Centre for Internet & Society

Snehashish Ghosh is participating in this event as a speaker.

Ever since the Neo-liberal agenda began to unfold 22 years back, the democratic spaces within Indian polity have been squeezing continuously and the present scenario of run up to 2014 elections is reflecting the state of disarray in parliamentary democracy. The mainstream discourse appears to have deliberately failed in bringing out the intrinsic relationship between ‘capitalism’; its ‘crisis’ and ‘democracy’ to the core of analyzing and understanding the present amnesia in political process.

The characteristics of crony, fictitious, lumpen and speculative Capital that is on the driving seat of contemporary phase of capitalism are mirrored in the operational levels of parliamentary democracy - from governance to electoral process- in the form of corporate influences on policies and decision making, rampant corruption at the pinnacle of power, control of money and muscle-power in politics.

It is, therefore, important to bring out the correlation between the ensuing crisis in global capitalism - including in India - and the impending crisis in our democracy - to the fore. The divergence in the requirements of the neo-liberal phase of capitalism and ‘democracy’ as its analogous political system seems to be the key in explaining the despair engulfing Indian polity at present. The attempts to transform ‘Democracies’ into ‘Corporatocracies’ that we see today, also emanate from this despondency alone.

Last two decades have also seen the institution of ‘State’ posturing itself more and more aggressively against its own people in order to fulfill its obligations to international financial & trade institutions so to serve the interest of global capital. In such a course, it has extensively resorted to adopt the instrument of ‘fabricating’ cases against the voices of opposition to the interests of the global capital.

Though the instrument of ‘fabrication’ is not new to the ‘State Craft’ but this time it is being used in a targeted and selective manner. Not only the existing criminal laws have been used for this purpose but new laws like UAPA and various state ‘security laws’ were created during this period to meet this requirement.

The ‘Indian State’ is also proceeding feverishly to create a surveillance state through various means of ‘electronic surveillance’ using cutting edge technologies to track mobile phones, internet usage, emails etc. at home while colluding with U.S. military and security establishment internationally against other nations. The business of creating and sharing of its citizen’s databases (both demographic & biometrics etc) has been promoted by Indian establishment by subverting the Constitution, existing norms of parliamentary democracy and citizens’ rights.

It is in this context that INSAF has decided to hold its two day National Convention 2013.

Programme Schedule

Day 1: Crisis of Capitalism and brazen onslaught on DEMOCRACY

10.00
10.30
Registration & Tea/Coffee
10.30
11.00
Introduction by Anil Chaudhary
11.00
13.00
Inaugural address by eminent writer and journalist P. Sainath Chaired by Justice Rajinder Sachar
13.00
14.30
Lunch
14.30
17.30 

Panel Discussion:

Prof. Vibhuti Patel (Director, Centre for Study of Social Exclusion and Inclusive Policy, SNDT Women's University, Mumbai)
Prof. Achin Vanaik (Former Dean of Social Sciences, Delhi University)
Prof. Ramesh Dixit (Lucknow, UP)

Day 2: Surveillance state and perils of DEMOCRACY

10.00
10.30

Panel Discussion

Dr. Usha Ramanathan (Law researcher and activist, New Delhi)
Prabir Purkayastha (Delhi Science Forum)
Ms. Subi Chaturvedi (Asstt. Prof. of Journalism Communication, Lady Shri Ram College for Women, Delhi Univ. Founder Hon. Managing Trustee, Media For Change)
Snehashish Ghosh (Centre for Internet & Society)
Chaired by Ms. Kalyani Menon-Sen (Feminist activist & researcher)

13.00
14.00
Lunch
14.00
16.30

Panel Discussion: Suppressing dissent: Stifling NGOs via FCRA
Kabir Dixit (Advocate, Supreme Court of India)
Mathew Cherian (Chairperson, Credibility Alliance)
Chaired by Sanjay Parikh (Human Rights activist and Advocate, Supreme Court of India)

16.30
17.00
Tea/Coffee
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