Rebuilding Livelihoods of Migrant Workers: Odisha Government Urged to go for Skill Mapping of Migrant Workers – Odisha Diary

Bhubaneswar: As a little more than a million Migrant Laborers have registered with the State Governments dedicated COVID -19 Website and a large number of them have returned back home triggered by uncertainty over Corona Pandemic, time to map their skills to redraw livelihood strategies for them. Government should plan out both long-term and short term strategies so that their livelihoods are secured thereby avoiding the risk of distress, human trafficking and re-migration through alternative pathways, said the outcome of a National Level Webinar, a Virtual Dialogue on Mainstreaming Migrant Workers. Migrants after losing jobs are facing unemployment and poverty back home as uncertainty looms large all over.

The webinar was organized jointly by City based Focus Odisha Foundation and Mahashakti Foundation in collaboration with National level Migrant Resources Centre Migration Watch India on July 13. About one hundred participants drawn from a cross section of society and representatives of civil society organizations from across the country participated to deliberate on the most pressing issue of the time Migrant crisis.

While making a lead presentation Executive Director of Action Aid Association India and Co-Chair of World Urban Campaign of UN Habitat Sandeep Chachra underlined the need for rebuilding livelihoods strategies and ensuring social safety net for both for returned migrants and informal workers working elsewhere in the Country, a huge community estimated at one fourth of the total population of the country. Chachra further added that we need to think beyond MGNREGS and explore alternative skill based livelihoods.

Dr Niranjan Sahoo, Sr Fellow at New Delhi based Indias leading think tank The Observer Research Foundation stressed the need for ensuring legitimate entitlements of migrant workers as there have been a large scale resentment across the country following the alleged denial of their rights as these communities facing identity crises as nowhere people.

its good that MGNREGS have provided fifty percent jobs to a huge population of jobless people during the last couple of months in rural hinterlands and have created 1.2 million man day in this period, but if we will not properly implement Pradhan Mantri Graiba kalyan Yojana, Food Security packages and a slew of programmes announced for migrants benefit, millions of people will be getting to poverty trap again, said Sahoo.

State head of UNDP Abha Mishra in her presentation highlighted the need for mapping the skills and knowledge of Migrant people so that we will be able to a draw a line between skilled and unskilled people and plan for the restoration of their livelihoods. She further added that there is a need to think about developing natural industries like livestock and diary development, focusing on nutrigardens, organic farming besides emphasizing on agricultural and Tourism development.

Shaonli Chakraborty of Bengalure based nation level forum Covid Action Collaborative called upon civil society actors, Industries, Governments to redirect their priorities for the resettlement and restoration of jobs of millions of migrant laborers; otherwise we will lose sight of prospering societies. All it needed is to facilitate their social security and occupational safety both at Origin and Destination Places and at Transit points.

Mumbai based CSR Head of ACC Ltd Pratyush Panda questioned on how skill persons can be engaged in MGNREGS wok which is largely for unskilled rural wage workers. As things stand today both Industries and civili society should come together to facilitate reengagement of lakhs of skilled migrant workers.

Convenor of COVID-19-Civil Society Initiative and Migration Watch India Sudarshan Chhotoray while outlining the context described how Corona Pandemic has exposed vulnerability for a large section of economically backward population. Time has come we need to recognize the Talents, Skills and knowledge migrants have brought in and the key to unlocking their potential is to put a right based orderly system in place to reintegrate them in local labour market thereby extending their access to social and economic security.

Prominent among the Guests who spoke were Sr Journalist and Foreign Affairs Expert Gopal Misra, Convenor of OIKTREE Initiatives William Stanley, President of ADHIKAR Ms N Amin, Joint Secretary of Utkal Samaj Madras Biswajit Kanungo and President of Mahashakti Foundation Santosh Kumar Mishra.

A special session was devoted on-How we reached out to thousands of standard Migrants? Where activists shared their experiences in dealing with the unfolding crisis and coordination they had with Government Authorities, Civil Society, Citizens Groups, Activists, Industries and philanthropists across the Country.

CEO of Mahashakti Foundation Jugal Kishore Patnaik summed up the outcome and deliberations and Shrishita Rath proposed vote of thanks.

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Rebuilding Livelihoods of Migrant Workers: Odisha Government Urged to go for Skill Mapping of Migrant Workers - Odisha Diary

Beyond Borders: Santa Fe partnership addresses the global refugee crisis and ongoing US/Mexico immigration issues through the lens of the arts and…

SANTA FE, N.M. (PRWEB) July 15, 2020

This summer, the School for Advanced Research (SAR), in collaboration with SITE Santa Fe and the Center for Contemporary Arts Santa Fe (CCA), presents Beyond Borders, a powerful series of art installations and events that use the lens of art and social sciences to examine the global refugee crisis and realities of migration and border policy in the Northern hemisphere.

The series centers on the global debut of Hostile Terrain 94, a participatory art project and exhibition organized and sponsored by the Undocumented Migration Project (UMP), which is directed by anthropologist and former SAR resident scholar Jason De Len.

The physical exhibition is scheduled to debut at SITE Santa Fe later this summer, pending NM State approvals. The exhibition is created to raise awareness of the death and suffering that occur regularly at the border between the U.S. and Mexico, and to remember those who have died, including many who remain unidentified.

The exhibit is composed of ~3,200 handwritten toe tags that represent the migrants who have died trying to cross the Sonoran Desert of Arizona between the mid-1990s and 2019. During the COVID-19 shutdown, teams from SAR, CCA, SITE Santa Fe, and others, including students from the New Mexico School for the Arts, have been meticulously filling out the individual toe tag cards at the center of the Hostile Terrain 94 installation. Each tag includes the name, age, sex, cause of death, condition of body, and location of recovery for each person memorialized in this project.

Following its debut at SITE Santa Fe, Hostile Terrain 94 will continue on a tour of up to 150 additional locations around the globe, including Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Detroit, Seattle, Miami, Mexico City, San Pedro Sula (Honduras), San Salvador (El Salvador), and Lampedusa (Italy).

Several public programs will accompany the exhibit to facilitate deeper local community conversations about the issues and to offer additional perspective from De Len and other leading anthropologists and social scientists who work with and study immigrant communities.

Friday, July 17, 5-6 pm (MDT)Hostile Terrain 94 Virtual Exhibition Opening

Beyond Borders makes its groundbreaking global debut on July 17, 2020, with a digital opening of Hostile Terrain 94, a participatory art project and exhibition organized and sponsored by the Undocumented Migration Project (UMP), which is directed by anthropologist and former SAR resident scholar Jason De Len. This virtual event will begin with introductions by the three partners of the Beyond Borders collaboration and will feature an overview of the project and a virtual walk through by De Len of the HT94 installation at SITE Santa Fe

Register for this event here.

Mid-July, 2020 January 2021DISPLACED: Contemporary Artists Confront the Global Refugee CrisisSITE Santa Fe1606 Paseo de PeraltaSanta Fe, NM 87501

The physical installation of Hostile Terrain 94 is scheduled to debut at SITE Santa Fe in mid-July, pending the NM Governors reopening plans, as a part of Displaced, a new exhibition exploring the global refugee crisis. With works by artists from two generations and from around the globe, Displaced explores the experience of the refugee, the migrant, and the displaced from many cultural and historical vantage points. Hostile Terrain 94 brings stark attention to the refugee crisis at our own U.S. border with a powerful work that memorializes so many who have lost their lives fleeing danger and hardship and seeking a better life.

SITE Santa Fe is making plans to reopen and premiere Displaced and Hostile Terrain 94 in July, 2020, though this date is subject to change pending reopening approvals from the state of New Mexico. The show will run through January 2021.

Saturday, July 18, 2020, 3-4 pmMacArthur Fellows in Conversation: Jason De Len and Steven FeldPresented by the School for Advanced Research (SAR)

Online public program, Free and open to the public. Advanced registration is required.

Register for this event here.

Following the launch of Hostile Terrain 94, join MacArthur Fellows Jason De Len and Steven Feld as they explore how research and data can be translated creatively for public consumption through numerous forms of art and media, and be used to inspire individuals to take action in their own lives to contribute to the greater good.

Funding provided by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.

Friday, August 21, 2020, 1011 amBeyond Borders SymposiumPresented by the School for Advanced Research (SAR)$15 SAR members; $25 not-yet-members. Registration required.

Register for this event here.

Led by Hostile Terrain 94 artist Jason De Len, this symposium, designed to foster greater public dialogue about immigration, will bring De Len together with leading anthropology and social sciences scholars C.J. Alvarez, Deborah A. Boehm, and Ieva Jusionyte, where they will share and discuss their own work with immigrant communities and their research on border issues and policies.

Beyond Borders Virtual Film SeriesPresented by Center for Contemporary Arts Santa Fe/CCA Cinemathequeccasantafe.org

In conjunction with Hostile Terrain 94, Center for Contemporary Arts Santa Fe presents a series of two related films, including Border South (2019), a Ral O. Paz Pastrana film, and The Infiltrators by Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarra.

Friday, July 24, 2020, 7 pmBeyond Borders presents A CCA Living Room Series programBorder South: A Zoom Discussion with Jason De Len

Ral O. Paz Pastranas film weaves together migrant stories of resilience and survival from different vantage points. The film exposes a global migration system that renders human beings invisible in life as well as death. Jason De Len served as producer and advisor to the film. (U.S./Mexico, 2019, 88m)

This is a book-club style event in which the film will be watched by participants individually prior to the Zoom gathering. Visit https://www.ccasantafe.org/living-room-series to register.

Friday, August 7, 2020, 7 pmBeyond Borders presents A CCA Living Room Series programThe Infiltrators: A Zoom Discussion with Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarra

Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarras documentary, winner of two awards at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival, reconstructs the remarkable, inspiring story of a rag-tag group of activist youthall Dreamerswho band together to wind up in one of Americas mysterious for-profit immigrant detention centers. From the inside, they plot ways to help protect the vulnerable detainees. (U.S., 2019, 95m)

This is a book-club style event in which the film will be watched by participants individually prior to the Zoom gathering. Visit https://www.ccasantafe.org/living-room-series to register.

For further information on the project and a full run of programs, please visit sarweb.org/beyond-borders-2020/

For interviews or high-resolution images contact:

School for Advanced Research / Merridith Ingram / (845) 674.3103 / mingram@66and.coSITE Santa Fe / Anne Wrinkle / (505) 989.1199 x 22 / wrinkle@sitesantafe.orgCenter for Contemporary Arts Santa Fe / JC Gonzo / (505) 919.7614 / marketing@ccasantafe.org

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Beyond Borders: Santa Fe partnership addresses the global refugee crisis and ongoing US/Mexico immigration issues through the lens of the arts and...

UK: Information service for migrants affected by COVID-19 – InfoMigrants

The IOM is offering an information service for migrants who may be particularly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom. Be that because their jobs have disappeared, they can't pay their rent or they find themselves homeless or ill. The information service is currently available in eight languages with one more coming soon.

"We are here to support the many migrants who are facing increasedchallenges due to the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Info on supportin key areas, including housing employment and benefits are availablein many languages," reads a tweet on the IOM UK Twitter feed.

"Almost every aspect of life for people living in the UK haschanged," reads a press statement from the InternationalOrganization for Migration (IOM). And those changes affect the largemigrant and refugee community in the country too.

'Migrantsat greater risk in the crisis'

"Migrantslivelihoods are often at greater risk in this crisis for severalreasons," says Dipti Pardeshi, chief of IOM's UK office. Thatsbecause they are "more likely to be working in sectors mostaffected by the crisis, such as hospitality and retail." Many alsowork as carers or in the health sector or as bus drivers, taxidrivers or couriers, which might mean their jobs are still there butthey are even more at risk of catching COVID-19 than the generalpopulation because they could be more exposed to a greater viralload.

Often,the jobs that migrants do "are likely to be self-employed or intemporary sectors," which means that it's possible they won'thave access, or it may be difficult to access the furlough schemesthat have been provided by the UK government, which offer to pay upto 80% of an employees wages until at least the end of August until a time when their employer can take them back to work again.

Anadditional risk for migrants, says Pardeshi, is that they tend to beliving in rented accommodation, "which puts them at additional riskof eviction if they have lost their income due to the crisis."

Thereis lots of official information from the UK government about how youcan access the job retention schemes mentioned above. However, some migrants have "difficulty navigating thesupport systems that have been put in place,"Pardeshi says.Some may alsostruggle to access or understand the UK government information.That's why IOM have produced advice in seven different languages totry and overcome this barrier.

'Hardship and destitution'

Some migrants' visa stipulations may prevent them from accessing the social welfare available in the UK. This could mean that migrants are then at "greater risk of hardship and destitution." IOM provides a website and freephone service on the following five subjects: "Health, work, benefits, visas and immigration, housing and homelessness."

On theIOM siteyou can find a "comprehensive overview" listingwhich government help schemes are available to migrants.

The websiteis availabe in English, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Albanian,Romanian, Vietnamese and Arabic. Polish is about to be added. Thefreephone telephone service is available in any language (0800 464 3380).

Employment and COVID-19

On the topic of employment, the website provides links for migrants if they are not ableto work, whether they are an employee or self-employed. It also liststhe rights you are entitled to if you are worried about workingduring the COVID-19 pandemic.

Thereis also a section for those who may be working without papers in theUK. In that situation, the IOM writes, it can be difficult to accessyour rights, if you essentially have no official right to work.However, there are still some things you can do, like visit aCitizens Advice Bureau or talk to Migrants Rights Charities like the Migrants' Rights Network.

Healthand COVID-19

Thereis lots of information on recognizing the symptoms of COVID-19 andgetting tested, as well as a list of what those who dont havepapers can do if they fear they may have contracted the virus.

Thewebsite reassures migrants without papers that free NHS (NationalHealth Service) treatment is available to everyone and that noimmigration checks will be carried out and that treatment and testingfor COVID-19 would be free. However, if you were to have a negativetest result but still needed treatment for another unrelated illnessthen you would be charged for that, unless it was another exemptcondition like Turburculosis (TB).

Thewebsite advises if you are worried about your eligibility fortreatment you should check on the Doctors of the World websiteto see how they might be able to help.

Accommodationand COVID-19

Interms of housing and homelessness, IOM advises that there might behelp available to you if you are struggling to pay your rent becauseyour working hours have been reduced due to the restrictions. It saysthat as of March 29 all landlords in the UK were instructed not toevict anyone for five months. In Scotland this lasts for six months.That means that even if you receive an eviction notice from yourlandlord during this period, you have a legal right to stay in yourhome.

If youdo become homeless during this period, for whatever reason, or arealready living on the streets you should turn to your localauthority. All local authorities across the UK "have beeninstructed to find suitable accommodation for street homeless duringthe pandemic."

However,they say as soon as the pandemic is over, you will likely be asked toleave whatever emergency accommodation was provided.

Thereare various phone numbers and websites listed in this sectionincluding to an organization called Street Link for those findingthemselves homeless in England. Shelter Cymru helps those homeless inWales and the Simon Community Scotland will help those in Scotland.

Project17 also helps migrant families who may find themselves homelessduring this time.

Youcan access the free telephone service by dialing this number fromwithin the UK: 0800 464 3380

You can access the website via this link: https://covid19uk.iom.int/

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UK: Information service for migrants affected by COVID-19 - InfoMigrants

$10B needed to avert COVID-19 hunger crisis, experts say | Cornell Chronicle – Cornell Chronicle

Due to the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic, an additional $10 billion is urgently needed to prevent millions more people becoming food insecure, according to a new report by Cornell, the International Food Policy Research Institute and the International Institute for Sustainable Development as part of the Ceres2030 project. Half that amount must come from donor governments as aid, with the rest provided by developing countries.

The analysis uses data from and is published alongside the United Nations State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World report, which forecasts how many people will be pushed into hunger as a result of the pandemic unless action is taken. Modeling conducted by Ceres2030 found that $10 billion must be spent this year on top of existing social protection programs and government efforts to address the hunger and nutrition impacts of COVID-19.

The warning signs are coming left, right and center, said Carin Smaller, director of agriculture, trade and investment at the International Institute for Sustainable Development and co-director of the Ceres2030 project. Without action now, decades of progress will be undone and the chance of meeting the U.N. target to end hunger by 2030 could be pushed out of reach. Governments must urgently increase spending on social protection programs to get people the money and food they need to survive the crisis, alongside long-term investments to build more sustainable and resilient food systems.

The main factor contributing to increased hunger is that the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting economic downturn have left millions of people across sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia without work and unable to buy food. Ceres2030 modeling predicts that the number of people in extreme poverty and hunger will increase by about 100 million this year, returning to levels not seen in almost two decades. Addressing such complex challenges requires a systemic approach to food security through more and better investments in both rural development and social protection, according to the report.

Even before COVID-19, global efforts to end hunger were falling far short of what was needed, said David Laborde, senior research fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute and co-director of the Ceres2030 project. The number of hungry people had been rising for three years in a row. The pandemic has exacerbated an already dire situation: Governments need to act quickly to prevent disaster and put the building blocks in place for a more secure future.

Supply disruptions such as problems transporting food to market, trade restrictions, and labor shortages due to restrictions on migrant workers and COVID-19 outbreaks in factories are also contributing to a rise in hunger. These problems require cooperative, evidence-based policymaking, according to the report. So far, 22 countries have introduced or announced food export restrictions in response to COVID-19, affecting 5% of the global supply of calories.

Social protection is needed not just as an emergency response to COVID-19, but also as a long-term investment in people boosting their productivity and ensuring they have the means to buy nutritious food, send children to school and get the health care they need, said Jaron Porciello, associate director for research data engagement in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Department of Global Development and co-director of the Ceres2030 project. Governments must ensure safety nets work effectively for everyone, particularly women, girls and other vulnerable groups, Porciello said. This means listening to those most in need and ensuring programs are informed by good quality evidence and data.

Ceres2030 is a cutting-edge research project on the public investments needed to end hunger sustainably, led by Cornell, IFPRI and IISD and funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The project was set up to provide donor governments with the tools they need to increase the amount and effectiveness of their investments to end hunger sustainably, in line with the U.N.s goal to end hunger by 2030.

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$10B needed to avert COVID-19 hunger crisis, experts say | Cornell Chronicle - Cornell Chronicle

The Greek Crisis: How the European Union Got the Euro Wrong – International Policy Digest

Although Greeces problems may have begun at home, that doesnt mean they end there. After decades of widespread fraud, extensive corruption, and reckless fiscal mismanagement, Greece belatedly joined the euro in 2001 in need of a lifeline. With the help of Goldman Sachs, Greeces government masked its climbing deficits and sovereign debt through currency swaps to meet the newly-formed European Central Banks strict requirements, hoping the transition would spur economic growth in the country. The belief was that the new monetary union, referred to as the Eurozone, would dampen inflation, help to lower nominal interest rates, encourage private investment, and remove transaction costs, all of which would allow Greece to better itself.

At the time, it was a glimmer of hope for a country whose government was in a free fall, but instead, Greeces membership in the Eurozone plunged the country into financial ruin. The country has suffered one of the worst economic crises in modern history and the longest recession of any capitalist economy to date, even overtaking the Great Depression. Greece may have provided the foundation for its hardships, but ultimately, the euro and therefore the Eurozone and European Union, are responsible for its economic collapse.

The necessary aspects of a single interdependent market operating under a standard system of laws and regulations across such varied national economies was not taken seriously when the euro was introduced. The largest flaw with the Eurozones inherent infrastructure is that the European Central Bank strictly dictates monetary policy for the entire currency while allowing countries to decide their individual fiscal policies. As a result, it has failed to be an institution flexible and democratic enough to cope, and the lack of flexibility in monetary policy has severely diminished financial oversight and prevented Greeces stability.

The economic straitjackets imposed on Greece were so blatantly inconsistent with its own financial and political goals as, in comparison to other European nations, the 2008 recession disproportionately affected Greeces economy. At the start of the Greek crisis, as their fiscal deficits surged, interest rates on debt increased significantly, but the country was unable to reduce them or devalue its currency to stimulate economic growth. The European Central Bank had handcuffed Greece and the countrys membership in the Eurozone acted as a lock on its system. Greece found itself without an adjustment mechanism that could have alleviated the impact of the crisis. Essentially, the Greek crisis was unnecessary, preventable, and could have easily been avoided if the Eurozones policies were more suited to support the economic diversity within it.

As the overarching financial entity responsible for a multinational currency and its monetary limitations, the European Central Banks main aim has been to maintain the stability of the euro and to keep inflation under control. It has no direct mandate individually concerning the Greek economy that cannot function as efficiently as the rest, and this is also one of its fundamental problems that have revealed the immense flaws in the Eurozones economic structure.

By definition, at least from a financial point of view, a successful monetary union is most responsible for the health of its currency, not for its members economies. However, that doesnt mean it should ignore or aggravate them at the cost of it. Despite bailouts from the ECB totaling more than 300 billion euros, one of them being the largest sovereign debt restructuring in history, the money went towards paying off Greeces international loans and quelling market fears that the Eurozone itself could be dismantled. Thus, the Eurozone has made it clear that the assurance of the euros health has occurred at the cost of the well-being of Greece.

As a result, Greeces real GDP contracted by more than 25%, and the country eventually defaulted in 2015 on a 1.6 billion debt payment to the IMF, making it the first and only developed country to do so. These bailouts only bought time for other European countries and their banks to distance themselves from Greeces financial problems, which had been displayed by their ensuing actions, as they refused to help the country during the humanitarian crisis that followed. This is a prime example of the issue with the priorities of a non-sovereign, transnational currency it does nothing to stabilize and support individual members that are struggling but everything to assure and assuage those that are thriving.

Furthermore, Greece has exposed significant fault lines in the Eurozones conduct of economic policy and performance. Greece has been a victim of political carelessness and economic negligence at its hands and has been financially drained at the cost of maintaining the euro and in the name of providing the appearance of a united European front in all aspects to the rest of the global community. The euro wants to be a transnational currency that fortifies Europe as an economically strong continent. But, as per the New York Times, the Greek crisis has raised serious questions about whether the euro is the instrument that shatters the European Union rather than enhances it as it should. The Greek crisis should never have occurred, but the euro and its governing bodies made it inevitable.

Having a currency that is dictated by centralized, non-sovereign institutions while also attempting to be independent within separate nations is destined to have more failures than successes. Similarly, having a universal monetary policy combined with so-called pick-and-choose fiscal management across such varied national economies is fated to present more issues than solutions. While it seems great when the economy is doing well, financial markets cannot be controlled to the extent of ensuring one currency, in this case the euro, supports all of its members.

The euros goal was to display to the world that Europe could flourish as the model for a truly united, interdependent continent after the barbarism and devastation caused by World War II. So, it may be true that the idea of the euro had been developed with good intentions. However, it is wrong to subject a country to such terrible economic circumstances, which have led to an unbelievable humanitarian and migrant crisis, simply in the name of supposed unity. It is also impossible to expect such economically different countries to share an abnormally regulated currency if they dont share anything except for geography. The lengths that the ECB and the Eurozone have gone to in order to stabilize themselves at the cost of Greece should be unacceptable. Furthermore, at a time when the global economy has come to a standstill, and the financial markets are the most unpredictable theyve ever been, if the Greek debt crisis and Europes severe mishandling of it act as anything, it should be taken as a dire warning for what may come in the future.

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The Greek Crisis: How the European Union Got the Euro Wrong - International Policy Digest

Nearly 10% of migrant children in district quit schooling – The Hindu

Nearly 10% of migrant children enrolled in public schools across Ernakulam had to leave their education unfinished after uncertainties triggered by the outbreak of COVID-19 forced their parents to return to their native States.

Children from 92 migrant families left the State following the crisis. As many as 1,222 migrant children belonging to 922 families were enrolled in lower primary and upper primary classes in 37 public schools under the district administrations Roshni project, according to official estimates. The project aims at enhancing the academic performance of migrant children through improved language proficiency.

However, a majority of families stayed back just for the sake of their childrens education despite the odds faced by migrant workers these times. Our volunteers were successful in constantly engaging with parents and ensuring that their children did not lose out on the opportunity to learn, said C.K. Prakash, general coordinator, Roshni.

A survey showed that as many as 38 migrant families had no access to television and smartphone. As many as 325 of the 922 families surveyed owned televisions with cable connection, while 421 had no television but owned smartphones with WhatsApp to receive notes and assignments.

Thirty-five families were found staying near schools and libraries where the authorities had made arrangements for online classes. Eleven families were found sharing a television set to attend classes. Four families that left for their home towns informed Roshni volunteers that they had smartphones to access digital classes.

Mr. Prakash said online learning facilities had been made available at common centres set up at the Government Girls Higher Secondary School and at an anganwadi at Perumbavoor, which has large concentration of migrant families. Trained volunteers have also taken steps to translate classes held in Malayalam and aired through Victers channel, he said.

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COVID-19, government payments, and international remittances | VOX, CEPR Policy Portal – voxeu.org

Getting funds to those in need and enabling access to money during COVID-19, part 2: Government payments and international remittances

In the context of the policy response to the current Covid-19 crisis, a special role is played by Government-to-Person (G2P) payments and international remittances (IRs). The accessibility and reliability of both services is especially crucial at times of crisis such as Covid-19, when immediate response is necessary to support people and businesses in need (Furman 2020). G2P payments permit the timely delivery of state salaries, pensions, and social insurance as well as expanding government cash transfers beyond the current recipients to households in need and informal workers. IRs are vitally important for most developing countries, where they matter even more than foreign direct investment or overseas development aid.

National authorities should make sure that such services continue to be provided as regularly and conveniently as possible, also to provide relief to those many people who cannot afford basic necessities during crises (Mides 2020).

In the Covid-19 context, G2P payments are being used by governments across the world to help vulnerable populations meet their needs. As of early April, at least 70 countries are scaling up their schemes by increasing benefit levels or coverage, or both1, and the World Bank is supporting several developing countries in this regard.

Digitising G2P payments and promoting choice and interoperability is more important now than ever, given governments urgency to provide cash assistance quickly, transparently, and responsibly. In addition, this process provides a crucial opportunity to catalyse necessary reforms. Countries with advanced G2P payment ecosystems can push transfers out rapidly and roll out new programs with relative ease. In the midst of the Covid-19 crisis, scaling up G2P payments and the provision of continued access to financial services is proving more difficult. Countries with less developed payment infrastructures, digital financial services regulations, and digital identity (ID) systems have a harder time deploying G2P payments rapidly.

In face of the crisis, immediate and short-term targeted measures can be implemented to enable vulnerable populations to receive assistance in the fastest and safest way possible.

Figure 1Key considerations for G2P in COVID-19 context

In doing so, countries will face two separate, but related challenges:

1. Expanding the list of eligible beneficiaries. Most countries are trying to provide social assistance not only to the current social program beneficiaries but also to a broader set of individuals and families affected by the crisis, many of which are in the informal sector. Identifying and targeting these individuals will be challenging for countries with ID systems that have low coverage or quality.2

2. Making payments safely and securely in the context of the pandemic. Countries are trying to solve how to get money to people safely, minimising contact and queues, while effectively reaching vulnerable populations. Importantly, changes to systems are required if new beneficiaries are included since the pre-crisis payment processes were not designed to minimise crowding or physical contact.

Scaling up G2P payments in a pandemic should not lead to further exclusion of vulnerable populations, particularly those without access to technology, the elderly, the disabled, and people living in remote areas. The positive externalities of more efficient payments are now much greater.3

What is feasible within a short period of time depends on the starting point in each country. Yet, decisions made in the height of the crisis will have long-term implications on the social protection and financial sectors.

There are two main types of payment mechanisms: account and non-account-based solutions. Account-based solutions, which include bank accounts, general purpose prepaid cards, and mobile money accounts, require onboarding beneficiariesideally remotelyand leveraging payment systems to transfer their benefits. These solutions provide the biggest potential benefits to beneficiaries such as financial inclusion and convenience and to governments, in the form of cost-savings, leakage reduction, and efficiency gains. After eligibility is verified against the social security register, those who are eligible can either provide an existing account number or are given the option to open a basic account at any of the providers or at any of the empanelled providers.

However, account-based solutions might not be the most feasible option for some countries given their payment ecosystem, financial infrastructure, and regulatory framework. In these cases, a non-account-based solution might be a more realistic option. Non-account-based solutions include limited purpose pre-paid cards, one-time passwords (OTP), vouchers, and cash, and range from being electronic-based to paper-based. But what they all have in common is that opening an account is not required. Although these solutions eliminate the challenge of opening accounts in countries with a less developed financial sector, they require physical delivery of the instrument creating logistical challenges during the pandemic.

Regardless of the payment delivery mechanism chosen, enabling beneficiaries to cash-out easily and safely is very important. Ideally all transactions should be conducted electronically during the pandemic, but the reality is that few payment ecosystems in developing countries are able to support such digitalisation, especially considering that many beneficiaries operate in the informal economy, with lower levels of electronic payments acceptance. Authorities must therefore ensure sufficient access to the existing cash-out points by designating agents and bank infrastructure as essential services and should also make an effort to expand the number of cash-out points especially in areas where beneficiaries reside, for example groceries, pharmacies, and postal office agents. Liquidity in cash-out points must also be monitored and addressed by the authorities. Finally, protocols to avoid overcrowding, including spacing out disbursements, and sanitary protocols should be established.4

According to World Bank data released last May, in 2020 remittance flows to lowincome and middleincome countries are expected to drop by around 20% to $445 billion, from $554 billion in 2019. In this sharp decline, the relative importance of remittance flows as a source of external financing for lowincome and middleincome countries is expected to rise.5

The contagion effects of Covid-19 have reflected negatively on the IR markets, adversely affecting migrant workers and their families back home. Service sector jobs have been hard hit by the lockdown in some of the largest remittance-sending countries the US, Switzerland, Germany, France, and Italy and travel restrictions have constrained many migrant workers from leaving their host countries. At the same time, the forced closure of small businesses in destination countries has led to the closure of agents and branches of remittance service providers. Similar restrictions have been imposed in remittance-receiving countries, further constraining the sending and receiving of IR. While sending IR via digital channels would not typically be affected by the closure of agents, it is being adversely impacted by the loss of migrant jobs.6Also, the cost of sending IR rises as the volatility in the financial markets and crisis causes foreign exchange margins to increase. Finally, most migrants lack immigration status, unemployment insurance, or health insurance.

Figure 2International remittances: Policy actions

A number of actions can be taken to support the IR sector. In the near term, national authorities should treat IR as essential services, mitigate any operational impacts to their functioning, and support the IR industry with appropriate instruments to manage their credit and liquidity risks effectively. In the medium term, they should act to reduce IR prices and respond to the challenges of the migrant communities in host countries by:

Continuing its pivotal role in reforming IR markets worldwide, the World Bank will keep on monitoring and reporting on the availability of remittance services worldwide and work with stakeholders to improve the transparency and efficiency of the remittances market guided by the CPMI-World Bank collaborative effort.7

Provision of safe and efficient G2P and IR services must be supported by strategic actions involving communication, consumer protection, and payment ecosystem maintenance. Proper communication of all actions throughout the implementation process is critical to avoid implementation setbacks which can create greater health risks. Several countries have already had bad experiences due to flaws in their communication strategy.8

The authorities should devote special attention to protecting users of digital payment services by providing them with assistance tools to deal and resolve issues involving frauds, operational incidents, breaches of data integrity, and disputes with providers.

Finally, maintaining and strengthening the payments ecosystem is critical to successful payment service provision. Connectivity and business continuity must be ensured for transaction, clearing and settlement systems involved, and the payments system must be able to support the higher volume of payments and ideally should provide operational availability in a schedule as extensive as possible.

Authors Note: Part II of this column builds on contributions from World Bank Group experts: Jose Antonio Garcia, Ugo Gentilini, Georgina Marin, Peter McConaghy, Jonathan Marskell, Robert Palacios, Doug Randall, Luz Rodriguez, Emil Tesliuc, Veronica Trujillo, Fiorella Risso, Guillermo Galicia, and Mahesh Uttamchandani, and from CGAP experts: Silvia Baur-Yazbeck and Gregory.

CPMI-World Bank (2007), General principles for international remittance services, joint report by the Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems and The World Bank, January.

Furman, J (2020), Protecting people now, helping the economy rebound later, VoxEU.org, 31 May.

Mides, C (2020), Millions of Europeans could not endure a two-month income shock without generous, targeted, government policies, VoxEU.org, 25 May.

World Bank (2020), COVID-19 Crisis Through a Migration Lens, Migration and Development Brief 32, World Bank: Washington DC, April.

1 A third of the 418 social protection programs world-wide responding to Covid-19 are government-funded, non-contributory cash transfer programs.

2 While some will be able to leverage administrative databases (social insurance, social assistance, income tax, auto registry etc.), others are determining to target practically everyone, and some are seeking alternative identification sources (e.g. databases of mobile network operators).

3 For example, enabling customer choice a system where payments are made to the provider that is most convenient to the beneficiary and depositing cash transfers into a transactional account that can be linked to a mobile account or a debit card would significantly reduce congestion and the need to travel. In many cases, regulatory changes that would have been recommended before the crisis such as allowing remote or simplified know-your-customer (KYC) for basic accounts could now be fast-tracked.

4 In addition, electronic payments should be promoted to minimise cashing-out and to maintain social distance as much as possible. Fees for beneficiaries to access their benefits should be waived or subsidised as much as possible. Expanding digital payment acceptance points is also key to promoting electronic payment usage. Deploying temporary POS terminals (or QR-code based solutions where available) to essential service merchants could increase use of electronic payments. Merchant CDD for electronic payments acceptance onboarding could also be simplifies to enable a rapid expansion.

5 See World Bank (2020).

6 Even in the best of times, sending and receiving remittances is not straightforward. For many, it requires a ride to the service provider at specific times of the day. During the mobility restrictions of a pandemic, sending cash remittances can become an impossible mission when digital alternatives are lacking, or people are unfamiliar with them. In many countries, agents are closed without any specific provisions recognising them as essential services. Where they have been deemed essential services, this information has not fully percolated to local authorities. Clients often face long queues, due to the lower number of agents and the shorter operating hours. Where sending digitally is an option, other barriers may exist for senders and receivers. For example, account ownership and usage of digital payments is not yet widespread among the biggest receiving countries, which limits options, and most developing economies that rely on remittances do not have a combination of high ownership of transaction accounts and high usage of digital payments.

7 See CPMI-World Bank (2007) The World Bank sponsors and participates in a wide range of global initiatives. Central is its role in supporting countries achieve Social Development Goal 10.c to reduce the transaction costs of migrant remittances to less than 3% and to eliminate remittance corridors with costs higher than 5% by 2030. In 2008, the World Bank began to survey and publish the prices of remittance services worldwide through the Remittance Prices Worldwide (RPW) database. RPW monitors the cost incurred by remittance senders along major remittances corridors and serves as a reference for measuring progress towards global cost reduction objectives. The RPW covers 365 remittance corridors, 48 remittance-sending countries, and 105 remittance-receiving countries.

8 In El Salvador, for example, a website to confirm eligibility with ID number instructed individuals to go to a government office if they didnt show up as eligible and wanted to contest the decision. This led to overcrowded public offices, followed by their closure which resulting in riots. Timing is also critical. In Thailand, when the government announced an emergency cash-transfer program they didnt specify how it would be delivered and people rushed to state banks to open accounts (other social programs are only disbursed through state banks). It wasnt until after crowds gathered that the government clarified that the transfer could be received both in state and commercial bank accounts which could be opened online, as well as a domestic mobile transfer system.

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COVID-19, government payments, and international remittances | VOX, CEPR Policy Portal - voxeu.org

Bradford sees rise in referrals for migrant victims of domestic abuse and honour-based violence – Bradford Telegraph and Argus

THERE has been an increase in the number of referrals for migrant victims of domestic abuse and honour-based violence during the Covid-19 crisis, a Bradford Council report says.

Councillors on Health and Social Care Overview and Scrutiny Committee are due to meet next Tuesday to discuss the Councils response in helping vulnerable people during the pandemic.

A report to the committee outlines the work of the No Recourse to Public Funds (NRPF) team.

This is a condition applied to people in the country with a temporary immigration status to protect public funds.

Amnesty International says this applies to people who are undocumented, but also to people who have the right to live and work in the UK, and who may have been living and working in the UK for many years.

In looking at the work of the team, the report says: Since the beginning of the pandemic the NRPF Team has seen the number of referrals per week increase by 100 per cent.

The service has seen cases that would not normally be referred to them such as individuals and families with NRPF who have lost their jobs due to non-essential businesses closing.

Most single adults with no recourse to public funds presenting as destitute are not in need of care and support, so the Care Act powers and duty will not usually apply.

It says the team has provided support with accommodation and subsistence to all individuals who have become destitute as a result of the coronavirus crisis.

It adds: The team has also seen an increase in the number of referrals for victims of domestic abuse and honour-based violence.

The report also gives an update on care homes.

It says that of June 26, four care homes were reporting either a confirmed or suspected outbreak of Covid-19 - down from 32 homes on May 14.

The report says: A rolling programme of re-testing of all staff within care homes regardless of whether they display symptoms or not is now offered to all care homes across the district and is being actively accessed. Since the establishment of local testing arrangements, over 6,000 tests have been undertaken via this arrangement with 95 per cent being within adult and learning disability care homes and an average of 200 swabs per day are now being routinely performed.

It also says: A number of measures were put in place to support providers on financial challenges arising from Covid-19, which ranged from rising costs, around PPE and staffing, to managing the reductions in placements, also known as voids, as a result of reductions in placements and mortality.

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Bradford sees rise in referrals for migrant victims of domestic abuse and honour-based violence - Bradford Telegraph and Argus

While everyone was rushing home, many migrants stayed back in Kerala because of a school programme – Scroll.in

When millions of jobless migrant workers across India started returning to their hometowns in May, Pratima and Rajesh Singh decided against heading back to their village in Ballia district in Easternmost Uttar Pradesh. Rajesh, who had worked as a welder in Keralas central Ernakulam district for 17 years, was among the 120 million Indians left unemployed by the Covid-19-induced lockdown.

The Singh family had a reason for remaining in Ernakulam through the crisis: They did not wish to interrupt their childrens education. Their sons, Amrith, 7, and Anshuman, 9, are enrolled in a school supported by the districts Roshni programme that helps children of migrant families become proficient in Malayalam. The three-year-old scheme has been successful in ensuring that these children stayed on in the states education system, as IndiaSpend reported in August 2019.

When classes moved to video/online platforms at the start of the school session in June, Roshni too was revived. Volunteers began participating in these remote classes, explaining the lessons in the childrens mother tongues and also involving the parents in the process, said teachers.

Of the 922 students families in Ernakulam covered by Roshni, 90% or 830 families had stayed back, as of May 10 46 days after the lockdown was announced according to the data generated by the programme and accessed by IndiaSpend.

We stayed on because of our childrens education. Changing school will be an issue and it will also mentally impact them, said Pratima, echoing a view held by the other migrant worker families we interviewed.

Although the exact number of migrants in Kerala is unknown, as much as 11% of the population now could be migrant, according to a 2017 study by Centre for Migration and Inclusive Development, an Ernakulam-based non-profit.

Hit by the lockdown, Indias unemployment rate for April was pegged at 23.5%, nearly thrice the level in March. In June, the Kerala government submitted to the Supreme Court that 153,000 workers have left for their homes on 100 special trains for returning migrants and 120,000 workers were still waiting to return.

Like the Singhs, most migrant families in Ernakulam that decided to stay back for their childrens education had little or no work/ income during the lockdown: They either lived on their savings or were supported by relatives back home.

Some families went home for the vacations [declared in March before the lockdown] and have not been able to come back, and at least 50% want to come back, said Jayashree K, academic coordinator of Roshni. I think the support [language proficiency] we are offering is useful.

School closures in India have impacted 247 million children more than the population of Brazil enrolled in elementary and secondary education, and 28 million children who were attending pre-school education in anganwadis, noted a June 23 UNICEF press release on its report on the impact of Covid-19 on children in South Asia. This is in addition to the more than six million girls and boys who were already out of school prior to the Covid-19 crisis, it said.

Kerala trialled online classes First Bell for two weeks from June 1 for all classes except class 11, and made these available on KITE Victers channel run by the general education department and online. Classes are scheduled for two hours for Class 12, 90 minutes for Class 10, and 30 minutes for lower and upper primary students.

The digital classroom sessions include Roshni volunteers, as we mentioned earlier. The videos are edited down to small capsules and shared with students and parents and are followed with instructions for educational activities. The children complete their activities, take a photo and video of their work and share it in the group with the help of parents. Some children are able to watch the videos as and when they are broadcast on TV or online but many students have trouble accessing a device.

If there are more than two children [to a device], it becomes difficult to watch the videos and complete activities, said Jayashree. The volunteers review the activities and share feedback.If we have doubts, the volunteer helps me out in Hindi and sometimes sits up late [to help], said Pratima.

The number of migrant students in Ernakulams government and government-aided schools increased 44% to 3,985 over a year to 2019-20, IndiaSpend reported in August 2019. Online classes [digital class] are in no way a substitute for classroom teaching but with online classes, we want [students] to make use of the time without pressuring them, Jeevan Babu, director, general education department, told IndiaSpend.

The Singhs currently have one smartphone that the children use for their lessons. Rajesh is out of a job and takes on occasional assignments. The family is managing with his sparse earnings, savings and the support of relatives in Uttar Pradesh. We do not even have a TV so a laptop [for the children] is out of the question, said Pratima.

The state government had conducted a survey in May before the start of online classes and found that there were 280,000 students who would not be able to access online classes. Our aim was to ensure that the child watches the class, probably the same day or within the week, depending on the availability of electricity and internet connectivity, said Babu. In places without such facilities, we have ensured that classes were downloaded and viewed on laptops or TV.

Most migrant families have access to at least a phone, said Roshnis Jayashree. For those who do not have any device, schools telecast classes at facility centres such as libraries, anganwadis and Kudumbashree [state womens collective] centres.

In June, a 14-year-old Dalit girl in Northern Keralas Malappuram district died by suicide reportedly over not having access to internet or a TV.

Ankit Kumar, a class 7 student, studies in a Roshni-supported school and is taking online classes now. He misses school and friends and finds classroom teaching better. I can understand Malayalam, but reading is difficult, he said.

Ankits parents are from Siwan in Bihar and run a home-based footwear business in Ernakulam, which supported nearly 20 other migrant workers till the lockdown. We shifted here with children nearly four years ago because back home the education system was not good and my husband was worried about their future, said Anita Kumar, Ankits mother. Clients have not been placing orders and business has been dull. We do not have any income but do not want to go back home as it will disrupt his classes, she said.

Muthu [she uses only one name], a single parent who works in a mall in Ernakulam, came back from her village in Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu, in early June soon after classes began. I did not want my daughter to miss classes, and also had to get back to work as the mall had reopened, she said. Although they have a TV, the governments 30-minute classes are viewed on a mobile.

Roshni volunteers collect daily data on how many students have been able to watch video, and participate in activities. Even among families that returned to their hometowns, 55 students have been watching classes, noted Roshni data as on July 1.

Hasina Khatun, a Roshni volunteer and a migrant from West Bengals Murshidabad district, helps children ease into Malayalam using Bengali and Assamese. She downloads online classes on a pen drive and plays it on TV for around 25 children at two anganwadis. There are children till upper primary, she said. Although online classes are only for 30 minutes, children are split into multiple batches and often these classes extend into the evening. Due to Covid, we cant go to their homes to help. Although most children understand Malayalam, they face problems writing or reading it.

During the lockdown, with schools closed, Hasina and other Roshni volunteers worked at the district administration call-centre set up to support migrant workers who needed essentials and travel needs. Hasinas husband, a driver, had met with an accident before the lockdown and she relied on her savings and daily wages of Rs 500 from the call centre to see her family through. I have stopped work at the call-centre because the classes started, she said.

Another volunteer, Supriya Debnath from Odisha, supports students at an on-site facility provided by a concrete block-making factory where many of the parents, mostly from Odisha, work. Class starts by 11 am, and we have created batches based on the number of children, maintaining social distancing, she said.

These classes have added more work for volunteers who now have to also engage with every child online for almost all subjects. They have to keep abreast with the latest classes and ensure that they understand it before they are able to explain it to the children. Doing all this online is difficult although the school support is available, said Jayashree.

Roshnis success found mention in the governors address in the State Assembly in January, noting that it would be expanded across the state. However, the model can be replicated only if there are a large number of students justifying the investment in resources, said Babu, director of general education. And unlike Ernakulam, in most districts, migrant workers live without their families, he added.

The immediate requirement will be to to find out the numbers who have come back after the lockdown was eased. Some of them may not come back with their families, said Babu.

This article first appeared on IndiaSpend, a data-driven and public-interest journalism non-profit.

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While everyone was rushing home, many migrants stayed back in Kerala because of a school programme - Scroll.in

Modi Shouldnt Be Attacked: Why Congress Has Knives Out for Rahul – The Quint

The real issue that the Congress party must urgently address is to revive party institutions from booth level to the All India Congress Committee. Unless these institutions are activated, made vibrant and meet regularly, there cannot even be an accountable discussion of the partys performance. Where will Congressmen air their opinions when the AICC does not meet regularlythe party Constitution mandates six monthly meetings but there is often not even an annual meeting?

The Congress Working Committee meets sporadically and Pradesh Congress Committees and the Block level units exist virtually on paper. Like the Old Guard is doing today, they will be forced to speak through proxies in the media.

It is in these forums that the plans for the partys revitalisation have to be discussed and new talent identified to counter cronyism. How good or bad Rahul Gandhi is as a general will depend on how good his army is. The Old Guard wants to keep all the command positions with no army, no weapons and no ammunition. And it seems keen to block anyone else from trying to put together the required wherewithal either.

(The writer is a senior journalist based in Delhi. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed are the authors own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.)

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Modi Shouldnt Be Attacked: Why Congress Has Knives Out for Rahul - The Quint

Garib Kalyan Rojgar Abhiyan: Will the scheme be of help? – The Financial Express

By Atul Sarma & Shyam Sunder

The Covid-19 lockdown left 45-60 million migrant labourers in the lurch across cities. Faced with lives and livelihood challenges, a large number of them began to leave in hordes to their native places, many on foot; it was a human tragedy. While concerned state governments and several NGOs sought to help them, the Centre took a lot of time to come out with effective measures.

Lately, it has announced an economic package as part of the Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan. Besides offering a stimulus package to support the economy, the government utilised Covid-19 as an opportunity to attempt at structural reforms covering agriculture, core sectors, MSME and so on; and introduced short-term relief measures for migrants, including free foodgrains for three months, employment under MGNREGA, one-time payment under Jan-Dhan and easy loans under Mudra Yojana to migrants at their native places. Medium-term measures include One Nation, One Ration Card and housing facilities. While these are desirable, the scale falls far short of the requirement this crisis has warranted. Whats more, the operational design of these policy announcements is yet to be articulatedas elsewhere in policymaking, the devil lies in implementation.

As an add on, the Prime Minister, during Mann Ki Baat, announced the setting up of a Migration Commission for the employment of migrant labourers after mapping out their skill matrix. He also emphasised the need for creating opportunities for self-employment and setting up of small-scale industries in villages.

On June 22, the Prime Minister launched a new package of `50,000 crorethe Garib Kalyan Rojgar Abhiyan (GKRA). It aims at creating livelihood opportunities for the returned migrants, and while doing so it is expected to create durable infrastructure in rural areas. The GKRA would be implemented in a mission mode to provide jobs and livelihood opportunities for 125 days for more than 6 million migrants, and would cover the ones who returned to 116 districts of six statesBihar (32 districts), Uttar Pradesh (31), Madhya Pradesh (24), Rajasthan (22), Odisha (4) and Jharkhand (3). These 116 districts also include 27 aspirational districts as identified by the NITI Aayog. This is an umbrella scheme that has brought under it 25 different government schemes of 12 ministries/departments. Some employment opportunities offered under the original schemes include building gram panchayat bhawans, anganwadi centres, national highway works, railway works and water conservation projects. This will provide immediate relief to families of migrant workers while creating infrastructure in rural areas, and help generate rural demand. But the government will not spend additional monies on this new scheme. Instead, it will merely aggregate the funds already allocated under the 12 ministries.

Second, to the extent that it would be implemented only in 116 districts of six states, it is discriminatory in that states such as Chhattisgarh and West Bengal are outside its ambit. Further, Odisha and Jharkhand even with large migrant workers got less allocation in terms of the number of districts. Some analysts have highlighted that this scheme will cover only two-thirds of migrant workers who have returned, and one-third fall outside its coverage. This has given a rise to the suspicion that it is politically-driven.

Third, it is not yet clear how different stakeholdersministries/departments, district administrations, banking systemswill coordinate on things such as timely payments to the workers. To that extent, the scheme will face implementation challenges. What could be a way forward is to bring all the stakeholders on a single IT-based platform, especially when the government is facilitating the role of an aggregator.

Ideally, the woes of distressed migrants could have been redressed by giving a basic income, or as the second-best the government could have made a reasonable amount of money transfer (Direct Benefit Transfer, or DBT). But lack of reliable data may have been the hurdle. However, the government should seize this opportunity to build a database of migrant workers that could be used in the future to create a social security system for them.

The bottom line of this crisis is that most of the migrant workers families need immediate relief in terms of cash for survival. Also, existing schemes like MGNREGA should be adequately funded to provide employment to migrants for at least the remaining months of this year.

Several states have attempted to create employment opportunities for the returned migrant workers in their own states. This runs counter to the demographic transition pattern of India: southern states have already reached the peak, i.e. the proportion of ageing population (15-59) has begun to rise, while other states like Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand have much larger proportion of younger people. States with older population would require younger labour, which states with younger population could supply. In a unified economy it would be growth and welfare enhancing to ensure free movement of labour and capital. In such a situation, what is important is to create an imaginative social protection and security system for migrant labourers. It is here that the Migration Commission could play an important role. It should be given the mandate to prepare an appropriate social protection and welfare system for migrant workers.

Sarma is distinguished professor, CSD, New Delhi, and Sunder works with a leading Indian corporate. Views are personal

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Garib Kalyan Rojgar Abhiyan: Will the scheme be of help? - The Financial Express

Venezuela: UN releases report on criminal control of mining area and wider justice issues – Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of) – ReliefWeb

GENEVA (15 July 2020) People working in the Arco Minero del Orinoco region in Venezuela are caught up in a context of labour exploitation and high levels of violence by criminal groups that control the mines in the area, according to a report released on Wednesday by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.

The High Commissioners report, which is being presented to the 47 member states of the Human Rights Council, describes how the criminal groups known locally as sindicatos exercise control over a large number of mining operations in Arco Minero del Orinoco.

They determine who enters and leaves the area, impose rules, inflict harsh punishment on those who break them, and gain economic benefit from all activity within the mining area, including through extortion in exchange for protection, the report says. It details how the groups maintain their presence and illegal activities in the mines via a system of corruption and bribery that includes paying off military commanders.

Due to the economic crisis and lack of labour opportunities in Venezuela, internal migration to the mining area has increased dramatically in the last few years, with workers engaging in informal labour in order to make ends meet for themselves and their families.

Miners work 12-hour shifts, descending deep pits without any protection. They are required to pay about 10-20 per cent of what they earn to the criminal groups who control the mines, and an additional 15-30 percent to the owner of the mill where rocks are crushed to extract gold and other minerals.

Women are also performing both mining and other related jobs. A number of people interviewed for the report suggest that since 2016 there has been a sharp increase in prostitution, sexual exploitation and trafficking in mining areas, including of teenagers. The UN Human Rights Office also received reports that children as young as nine are working in the mines.

Interviewees reported that harsh punishments are inflicted upon those not complying with the rules imposed by the criminal groups: in addition to severe beatings, such punishments include being shot in the hands, or having a hand cut off, as well as killings. Witness accounts describe how bodies of miners are often thrown into old mining pits. Violence also stems from disputes over control of the mines. Based on open-source analysis, the UN Human Rights Office identified 16 such disputes in the last four years, which reportedly resulted in some 149 deaths. Allegedly, security forces were involved in some of these incidents.

Despite the considerable presence of security and military forces in the region, and the efforts undertaken to address criminal activity, the authorities have failed to investigate and prosecute human rights violations, and abuses and crimes linked to mining, said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet.

Authorities should take immediate steps to end labour and sexual exploitation, child labour and human trafficking, and should dismantle criminal groups controlling mining activities. They must also investigate, prosecute and punish those responsible for human rights violations, abuses and crimes, she added.

Living conditions in the mining areas are appalling, with no running water, electricity or sanitation. Pools of stagnant and polluted water resulting from mining are breeding grounds for mosquitoes, leading to a rise of malaria cases in the region, affecting not only migrant workers but also indigenous communities.

Both these groups are also badly affected by mercury poisoning. Mercury is widely used in the region to separate gold from other minerals, and toxic fumes created during the process are breathed in by workers and people living in the area. It is also poured onto the ground and seeps into the rivers.

Illegal mining also affects the enjoyment of the individual and collective rights of indigenous people, due to the destruction of their habitat and the lack of control over their traditional territories and natural resources.

The report also examines broader justice issues in Venezuela and describes how the independence of the justice system has been considerably undermined by the insecurity of tenure of judges and prosecutors; the lack of transparency in the process of designation; precarious working conditions; and political interference. Decisions of the Supreme Court related to the opposition-controlled National Assembly have consistently given rise to concerns about political considerations prevailing over legal determinations.

This situation has gravely affected the judiciarys capacity to act independently to protect human rights, and is contributing to impunity. Despite recent efforts made by the Office of the Attorney General to investigate human rights violations committed by security forces, the lack of accountability is especially significant in cases of killings in the context of protests and during security operations, as well as allegations of torture and ill-treatment and gender-based violence.

Victims of human rights violations and abuses continue to face persistent legal, political and socio-economic barriers in accessing justice, with women experiencing gender-specific challenges.

I call on the Venezuelan Government to undertake and complete the announced reforms to the justice system to guarantee its independence and impartiality, to halt the use of the military justice to try civilians, and to carry out their obligation to investigate any allegation of torture and ill-treatment, Bachelet said.

I also urge an immediate halt to all acts of intimidation, threats and reprisals by members of the security forces against relatives of victims of human rights violations who seek justice, she added. Victims and their families have the right to know the truth and to obtain justice and reparations, and not to be harassed and re-victimized by those whose job should be to protect them.

To read the report click here

ENDS

For more information and media requests, please contact: Rupert Colville - + 41 22 917 9767 rcolville@ohchr.org or Liz Throssell - + 41 22 917 9296 / ethrossell@ohchr.org

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Venezuela: UN releases report on criminal control of mining area and wider justice issues - Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of) - ReliefWeb

Fruit pickers trapped in Spain: We have run out of money and need to return to Morocco – EL PAS in English

I came here to pick strawberries, but the season is over and now I cant go home. My family needs me, and the money Id saved for them is being spent on food to survive, says Fatna, a 46-year-old seasonal worker from Morocco with six children waiting for her back home.

Like her, there are around 7,100 Moroccans who arrived in southern Spain in January for the strawberry picking season, but who now find themselves unable to go back because their government has kept its borders sealed since mid-March because of the coronavirus pandemic.

My family needs me, and the money Id saved for them is being spent on food to survive

Although Rabat has announced it will start reopening its borders on Wednesday, travel from Spain will for now only be allowed by air. But airfare is out of reach for these laborers, whose contracts ended between mid-June and July.

Unable to work, almost penniless, far from their children whom they havent seen for over six months, and with nobody to tell them when they might be able to go home, their situation is increasingly desperate.

Their employers, union leaders and non-profit groups are warning that the situation could turn into a humanitarian crisis if the governments of Morocco and Spain do not find a solution soon.

Spanish government sources said that both governments are immersed in intense talks, but neither of the two Spanish ministries most closely involved in the matter, Migration and Foreign Affairs, are taking direct responsibility in the negotiations, nor are they providing any details.

Meanwhile, the regional government of Andalusia has offered the Moroccan workers free PCR coronavirus tests, and the Moroccan consul in Seville has been negotiating for weeks with Spanish government representatives in Huelva to get the group transferred. But so far, the only progress has been the repatriation of around 100 women who were pregnant, had just given birth, or were ill.

What we really care about now is being with our families, because some of us have ill parents or children who also need us

We dont know whose fault it is, but we came here to work and we are willing to take all necessary tests. We listen to the news from Morocco, and there is talk about migrants abroad, but very little talk about us, complains Saidia, a laborer who has been coming to Spain to pick strawberries for 13 years, and who is urging her government to do something about their situation.

We hope that the steps we have been taking with Spanish and Moroccan authorities will soon bear fruit, said Pedro Marn, the manager of Interfresa, a strawberry trade association in Huelva. Theyve been coming to work in Huelva for over a decade, and they are a basic pillar for the companies that they work for.

Najiya has also been crossing the Strait of Gibraltar every winter for over a decade in order to pick strawberries for the same agricultural cooperative. This year, her work ended on June 19. Under the terms of her contract, she and the other seven workers she shares an apartment with did not have to pay any rent, only the utilities. But in light of the situation, their employer has decided to extend their free rent and is also covering the utility expenses even though their contract has expired.

We talk to our families almost every day to see what the situation is back home, and they tell us that things are getting worse every day, says Najiya, who has two children aged eight and 14.

These workers come from small, low-income communities where the money they earn from picking strawberries in Spain is enough to live on for nearly the entire year. So having to spend those earnings on food and other necessities while stuck in Spain represents a serious economic setback for them, not to mention the stress of not knowing how long their plight will last.

Some of us had the possibility of going to work at estates in our own villages when we returned, but now weve lost that opportunity, notes Saidia. But what we really care about now is being with our families, because some of us have ill parents or children who also need us.

Theyve been coming to work in Huelva for over a decade, and they are a basic pillar for the companies that they work for

Many employers have taken on the cost of housing the stranded workers, and some are even paying for their everyday needs while seeking to close a deal with Morocco so the latter country will cover these expenses.

The Human Rights Association of Andalusia wants to see a radical review of the hiring agreement that will improve [the workers'] conditions and guarantee a dignified job. This group also said that the laborers living and repatriation expenses should be shared between Madrid and Rabat.

According to the contract conditions, employers pay for the workers journey from Morocco to the Huelva greenhouses, which includes a ferry trip and a bus ride. But the workers have to pay their own way back, which costs around 45.

The women now feel abandoned. Many of them are living in isolated areas far from village centers, and they have no means of transportation to get there, explains Ana Pinto, a member of the laborers association Jornaleras del Campo. These days, the stranded women can often be seen walking in groups along the paths near the hamlet of El Roco, on their way to or from a bus stop that will take them to the nearest municipality to do some grocery shopping.

They refuse to talk. Many of them do not speak Spanish and they are illiterate, making it difficult for them to establish a direct relationship with the Moroccan consulate or any other authority from their country. Instead, information reaches them through non-profit groups or through advisors at Prelsi, Interfresas ethical and social responsibility project.

Some cooperatives have been trying to help the women find similar work in other parts of Spain. Around 40 have traveled to Segovia to pick strawberries there. But most of them would rather stay closer to Morocco in case they are suddenly allowed to go back, said Fatna. For now, they continue to wait amid the empty greenhouses.

English version by Susana Urra.

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Fruit pickers trapped in Spain: We have run out of money and need to return to Morocco - EL PAS in English

United States v. Gratkowski Beware of Inanimate Objects That Violate Your Privacy – JD Supra

In Philip K. Dicks novel Ubik, the sci-fi legend warned the world of the dangers of inanimate objects that could violate our privacy.[1] In a virtual nod to Ubik and Dick, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the privacy protections of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution do not apply to records of Bitcoin transactions held by a major digital asset trading platform. Faced with the novel question of whether an individual has a Fourth Amendment privacy interest in the records of their Bitcoin transactions, the Fifth Circuit, in United States v. Gratkowski, found that Bitcoin data akin to bank records does not have a constitutional right to privacy or unreasonable search.

In United States v. Gratkowski, federal agents analyzed the publicly viewable Bitcoin blockchain and subpoenaed a leading digital asset trading platform for all information on the customers of the trading platform whose accounts had sent Bitcoin to a child-pornography website. In response to the subpoena, the trading platform identified Gratkowski as one of these customers. Federal agents then obtained a search warrant for Gratkowkis house, which resulted in the discovery of child pornography in his possession.

Generally, a person must have a reasonable expectation of privacy in an item for Fourth Amendment protections to attach.[2] Under the third-party doctrine, a person generally has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties.[3] Gratkowski argued that his Bitcoin information should receive the same protections as those set out in Carpenter v. United States, which expanded Fourth Amendment protections by limiting the applicability of the third-party doctrine in the context of cell phones.[4]

Relying on the United States Supreme Courts ruling in Carpenter,[5] which limited the applicability of the third-party doctrine in the context of cell phones, Gratkowski claimed that the federal agents infringed upon his Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches. Gratkowski argued the Government violated his reasonable expectation of privacy in the records of his Bitcoin transactions recorded on the Bitcoin blockchain that were executed at the crypto trading platform.

The Fifth Circuit, affirmed the decision of the district court, rejected Gratkowskis argument, and concluded the information on the Bitcoin blockchain is analogous to bank records which are subject to the third-party doctrine and not protected under the Fourth Amendment. The court reasoned that like bank records, the Bitcoin blockchain identifies (1) the amount of Bitcoin transferred, (2) the Bitcoin address of the sending party, and (3) the Bitcoin address of the receiving party. The court also opined that since every Bitcoin user has access to the public Bitcoin blockchain which is a not a permission based distributed ledger technology and can see every Bitcoin address and its respective transfers, Bitcoin users are unlikely to expect that this information will be kept private.

The Fifth Circuit also held the records at the digital asset trading platform were akin to bank records, finding no reason for treating these records and records at other trading platforms any differently than traditional banks. The court reasoned the trading platform and traditional banks both are subject to the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) as regulated financial institutions, whose records provide only limited information about a persons virtual currency transactions. The court also suggested that Bitcoin users have the option to maintain a higher level of privacy by transacting without a third-party intermediary exchange, albeit this would require greater technical expertise.

Despite the fact that Bitcoin users enjoy a greater degree of privacy than those who use other money-transfer means, transaction information under this ruling is not protected under the Fourth Amendment. It is unclear how the Fifth Circuit would have ruled if the defendants data had been stored in a permissioned blockchain. However, the determination of the court that a digital asset trading platform is deemed a financial institution, does not bode well for the argument that digital assets stored on a permissioned blockchain will be protected by the Fourth Amendment.

The Fifth Circuits conclusion that the records of crypto currency trading platforms are not protected by the Fourth Amendment because the trading platform is a regulated financial institution could also possibly open the door to the argument that records maintained by digital asset trading platforms are subject to the protections of the federal Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978 (RFPA).[6] Subject to certain limitations such as national security subpoenas, RFPA requires federal government officials to follow certain procedures when seeking customer financial information from a financial institution. RFPA also requires financial institutions to take a number of steps before releasing the information. The customer must receive a written notice of the governments desire to obtain the records, the customer must be told why the records are being requested, and the customer must told the steps they can take to protect the information. RFPA includes a number of exceptions to when the customer must be given notice and places restrictions on a customers ability to prevent the information from being released.

If digital asset trading platforms are deemed financial institutions by virtue of being subject to the BSA, the records of clients at such institutions may be subject to the protections of RFPA discussed above.

[1] Philip K. Dick, Ubik (196); see also April Glaser, Philip K. Dick Warned Us About the Internet of Things in 1969, Slate (Feb. 10, 2015), available at: https://slate.com/technology/2015/02/philip-k-dick-s-1969-novel-ubik-on-the-internet-of-things.html.

[2] United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400, 406 (2012)

[3] Smith v. Maryland, 442 U.S. 735, 74344 (1979)

[4] 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018),

[5] Carpenter v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2206, 2217 (2018)

[6] 12 U.S.C. ch. 35, 3401 et seq.

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United States v. Gratkowski Beware of Inanimate Objects That Violate Your Privacy - JD Supra

OPINION: Weed should regulate its surveillance – News – Mount Shasta Herald

Take a drive throughout the town of Weed and youll surely come across odd looking cameras topped with a blinking blue light. Theyre primarily intended for traffic monitoring, one city employee told me. But their pervasiveness without an accompanying city ordinance has gone on too long and the city risks jeopardizing its citizens civil liberties.

One of the more prominent of these cameras is mounted to a telephone pole on Main Street. From its vantage point, the main street camera is particularly concerning for its possible ability to surveil regular goers to the nearby dispensary, bar, and bank. Some months ago, a camera was mounted at the intersection of Broadway and Roseburg overlooking a historically African-American predominant residential area.

While the intention to monitor traffic is merited, there is an unfortunate propensity for these technologies to expand in their reach and scope. In San Diego, for example, the city council in 2016 sold the public on a new smart streetlight program. Armed with an array of sensors, the street lights feature wide angle cameras and the ability to upload collected data to a cloud storage database.

The City of San Diego applauded the smart street lights for their energy efficiency and future applications in regards to improving traffic, saying the lights would help City staff provide better services to our residents and increase efficiencies for City operations.

But, the mission creep settled in quickly. In 2019 reports surfaced that San Diegos contract with the streetlight vendor, General Electric, allowed unrestricted rights to the data gathered by the cameras and sensors, including the right to sell the data to third parties.

By early 2020, it was clear that the San Diego police were not even using the streetlights for the primary purpose of traffic control or monitoring, but instead were looking into alleged criminal activity. Then, in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests in June of 2020, police used the cameras to investigate protestors. This type of surveillance can have a considerable chilling effect on First Amendment activity.

Though it is of course desirable for police to effectively utilize the tools at their disposal, this much is clear: with a poor regulatory regime, no oversight, and little transparency, the benign traffic monitoring cameras went above and beyond their explicitly stated purpose. And it does not help that some vendors specifically market their wares to city officials as enabling infrastructure by hosting third party sensors. Meaning, that other sensors and software can be incorporated later.

It would have been prudent for the City of Weed to have had a privacy policy in place prior to the acquisition of surveillance technology. For starters, there is virtually no transparency on the issue; information related to it is not readily available. A search of the words camera, surveillance, or privacy on the City of Weeds website returns no pages nor documents. Compare that with the gold standard set by the City of Oakland, which has its policies enshrined as a dedicated chapter in its municipal code.

Policy 378 of the Weed Police Department Policy Manual does have a section on a Public Safety Video Surveillance System. The policy deserves kudos for specifying that the cameras should be conspicuous, and that they will not record audio, but otherwise the policy is neglectful for its porous standards.

Proponents of the cameras might counter that these are only keeping an eye on the public thoroughfare; there is no expectation of privacy, and therefore it would not be a Fourth Amendment violation, per se. But as the California State Auditor once noted, [The United States Supreme Court] has decided cases involving other electronic surveillance [...] the court has found that certain electronic data that reveal individuals movements over an extended period of time, if gathered, do at some point impinge on privacy.

Even in public, there still needs to be a concern over surveillance.

Furthermore, there is nothing stopping the Weed Police Department (WPD) from acquiring more invasive technology. Policy 378.3.3 says it can integrate its video surveillance equipment with gunshot detection, incident mapping, crime analysis, license plate recognition, facial recognition and other video-based analytical systems may be considered based upon availability and the nature of department strategy.

Not only has gunshot detection, facial recognition, predictive policing, and license plate recognition systems come under fire for being flawed and having negative impacts on civil liberties, but in the WPDs response to an inquiry from the California State Auditor, WPD said that there are no plans to use an automated license plate recognition system. If this is the case, then why do they need a surveillance system capable of doing so?

The video retention policies stand out as another big risk. Absent of being used in litigation, Policy 378.5 says that the retention schedule [is] a minimum of one year. However, the media is seemingly not regularly cleared automatically after that time as the city attorney needs to explicitly sign off before the video can be deleted.

This is not to say that the City of Weeds efforts up to this point have been in bad faith. Rather, given that the city now has these technologies at their disposal, it is imperative that guidelines are made now to prevent future abuse. Without specific policies there is no guarantee that the civil liberties of the residents are being respected. The genie must be kept in its bottle. An ordinance requiring city council approval for the acquisition of surveillance technology and mandated standards is needed.

Jonathan Hofer was born and raised in Weed. He is a former political science researcher at the University of California, Berkeley and currently works as a research associate at an Oakland based public policy think tank working on municipal surveillance and the impact of emerging technologies on civil liberties.

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OPINION: Weed should regulate its surveillance - News - Mount Shasta Herald

Freedom And Responsibility – The Transylvania Times

In 1942, my father and my father-in-law received draft notices informing them to report for military service for the duration, not for a few months, not for a year or two but for the duration of the war. Both served in Europe.

My father returned in half a body cast with severe leg injuries and a Purple Heart. My father-in-law fought with the units that relieved Bastogne and that seized the bridge at Remagen.

Meanwhile, my mother and mother-in-law stayed at home and worried if they would ever see the men they had recently married alive again. My mother worked in the defense industry. My mother-in-law taught. Both dealt with anxiety and the rationing of gasoline, sugar, meat, butter and a variety of other basic commodities. They all sacrificed for the freedom we enjoy today. They never claimed their freedom was being threatened by their government or that their actions were exceptional. My father declined to have a Purple Heart license plate on his car precisely because he didnt think that what he had done made him special.

Today we are under attack from a very different kind of enemy, a virus. We are being asked to sacrifice by wearing masks in public settings, by washing our hands more frequently and by keeping 6 feet away from others not from our own household. We are advised to avoid crowds and are deprived of many forms of entertainment.

Most Americans are willing to make these small sacrifices. They understand our economy cannot be restored as long as the uncertainty of a pandemic hangs over us. A loud and dangerous minority chooses to see these measures as an attack on their freedoms. Some claim that they violate our Constitution, without demonstrating that they have ever actually read that document. Mostly they are either uninformed about the rationale for these measures or they have utter disregard for the health and safety of their fellow citizens or both.

Wearing a mask has nothing to do with party affiliation. It doesnt make you more or less macho. It is about protecting your fellow citizens. It shows that you care about our country and its freedoms. It shows that you accept your share of the responsibility for defending our country as the Greatest Generation did.

Is that really too much to ask?

Peter Chaveas

Brevard

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Freedom And Responsibility - The Transylvania Times

Current crises give cause to consider the meaning of ‘freedom’ in 2020 – Iowa City Press-Citizen

Kelcey Patrick-Ferree and Shannon Patrick, Writers' Group Published 9:30 a.m. CT July 11, 2020

Independence Day is a time when we both celebrate freedom and consider its meaning, and 2020 has thrust to two radically different visions of freedom to the forefront.

One version, championed by Black Lives Matter protesters, calls for all Americans to enjoy the same rights and responsibilities granted by their U.S. citizenship. They protest for freedom from police violence, from discrimination in housing and work and education and medicine, from race-based harassment. They protest, in short, on behalf of liberty and justice for all.

In so doing, they echo both core, traditional American beliefs and centuries-old calls for America to better live up to its values. These demands for freedom from echo the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, the demands of the Civil Rights movement of the 1960sand more. The exhortations that we do better recall Frederick Douglas What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July? and Langston Hughes Let America Be America Again:

"O, let America be America again

"The land that never has been yet

"And yet must bethe land where every man is free."

The other view of freedom on display is a belligerent, self-centered sense of freedom to that some should be free to do whatever they wish, regardless of their actions impact on others. Its advocates ignore public health directives, threaten and kill Black Lives Matter protesters, carry guns to intimidate state legislators and protesters as they have done in at least 33 states.

This view, that the freedom of one group is more important than everyone elses liberty, also has a long tradition. If equality is the heart of American freedom, then this other version is Confederate freedom; as the traitors vice president declared, the Confederacy was founded upon exactly the opposite idea; its foundations are laid, its corner-stone rests, upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery subordination to the superior race is his natural and normal condition.

Its advocates are not all motivated by race (although, notably, many anti-quarantine groups morphed into openly racist anti-Black Lives Matter groups), but those who champion Confederate freedom dismiss the rights and even the lives of those they look down upon.

This stance is neither fringe nor obscure. For example, a 2017 NPR/PBS Marist poll found that Republicans are the group most likely to believe that we do too little to restrict freedom of the press, of religion, to protestand to vote. This is not a problem among Republicans only, but current Republicans disproportionately champion selective liberty and are the ones engineeringgerrymandering and voter suppression, stripping incoming governments of their power, limiting citizenshipand more.

They do this under the banner of the president, who has expressed his devotion to this type of perverse liberty by stating his belief that the Constitution gives him the right to do whatever I want. His actions testify to the earnestness of this belief, as he ignores the Constitution on anti-corruption, Congressional oversightor even budget procedures, Constitutional allocations of power are unimportant to him.

Similarly, the national GOP has lashed itself to his mast, as it states, The RNC is the political arm of the president and we support the President. It makes that support concrete by standing with him during his impeachment, tolerating his support for Chinas concentration campsand restricting voting, protestingand other Constitutional rights.

The American public overwhelmingly supports freedom for all Black Lives Matter may be the largest movement in U.S. history, reaching even small cities across the nation, and public health measures are widely popular. However, when one segment of our political sphere adopts a definition of freedom that tramples on the rights of others, it is a threat to us all, regardless of party. It is our duty, at the least, to defeat the champions of selective, Confederate freedom and their collaborators in a landslide this November and afterward.

Kelcey Patrick-Ferree and Shannon Patrick(Photo: Special to the Press-Citizen)

Writers Group members Kelcey Patrick-Ferree and Shannon Patrick live in Iowa City. And biannual time changes must be abolished.

Read or Share this story: https://www.press-citizen.com/story/opinion/contributors/writers-group/2020/07/11/freedom-in-2020-coronavirus-black-lives-matter-donald-trump/5402753002/

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Current crises give cause to consider the meaning of 'freedom' in 2020 - Iowa City Press-Citizen

Defending the Freedom of the Church | Michael P. Moreland – First Things

Although they have generated controversy in some progressive precincts, the U.S. Supreme Courts decisions last week in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru and Little Sisters of the Poor v. Pennsylvania were quite straightforward.

Both cases were decided 7-2 on the same day, with the five conservative members of the Court joined by Justices Breyer and Kagan. In Our Lady of Guadalupe, Justice Alitos opinion held that Catholic parochial schools were protected by the First Amendments ministerial exception from employment disputes involving teachers. Little Sisters of the Poor posed an issue of administrative law in this latest, post-Hobby Lobby round of litigation over the contraceptive mandate imposed under the Affordable Care Act. Justice Thomass opinion held that a federal agency acted lawfully when it issued regulations exempting categories of religious employers from the requirement that contraception be included in employer-provided health plans.

Both cases corrected extravagant circuit court decisions. In the ministerial exception case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit concluded that because the Catholic school teachers did not have a clerical title or extensive theological training, they did not perform an important religious function, even though the teachers led students in prayer, taught religion as part of a grade school curriculum, and prepared students for the sacraments. In Little Sisters, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held that administrative agencies cannot craft exemptions for religious objectors to the ACAs requirements, even though the statute itself is silent about whether agencies may craft exemptions and another federal statute (the Religious Freedom Restoration Act) arguably requires that they do so.

Beneath the surface, though, Our Lady of Guadalupe and Little Sisters might have profound implications for religious freedom and the shape of American constitutional law in the years ahead.

Both cases vindicate a concept of church autonomy and institutional religious freedomin some respects an American constitutional variation on the ancient idea of libertas ecclesiae or the freedom of the church. Almost forty years ago in the Columbia Law Review, First Amendment scholar Douglas Laycock argued that the First Amendment protected a right of church autonomy that was distinct from the standard conscientious objector claims of religious free exercise. In the years since, scholars such as Notre Dames Richard Garnett have argued for a principle of freedom of the church and the recognition of plural claims of jurisdiction and authority between church and state in American constitutional law.

The problem, though, was that the freedom of the church seemed ill-fitting in American law, notwithstanding a few cases involving disputes over church property or governance that seemed to point toward something like church autonomy. Maybe it made sense to invoke the freedom of the church in disputes over the jurisdiction of ecclesiastical courts or the benefit of clergy in medieval England, but surely (the story went) the Reformation and modern liberalism dispensed with all that. Combine that with the ambient individualism of constitutional rights discourse, and the idea of freedom of the church looked anachronistic or outright dangerous.

The Courts decision in Our Lady of Guadalupe resolves this question and reaffirms a principle of church autonomy. As Justice Alito writes,

The metes and bounds of church autonomy will continue to be worked out in other contexts, and it may end up quite narrow in its application. Still, Our Lady of Guadalupe confirms John Courtney Murrays argument fifty years ago in We Hold These Truths that freedom of the church (refracted through the First Amendment) is part of the American constitutional order.

The recognition of a sphere of church autonomy in these cases continues a sort of judicial Peace of Westphalia settlement in our culture wars. Our Lady of Guadalupe and Little Sisters were the latest in a string of victories for religious freedom going back several years (including the Courts decision a week earlier in Espinoza v. Montana that religious schools could not be excluded from the benefits of a government program). The Court has given legal sanction to aspects of the sexual revolution, on the one hand, while protecting religious objectors, on the other hand, through judicial scrutiny under the free speech and free exercise rights of the First Amendmentsuch as the 2018 decisions in Masterpiece Cakeshop and NIFLA v. Becerra (a challenge by crisis pregnancy centers to a California abortion disclosure requirement).

How enduring the peace will be is an open question, one pressed by skeptics of liberalism on the right and progressives wielding anti-discrimination law on the left. If the settlement falters, one gets a sense of the alternative in the overbearing statism of the dissents by Justices Ginsburg (in Little Sisters) and Sotomayor (in Our Lady). Next term the Court will hear a case about a Catholic adoption agency in Philadelphia that was excluded from a foster care program because it declined to place children with same-sex couples. The Court may again expand the scope of free exercise protection there.

This year marks 850 years since the martyrdom of St. Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral amid a conflict with King Henry II over matters of ecclesiastical jurisdiction. As Harold Berman wrote in Law and Revolution (1983) about the legacy of the Becket conflict, There is in most countries of the West not only a residual conflict of jurisdictions and of laws but also a constitutional limitation upon the power of the state to control spiritual values. The Supreme Court has reaffirmed for now an American version of libertas ecclesiae, but the long history of disputes over the freedom of the church is one of contingent triumphs.

Michael P. Moreland is University Professor of Law and Religion and Director of the Eleanor H. McCullen Center for Law, Religion, and Public Policy at Villanova University.

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Defending the Freedom of the Church | Michael P. Moreland - First Things

Freedom, Limitations, and Lifestyles – The Independent | News Events Opinion More – The Independent | SUindependent.com

To some freedom means doing what they want, when they want, and how they want with little if any regard for others. To others, it means freedom to do what they want, when they want, and how they want as long as those actions dont harm others.

As I sat in my home on July 4th, 2020 during the COVID pandemic, my mind started down rabbit holes regarding the concept of freedomwhat it means to me and what it seems to mean to others. Of course, all words are just concepts that people have in their minds and thus have given their own meaning, not without some standard definition but even that can be confusing.

Merriam Webster has defined freedom but apparently its not that simple for them either. Generally, most word definitions are brief but not with freedom. Websters definition includes the absence of necessity, coercion, or constraint in choice or action and the quality or state of being exempt or released usually from something onerous as in freedom from care or responsibility. They add that freedom has a broad range of applications from total absence to restraint to merely a sense of not being unduly hampered or frustrated. So, there you go. All clear, right?

To some freedom means doing what they want, when they want, and how they want with little if any regard for others. To others, it means freedom to do what they want, when they want, and how they want as long as those actions dont harm others. But even that is tricky. What does harm mean? In this age of mask-wearing (or not), many define harm as when someone gives them the coronavirus by not taking proper precautions.

Many years ago we had passionate arguments over smoking. Smokers wanted the freedom to smoke wherever and whenever they chose because that was their business and no one should tell them otherwise. Then the science about the harm of second-hand smoke to others came to light. The issue got a little clearer but no less testy. Its not just about the smoker; its about those around the smoker too and their rights, i.e, freedom to maintain their health.

Freedom is even limited when it comes to what I can do in my own home since if Im doing something illegal my freedom to do it would be denied if I were discovered. When we live in close quarters, some things we do in our own homes even if legal may have a negative effect on the freedoms of those close to us who may want to enjoy peace and quiet, something they feel is part of their freedom to enjoy life while others feel freedom allows them to be rowdy and noisy. The point is that freedom is a very complicated thing and cannot be easily forced into a political box of rhetorical sound bites.

Freedom is one of those things that depend on whose ox is getting gored, as they say. Our nations founders fought for freedoma freedom that today many are using in their rhetoricbut they were not opposed to taking away the freedom of the black people, those who were supporting their comfortable lifestyles through hard labor. The founders were not willing to fight for those humans freedoms because they felt it would tear this country apart (and for many affect their own economic position). Yet they left us with a legacy that is now tearing us apart. So much for gaining ground and so much for defining what freedom really means in the context of this nation and its history. Native Americans and their lack of freedom during this nations history serves as another example of freedom denied. Often freedom only extends to the end of ones nose: my freedom is good but yours not so much.

The right to possess guns is another freedom issue, but the poster child for freedom today has moved from guns to masksat least temporarily. Many folks who are complaining about wearing masks, want our economy opened, support market-based economics, and believe that business owners should be able to make their own business decisions. But these same folks are now telling businesses, You cant tell me to wear a mask while in your store. I would say to these folks that freedom is indeed tricky but please try to decide what your beliefs are because for many of us they appear very contradictory.

Fires that resulted from the 4th of July fireworks are an example of freedom run amok. This is evidence that our freedom has now morphed into license freedom that allows or is used with irresponsibility. Burning our landand at times ourselvesis not how to honor the freedom that so many fought to preserve.

So, yes, the word freedom is very tricky, but as citizens of this nation we must work to define this term in a way that works for all of us or the freedom of which we speak so highlyand often looselywill be lost. I will continue to muse about how nice it would be if freedom were used in a fair way to make it workable and healthy for all.

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Freedom, Limitations, and Lifestyles - The Independent | News Events Opinion More - The Independent | SUindependent.com

CPJ to Honor Amal Clooney With Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award – Voice of America

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) saidMonday Amal Clooney will be recognized for ongoing contributions to press freedom at an event where reporters from Bangladesh, Iran, Nigeria, and Russia willbe recognizedfor reporting despite arrests or threats of reprisal.

Like brave and committed journalists everywhere, CPJs honorees set out to report the news without fear or favor for the benefit of their communities, their country, and the world," CPJ executive director Joel Simon said in a prepared statement.

They understood that they would confront powerful forces, enemies of the truth, who would try to stop them from doing their work," he added. "What they did not foresee was COVID-19. The global pandemic has not only made their jobsmore difficult and dangerous;it has fueled a ferocious press freedom crackdown as autocratic leaders around the world suppress unwelcome news under the guise of protecting public health.

Clooney has spent years doing pro-bono representation for journalists faced with legal threats over their work, including Manila-based journalist Maria Ressa and Myanmar-based Reuters reportersWaLone and KyawSoeOo.

Ressa, a Princeton-educated Filipino American and chief executive of popular Philippines media outletRappler, is currently free on bail pending appeal of a June 15 cyber-libel conviction that many see as back-handed retaliationfor a string of articles critical of President Rodrigo Duterte.

Critics say the verdict, stemming from charges typically reserved for pornographers and stalkers, dovetails with Duterte's anti-fake news laws and wider press restrictions related to the country's coronavirus lockdown.

Reuters journalistsWaLone and KyawSoeOowalked free from a Myanmar prison in May 2019 after 500 days behind bars for violatingthe countrys Official Secrets Act. Clooney was on the defense team handling their case, which continues to raise questions about Myanmars progress towards democracy.

CPJ says the 2020 honorees include renowned Bangladesh photojournalist ShahidulAlam, who was beaten during his 102-day jail term for posting footage of Dhaka students protests to social media in 2018; Iranian freelance reporter MohammadMosaed, who has been repeatedly arrested for publishing investigations on corruption, embezzlement, labor issues, and anti-government protests; Nigeria'sDapoOlorunyomi, co-founder, CEO and publisher ofPremium Times, who has spent portions of his career in police detention or in hiding, and Russia's SvetlanaProkopyeva, a regional correspondent for Radio Svoboda, who is facing a six-year prison term and fines for justifying terrorism after reporting on the 2018 suicide bombing byaRussian teenager of an FSB security service office in the northwestern city of Arkhangelsk.

Radio Svoboda is a multiplatform alternative to Russian state-controlled media, providing audiences in the Russian Federation with informed and accurate news, analysis, and opinion. It is run by the Russian Service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, one of VOA'ssister networks.

The honorees will receive their awards at CPJs annual benefit gala on Nov. 19, where Clooney will be presented with the Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award forherextraordinary and sustained commitmentto press freedom.

Journalists in trouble have no better champion than Amal Clooney," said CPJ board chairperson Kathleen Carroll in a prepared statement. "A talented barrister, gifted negotiator, and powerful speaker, Clooney works tirelessly to free journalists unjustly targeted by despotic leaders using increasingly punitive laws to stifle reporting.

The Clooney Foundation for JusticesTrialWatchinitiative monitors trials of journalists worldwide and provides free legal representation for those in need.

Chaired by Open Society Foundations President Patrick Gaspard and hosted by veteran NBC broadcast journalist Lester Holt, this year's gala will be virtual due to COVID-19 safety restrictions.

The Gwen Ifill Award, is named for the groundbreaking Black journalist who covered the White House, Congress and national campaigns during three decades for The Washington Post, The New York Times, NBC and, most visibly at PBSwhere shewas the moderator and managing editor of the public affairs program Washington Week and the co-anchor and co-managing editor, with Judy Woodruff, of the nightly NewsHour.Ifilldied of uterine cancer in 2016.

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CPJ to Honor Amal Clooney With Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award - Voice of America