Study highlights the other side of ‘Kerala model'

Special Correspondent

Benefits not uniformly distributed

http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-kerala/article2590549.ece

Has the much lauded Kerala model of development taken its benefits
uniformly to all sections of the society?

A recent study done by a human rights organisation called RIGHTS,
based here, says the Kerala model of development is more of a myth for
the marginalised sections such as the Dalit, Adivasi, and fishing
communities in the State. The study covered 2,100 families belonging
to these sections, living in 30 representative panchayats spread over
all the 14 districts in the State. For the sake of comparison, 614
families from the forward communities too were surveyed by researchers
under RIGHTS.

The study focussed on two social indices — education and health. The
Kerala model development theory is based on the argument that high
level of social development is possible even in the face of poor
economic growth. The survey found that while the forward communities
enjoyed total access to both education and health care facilities, the
same claim could not be made in the case of marginalised sections.

According to the study, 46.07 per cent of the Dalit children, 34.47
per cent of the tribal children, and 69.12 per cent of the children
from fishing communities do not have schools within one kilometre of
their residing places.

Schools are located more than four kilometres away from their homes
for 16.88 per cent of the Dalit children, 29.55 per cent of the tribal
children and 2.23 per cent of the children belonging to fishing
communities. As much as 14.48 per cent of the Dalit children surveyed
dropped out of schools at various stages of their school education and
6.85 per cent of them in the school-going age group had not gone to
school at all.

The above proportions are 18.06 per cent and 3.93 per cent
respectively in the case of tribal children and 15.08 per cent and
5.21 per cent for children from fishing communities.

As much as 36.35 per cent of the Dalit children, 44.05 per cent of the
tribal children, and 24.16 per cent of the children belonging to
fishing communities have not received vaccines under the Universal
Immunisation Programme. Primary Health Centres (PHCs) are located
between two kilometres and five kilometres away from home for 35.08
per cent of the Dalit families, 22.93 per cent of the tribal families
and 23.27 per cent of the fisherman families surveyed by the
organisation. The PHCs are even beyond a distance of five kilometres
for 39.11 per cent of the tribal families and 12.34 per cent of the
fishing families. The survey reports the same kind of glaring gaps in
the matter of taking the government's nutrition programme to pregnant
women and children.

________________________________
Study covers 2,100 marginalised families
Focuses on two indices, education and health
________________________________
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"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
 It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of
human personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
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-- 
"[It is not] possible to distinguish between 'numerical' and
'nonnumerical' algorithms, as if numbers were somehow different from
other kinds of precise information." - Donald Knuth

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