of any industry digitally, he says.
LAWCTOPUS, DELHI
Founder Tanuj Kalia, 26
What is it?
Lawctopus is the go-to website for career related queries
for law students in India. Initially started by five college
students, Tanuj Kalia, Prateek Bhandari, Dhruv Mairal,
18
SKILLS
I
ADITYA TRIPATHI
ts right to say that technology is changing the way the world functions; its
undoubtedly faster than ever. Communication, travel, entertainment, health care and
several other activities in our daily lives are being revolutionised by technological
advances. Many of these successes originate in research and development labs, and
in educational institutions. However, the education sector itself is one of the slowest to
embrace the change and take advantage of developments in technology and effectively
change the way learning is delivered to students. With increasing awareness and the right
push, the sector is beginning to feel the need to transform digitally. Some key factors that
can fastrack the process of adaptation in 2017 and can bring about a shift from
traditional leadership roles to modern business strategies.
SHUTTERSTOCK
Massive open
online courses
Imagine a scenario where a student in
rural India can have easy access to the
best faculty and courses in Europe, US
or anywhere else in the world. This is
exactly what Massive Open Online
Courses (MOOCs) are aboutonline
courses aimed at unlimited
participation and open access through
the internet. While the MOOC format
has been around for some time now,
the advancement of digital technology
will reshape this format of consuming
education content. MOOC providers
will also continue to tailor their courses
to make them more relevant to
potential consumers of the content,
according to the need of the hour. The
ideal MOOC environment is a world
where there are no barriers to learning
and even students who cant afford
to enrol into expensive and distant
education institutes will be able to
learn digitally.
Key benefit Videos and online reading
materials minimise the need for teachers, allowing implementation of
flipped classrooms; enabling of
forums and online teacher contact
sessions for student questions and peerbased evaluation of assignments to
eliminate the need for evaluators.
20
Makerspaces
A makerspace is a physical location where people gather to create, network
and learn from each other. It provides tools and facilities in a community
environmentlibrary, community centre, and campus labswith expert
intervention only where necessary. This idea of a collaborative studio or
makerspace is slowly gathering momentum in the education sector wherein
the merits of makerspace as an informal combination of a lab, workshop
floor and conference room are being hailed. This innovative concept is gaining
a stronghold in the fields of engineering, computer science and graphic
design as well as sciences due to its learning through a hands-on
exploratory approach.
Key benefit Makerspace allows a student or an individual to take control of
their own learning versus being taught.
Wearables
Virtual
data and
augmented
reality
Although envisioned
primarily for advanced-level
video games and simulations,
virtual and augmented reality
can simulate highly
immersive learning
experiences. In campus, with
the help of augmented reality,
students can gain a better
understanding of concepts
that they are studying. For
example, in engineering, a
lecturer can integrate
augmented reality into her
lessons to explain complex
designs and prototypes of
models using 3D technology
to the students.
Key benefit Augmented
lessons and apps encourage
greater participation as they
are more fun and engaging
for students.
SHUTTERSTOCK
Video
Machine learning
A subset of artificial intelligence, machine learning
is basically finding patterns in the collected data and
using algorithms to make decisions or data-driven
predictions. Of late, we are witnessing how machine
learning and Big Data are being used by higher
education institutes to improve their education
systems and existing modules. Many colleges and schools
have embraced technology and are already customising
learning by matching a teachers expertise to the need
of the students with the help of machine learning.
Key benefit Dynamic scheduling will help analyse and
optimise content on a regular basis.
As bandwidth increases
across the country,
accessibility to video, as
opposed to text and
visual-based content will
increase. Combined with
increasing access to
smart devices, more and
more video-based
eLearning will be tapped
by learners.
Key benefit Video
format reduces the cost of
education and does not
limit education to merely
classrooms. It also
simplifies procedureoriented tasks.
Robotics
Robotics has the biggest scope of expansion.
When applied to education, the main role of
robotics is to act as simulators for physical
tasks. For example, medical science requires
specialised knowledge and robots are used as
stand-ins for humans as subjects of study.
These robots in turn help students learn
medical procedures as if they were
performing them on human bodies.
Key benefit Simulated environment
customises education and eliminates errors.
SHUTTERSTOCK
SHUTTERSTOCK
Big Data
In education, implementation of Big Data is a
major issue due to lack of right infrastructure,
not having the right technical resources and
appropriate talent.
Key benefit Big Data can help teachers
understand student-to-student interactions, by
assisting teachers in decision-making while
executing group assignments.
Mobiles and
sensors in mobiles
What is obvious is that smartphones
will become the new education
notebookwith several education
apps available, students are
increasingly accessing learning content
on their phones. The true power of a
smartphone has not yet been tapped
by content providers. Smartphones
have touch, feel, sound, and light
sensors, compass, gyroscope,
accelerometer, proximity sensors
and much more.
Key benefit Sensors will enable
learning come to life on a screen
experiential learning anytime,
and anywhere.
21
LEARNING
usinesses cannot
operate without the
internet. While the
benefits of the digital
revolution surpass the
pitfalls, one cannot take
risks like data leaks and
losses lightly. Cyber
criminals are not only
targeting big corporate
houses; government
agencies, banks, and
research institutes are also
facing problems with
hacking and spying
frequently. This is the
22
Skyrocketing demand,
but short supply
The cyber security market
is expected to grow from
$75 billion in 2015 to $170
billion by 2020, which is
almost a 100 per cent
increase. A 2015 report by
Cisco stated that by 2019,
there will be a need for six
million cyber security
professionals globally, but
the world would not be
able to meet the demand
due to dearth of skilled
manpower in this domain.
In the US alone, more than
2.09 lakh cyber security
jobs are unfilled according
to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS). The Indian
TREND
23
EXPERT SPEAK
KANISHKA GUPTA
24
Renuka Chatterjee,
Vice-President, Publishing,
Speaking Tiger Books.
According to her, an agent
has to actively seek out
authors, instead of waiting
for work to come to them.
Thinking of ideas and
finding good writers who
can execute them, much like
a commissioning editor, is
also important.
Dont worry about the
money initially
Low advances and direct
commissioning are a fact of
SHUTTERSTOCK
DIGITAL EDITION
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JANUARY 2017
JANUARY 2017
JANUARY 2017
ART SPECIAL
9 TRENDS
IN DIGITAL
EDUCATION
RAISING
THE BAR
WHAT TO KNOW BEFORE
APPLYING TO LAW SCHOOL
Not for sale. To be circulated free with India Today in Mumbai, Delhi & NCR, Chennai, Bangalore,
Kolkata, Hyderabad and Pune. Supplement to India Today issue dated January 16, 2017
BODY OF WORK
A CLASS
UNDERWAY
AT REFORMS
PHYSIOTHERAPY
AND PILATES
THE
SHAPE
MAKERS
FUN WAYS TO STAY FIT
IN THE CITY
JANUARY 2017
A CLASS
UNDERWAY
AT REFORMS
PHYSIOTHERAPY
AND PILATES
THE
SHAPE
MAKERS
FUN WAYS TO STAY FIT
IN THE CITY
SIMPLY HYDERABAD
Inside
Photograph by
KRISHNENDU HALDER
Editor-in-Chief
Aroon Purie
Group Chief Executive Officer
Ashish Bagga
Group Editorial Director
Raj Chengappa
Editor-at-Large
Kaveree Bamzai
Group Creative Editor
Nilanjan Das
Group Photo Editor
Bandeep Singh
n
Assistant Editor
Mona Ramavat
Editorial Team
Mohini Mehrotra, Ursila Ali
Photo Department
Vikram Sharma
Photo Researchers
Prabhakar Tiwari, Shubhrojit Brahma
Art Director
Jyoti Singh
Design
Vikas Verma,
Bhoomesh Dutt Sharma
Production
Harish Aggarwal (Chief of Production),
Naveen Gupta, Vijay Sharma,
Prashant Verma
Layout Execution
Ramesh Kumar Gusain,
Pradeep Singh Bhandari
n
Publishing Director
Manoj Sharma
Associate Publisher (Impact)
Anil Fernandes
n
IMPACT TEAM
Senior General Manager:
Jitendra Lad (West)
General Managers:
Upendra Singh (Bangalore);
Velu Balasubramaniam (Chennai)
Kaushiky Chakraborty (East)
s-2
COVER STORY
s-4
Cover photo by
KRISHNENDU HALDER
SIMPLY HYDERABAD
Chandana Mannedi
(front)
Cover Story
THE ROAD TO
FITNESS
FROM FUN FADS TO COOL FITNESS REGIMES, TRAINERS IN
THE CITY ARE OFFERING NEW MANTRAS FOR A HEALTHY
KICK-START TO THE NEW YEAR.
By MONA RAMAVAT
A STRETCH
IN TIME
REFORMS PHYSIOTHERAPY
AND PILATES
s-5
SIMPLY HYDERABAD
Cover Story
Yoga-instructor,
Kavita Chowdhary
HOT
PURSUIT
BIKRAM YOGA
TELANGANA STUDIO
s-6
SIMPLY HYDERABAD
Cover Story
PACK A
PUNCH
MANASA MACHANI
SIMPLY HYDERABAD
MUSCLE
POWER
GAVINZ GYM
Gavin Holt
(in black) of
Gavinz Gym
Cover Story
SIMPLY HYDERABAD
Cover Story
CORE
SCORE
POTENS
Sandeep Gadde,
trainer at Potens
SIMPLY HYDERABAD
Buzz
THINGS
TO LOOK
FORWARD
TO
STORE REVIEW
NUTTY SIDE
A D D R ESS H O M E
Vibrant hues or metal tones, the festive home
dcor collection at Address Home is perfect
to rev up your space. Bed spreads in cheery
shades, bright cushions and tableware, artsy
picture frames or candle holders make for ideal
wedding gifts as well.
AT Address Home, Road No 7, Banjara Hills
TEL 40068516
L AU G H R I OT
December 31
Laugh the evening away
over the antics performed in
Miya Biwi, a comedy play in
Hyderabadi Hindi presented
by Udaan Performing Arts.
Adapted from the Marathi
production Shri Tashi Sau, the
play revolves around a couple
heading for divorce.
AT Lamakaan, Road No 4,
Banjara Hills
TEL 9494512141
FO R A RT S SA K E
January 27 to 29
Art O Graph at the upcoming Hyderabad Literary Festival is where art
will meet words, with works of various artists themed around urban life,
the environment and more. The exhibition will feature art installations
and works in new media, incorporating the written word alongside
visual imagery, curated by Avani Rao Gandra.
AT Hyderabad Public School, Begumpet
DETAILS hydlitfest.org
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SIMPLY HYDERABAD
Feature
Lake of
Dreams
Tejdeep Kaur
Menon at
Ameenpur lake
PROTECTION FORCE (TSSPF), TEJDEEP KAUR MENON, WHOSE EXEMPLARY WORK WITH
THE CLEANUP DRIVE AT AMEENPUR LAKE RECENTLY WON HER THE PRESTIGIOUS
WIND UNDER THE WINGS AWARD.
n
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By Mona Ramavat
to ensure that it
is not polluted
and save it from
death