Field Journal

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Healing mental health wounds

Access to mental health care is lacking in rural India - especially for the marginalized - which is why The Banyan mental health service organization enlists local community women to help them help those in need.

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Poshan Maah – eat nutritious, eat local

September’s Poshan Maah (nutrition month) helps development professionals drive home the importance of eating locally-sourced, nourishing food to eradicate malnutrition through discussions and games.

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Reverse dowry – empowering or subjugation?

Though the practice of Barela tribesmen marrying women by paying a “bride price” – or reverse dowry – appears to be empowering for women, a development worker finds it is essentially “buying” brides.

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Food security improved by women’s groups in MP

Involving women self-help groups in the public distribution of food in Madhya Pradesh is strengthening food security, according to a development worker with Transform Rural India Foundation.

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Helping marginalised kids go to university

Led by a lifelong social worker, a small group of passionate, retired professionals in Karnataka is finding bright but marginalised children and tutoring them. Their goal is to get fifty kids into IIT.

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A bus driver now drives farm prosperity

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Meet Amol Kadam, a bus driver who is helping his village with farming.

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Perils of anganwadi worker not showing up for work

A childcare worker in an anganwadi is a vital part of a village - ensuring the health and growth of rural children. A young development professional observes the consequences when there is no worker for months.

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An educator and his rural school with a difference

The likes of this advocate-turned-educator who offers quality education to rural children and works for rural development, are an inspiration for society’s progress, says this young development professional.

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Where are women in local government?

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Dismayed by seeing very few women in district-level government prompts two young development professionals to find out why.

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No longer walking 2km to fetch dirty water

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When government water schemes do not reach two tribal villages of Rajasthan, the women of Chittorgarh take matters into their own hands and install a treatment plant and a piped water supply system.

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A lighthouse in the gloomy world of cooperatives

When cooperatives had gone out of fashion, a Keralan cooperative society found a way to keep growing by listening to customers and evolving to fit their needs, as two graduates passionate about rural development explain.

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How the youth built and build India

Contrary to the myth that youth are self-absorbed, many young women and men not only fought for Independence but in the decades that followed have given up well paying jobs to work on India's development - which the youth of today carry forward.

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The infrastructure woes of government offices

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While governments spend large sums of money to build swanky administrative offices, no one seems to give a thought about their upkeep and the necessary basic facilities for a conducive work environment.

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Life-changing Sunderbans trip creates SOUL

A weekend trip to the remote and underdeveloped G-Plot island prompts a corporate executive to quit his job and start SOUL - dedicated to improving the life of the Adivasis living there, as reported by a SOUL volunteer.

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How do tribal households view government interventions?

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Contrary to general opinion that tribes are a neglected lot, they are not only aware of the various government schemes for their welfare but are happy about the implementation.

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Our water, our management

It is vital to tap the local community - get them involved - when implementing piped-water supply schemes through the Jal Jeevan Mission, as the lessons from Panna, MP prove.

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Mud houses that help keep the cool

While the monsoon brings relief from this summer’s soaring temperatures to some, development worker Jyoti Rajput looks at how Rajasthani tribes beat the heat in their mud houses.

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The vanishing art of weaving bamboo baskets

A couple struggling to earn money by weaving bamboo baskets – their traditional livelihood – makes a development management student wonder if it’s wrong to expect some support from the government.

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Why do women revert to the chulha despite Ujjwala Yojana?

Some rural women still do not use cooking gas because it is not affordable. A development student feels that the government needs a bottom-up approach in designing welfare schemes.

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The voice of a labourer

A villager who raises his voice for labourers’ rights and juggles multiple jobs to make a living inspires a development management student to be courageous and just. The lead image shows Grishma Kajbaje and her friend during a field visit.