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Pakistan’s ‘Mainstreaming’ Jihadis Vinay Kaura, Aparna Pande The emergence of the religious right-wing as a formidable political force in Pakistan seems to be an outcome of direct and indirect patron- age of the dominant military over the years. Ever since the creation of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan in 1947, the military establishment has formed a quasi alliance with the conservative religious elements who define a strongly Islamic identity for the country. The alliance has provided Islamism with regional perspectives and encouraged it to exploit the concept of jihad. This trend found its most obvious man- ifestation through the Afghan War. Due to the centrality of Islam in Pakistan’s national identity, secular leaders and groups find it extreme- ly difficult to create a national consensus against groups that describe themselves as soldiers of Islam. Using two case studies, the article ar- gues that political survival of both the military and the radical Islamist parties is based on their tacit understanding. It contends that without de-radicalisation of jihadis, the efforts to ‘mainstream’ them through the electoral process have huge implications for Pakistan’s political sys- tem as well as for prospects of regional peace. Keywords: Islamist, Jihadist, Red Mosque, Taliban, blasphemy, ISI, TLP, Musharraf, Afghanistan Introduction In the last two decades, the relationship between the Islamic faith and political power has emerged as an interesting field of political anal- ysis. Particularly after the revival of the Taliban and the rise of ISIS, Author. Article. Central European Journal of International and Security Studies 14, no. 4: 51–73. -
Annual Report (April 1, 2008 - March 31, 2009)
PRESS COUNCIL OF INDIA Annual Report (April 1, 2008 - March 31, 2009) New Delhi 151 Printed at : Bengal Offset Works, 335, Khajoor Road, Karol Bagh, New Delhi-110 005 Press Council of India Soochna Bhawan, 8, CGO Complex, Lodhi Road, New Delhi-110003 Chairman: Mr. Justice G. N. Ray Editors of Indian Languages Newspapers (Clause (A) of Sub-Section (3) of Section 5) NAME ORGANIZATION NOMINATED BY NEWSPAPER Shri Vishnu Nagar Editors Guild of India, All India Nai Duniya, Newspaper Editors’ Conference, New Delhi Hindi Samachar Patra Sammelan Shri Uttam Chandra Sharma All India Newspaper Editors’ Muzaffarnagar Conference, Editors Guild of India, Bulletin, Hindi Samachar Patra Sammelan Uttar Pradesh Shri Vijay Kumar Chopra All India Newspaper Editors’ Filmi Duniya, Conference, Editors Guild of India, Delhi Hindi Samachar Patra Sammelan Shri Sheetla Singh Hindi Samachar Patra Sammelan, Janmorcha, All India Newspaper Editors’ Uttar Pradesh Conference, Editors Guild of India Ms. Suman Gupta Hindi Samachar Patra Sammelan, Saryu Tat Se, All India Newspaper Editors’ Uttar Pradesh Conference, Editors Guild of India Editors of English Newspapers (Clause (A) of Sub-Section (3) of Section 5) Shri Yogesh Chandra Halan Editors Guild of India, All India Asian Defence News, Newspaper Editors’ Conference, New Delhi Hindi Samachar Patra Sammelan Working Journalists other than Editors (Clause (A) of Sub-Section (3) of Section 5) Shri K. Sreenivas Reddy Indian Journalists Union, Working Visalaandhra, News Cameramen’s Association, Andhra Pradesh Press Association Shri Mihir Gangopadhyay Indian Journalists Union, Press Freelancer, (Ganguly) Association, Working News Bartaman, Cameramen’s Association West Bengal Shri M.K. Ajith Kumar Press Association, Working News Mathrubhumi, Cameramen’s Association, New Delhi Indian Journalists Union Shri Joginder Chawla Working News Cameramen’s Freelancer Association, Press Association, Indian Journalists Union Shri G. -
Caring for the Hindu Patient
Caring for the Hindu Patient Most Hindus in Britain come from Gujarat, in western India, or from east Africa. However, Hindus divide into different sects whose beliefs and philosophies are quite different and practices may vary. SIGNIFICANT TERMS KARMA - Hindu doctrine teaching that what the individual does in this life will affect him in the next. DHARMA - Living of a good and virtuous life which frees the soul from the cycle of death and rebirth. AYURVEDA - Well-defined philosophy of life advocating regular diet, sleep, defecation, cleanliness of body and clothing, as well as moderation in physical exercise and sexual indulgence. A Hindu patient may adhere to some aspects of this and want to discuss his/her care accordingly. BRAHMIN - The highest Hindu caste from which the PANDIT (priest) is chosen. HARIJAN - Where the Hindu caste system still has a hold this is the lowest Hindu caste (untouchables). Menstruating women and mourners can be seen as ritually unclean and therefore untouchable. MANDIR - Hindu Temple. BHAGAVAD GITA - Chief of the Hindu holy books. SPECIAL MODESTY - Is very important. Hindu women can be very reluctant to undress for CONSIDERATIONS examination. Female doctors for female patients wherever possible, and same- sex nursing is preferred. Disregard of modesty can cause extreme distress. Sensitivity to it can make communication with the patient very much easier. Discomfort or pain in the genito-urinary or bowel areas is often not mentioned, especially if a spouse is present. This can raise sensitive nursing issues which need to be carefully addressed. HYGIENE - Hindus need running water, or a jug, in the same room as a toilet. -
MEDIA and PUBLIC POLICY: an Analysis on the Information Dissemination of National Policy by Mainstream Media 1 2 S
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR INNOVATIVE RESEARCH IN MULTIDISCIPLINARY FIELD ISSN – 2455-0620 Volume - 2, Issue - 8, Aug - 2016 MEDIA AND PUBLIC POLICY: An Analysis on the information dissemination of national policy by mainstream media 1 2 S. Sree Govind Baratwaj , R.Venkatesh Aravindh 1. Research Scholar, Dept of Journalism & Mass Communication, Periyar University,Salem, TN, India. Email - [email protected] 2. Research Scholar, Dept of Journalism & Mass Communication, Periyar University,Salem TN, India. Email - [email protected] Abstract Government of India has lead various national schemes for uplifting the livelihood of all people. One major concern for a developing country like India is creating suitable employment opportunities and training for skill development to all citizens. ‘Make in India’ is an initiative of the government to encourage multinational, as well as domestic, companies to manufacture their products in India, the major objective behind it is to focus on job creation and skill enhancement in twenty-five sectors of the economy. In order to fulfill this national initiative, it is important for all employable citizens of the country to understand how the scheme works and how the know-how to be industry ready while implementing the scheme. This knowledge transfer could be achieved only when the government takes all initiatives to spread the awareness to the employable citizens. This paper takes a qualitative content approach to investigate how government has used the regional newspapers of Tamil Nadu to transfer the idea behind ‘Make in India’ scheme work for the betterment of the country. Keywords: Indian National Policies, Regional Newspapers, Policy Dissemination, Public Reach, Make in India. -
REPRESENTATION of VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN in INDIAN PRINT MEDIA: a COMARATIVE ANALYSIS Rupsayar Das Student, M.A
Students’ Research Global Media Journal – Indian Edition/ISSN 2249-5835 Sponsored by the University of Calcutta/ www.caluniv.ac.in Summer Issue / June 2012 Vol. 3/No.1 REPRESENTATION OF VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN IN INDIAN PRINT MEDIA: A COMARATIVE ANALYSIS Rupsayar Das Student, M.A. Second Year Department of Journalism and Mass Communication University of Calcutta,India Email: [email protected] Abstract: This study aims at investigating print news discourses on a relatively recent act of violence perpetrated on women in India, which evoked a nation-wide non-violent protest, popularly known as „The Pink Chaddi‟ Campaign, 2009. We considered some of the top English national and local daily newspapers (online editions) for analyses; using advanced computer-assisted qualitative data analysis software (CAQDAS) called Leximancer v3.5. We aimed to explore the frames in the news discourse through intra-media analyses, and perform comparative inter-media analyses between national- and local newspaper corpora. The „concept maps‟ produced by Leximancer v3.5, in the unsupervised-mode, threw light on the nature of the news discourse on the Campaign. We found slight evidence that some of the newspapers tried to downplay the VAW and took a detour towards political blame-game. These results somewhat reflected the results of Caputi et al. (1992), O‟Connor (2002) and Wetschanow (2003). Keywords: „The Pink Chaddi‟ Campaign, CAQDAS, Leximancer v 3.5, Concept Maps, News Frames, News Discourse Introduction It is true that we live in the 21st century, but even to this date, social malice and malpractices are still very much prevalent which are reminiscent of the past. -
Indian Leaders Programme 2013 Participants
PARTICIPANTES PROGRAMA LÍDERES INDIOS 2013 INDIAN LEADERS PROGRAMME 2013 PARTICIPANTS FUNDACIÓN SPAIN CONSEJO INDIA ESPAÑA COUNCIL INDIA FOUNDATION PARTICIPANTES / PARTICIPANTS that started Tehelka.com. When and in 2013, the Italian Ernest Editor and Lead Anchor at ET NOW Tehelka was forced to close Hemingway Lignano Sabbiadoro & NDTV Profi t. Shaili anchored down by the government after Award for journalism across print, the 9 pm primetime slots and its seminal story on defence internet and broadcast media. She conducted exclusive interviews of corruption, she was one of four lives in Delhi and has two sons. people like Warren Bu ett, George people who stayed on to fi ght and Soros, Deutsche Bank CEO Anshu articulate Tehelka’s vision and Jain, PepsiCo’s boss Indra Nooyi, relaunch it as a national weekly. Microsoft’s CEO Steve Ballmer and more. Shoma has written extensively on several areas of confl ict In 2012, Shaili received India’s in India – people vs State; the principal journalism honour The Ms. Shoma Chaudhury Maoist insurgency, the Muslim Ramnath Goenka Award for best in Managing Editor question, and issues of capitalist business journalism. She also won TEHELKA development and land grab. the News Television Award for She has won several awards, the Best Reporter in India in 2007 Shoma Chaudhury is Managing including the Ramnath Goenka and later in 2008, her business- Editor, Tehelka, a weekly Award and the Chameli Devi Ms. Shaili Chopra golf show Business on Course, newsmagazine widely respected Award for the most outstanding Senior Editor won the Best Show Award. She for its investigative and public woman journalist in 2009. -
NEWS PAPERS - UPDATED on 02-03-2019 Publishing Davp Empanelled Circulation SL
Information & Public Relations Department EMPANELLED NEWS PAPERS - UPDATED ON 02-03-2019 Publishing Davp Empanelled Circulation SL. NO News Paper Circulation Edition Place Valid Upto Language Rate by I&PRD Certificate 1 Aaj Jamsedpur Hindi 10288 12.47 Inside Jharkhand Yes 01.01.19 to 31.12.19 CA 2 Aaj Patna Hindi 135794 64.36 Outside Jharkhand Yes 01.01.19 to 31.12.19 ABC 3 Aaj Ranchi Hindi 57402 30.80 Inside Jharkhand Yes 01.01.19 to 31.12.19 ABC 4 Amar Ujala Allahabad Hindi 158005 74.89 Outside Jharkhand Yes 01.01.19 to 31.12.19 ABC 5 Amar Ujala Agra Hindi 235127 111.44 Outside Jharkhand Yes 09-03-2019 ABC 6 Amar Ujala Delhi Hindi 199379 94.50 Outside Jharkhand Yes 09-03-2019 ABC 7 Amar Ujala Dehradun Hindi 161574 76.58 Outside Jharkhand Yes 09-03-2019 ABC 8 Amar Ujala Meerut Hindi 236856 112.26 Outside Jharkhand Yes 09-03-2019 ABC 9 Amar Ujala Varanasi Hindi 278266 131.89 Outside Jharkhand Yes 09-03-2019 ABC 10 Asian Age Kolkata English 42633 25.85 Outside Jharkhand Yes 01.01.19 to 31.12.19 CA 11 Avenue Mail Jamsedpur English 16161 16.87 Inside Jharkhand Yes 01.01.19 to 31.12.19 CA 12 Awami News Ranchi Urdu 96220 47.40 Inside Jharkhand Yes 01.01.19 to 31.12.19 RNI 13 Awaz Dhanbad Hindi 74057 35.55 Inside Jharkhand Yes 01.01.19 to 31.12.19 RNI 14 Anadabazar Patrika Kolkata Bengali 852210 403.93 Outside Jharkhand Yes 01.01.19 to 31.12.19 ABC 15 Azad Sipahi Jharkhand Hindi 92076 47.40 Inside Jharkhand Yes 31-07-2020 RNI 16 Akhbar E Mashriq Ranchi Urdu 15344 16.87 Inside Jharkhand Yes 31-07-2020 CA 17 Bihar Observer Dhanbad Hindi 39575 -
A Content Analysis of the Media Coverage for Rajya Sabha Election 2020 in Karnataka: Comparative Study of ‘Vijaya Vani’ and ‘The Times of India’
International Journal of Electronics and Communication Engineering (IJECE) ISSN(P): 2278-9901; ISSN(E): 2278-991X Vol. 9, Issue 5, Jul–Dec 2020; 49–56 © IASET A CONTENT ANALYSIS OF THE MEDIA COVERAGE FOR RAJYA SABHA ELECTION 2020 IN KARNATAKA: COMPARATIVE STUDY OF ‘VIJAYA VANI’ AND ‘THE TIMES OF INDIA’ Reethu Varna P & Mary Binu Assistant Professor Media Studies, Garden City University, India ABSTRACT Election is one of the most important events in a democracy and it’s no different in the largest democracy of the World. Citizens are given the right to votes for one particular political candidate they like and bring them to power. The voting behavior has drastically changed over years due to the influence of media. Elections go a long way in making a democracy successful; they reflect political culture and people’s political behavior. Elections are intellectual exercise that helps people to remain vigilant of the activities of the government. Democracy is about the power of citizen however; the powerful media has changed the way information is given to the public during an election. Instead of providing right information to voters and marshaling change, the press has taken the role of an influencer. This study compares and analyses the news coverage of Rajya Sabha election 2020 campaigns in two leading newspapers in Bangalore during the pre-election session. The study will also focus on the amount of space allotted for election coverage. The content analysis of this publication will be analyzed to check if any publication is biased towards a particular political candidate or a party or if it is giving any excessive information either by news coverage or photographs. -
Comparing Written Indian Englishes with the New Corpus of Regional Indian Newspaper Englishes (CORINNE)
ICAME Journal, Volume 45, 2021, DOI: 10.2478/icame-2021-0006 Comparing written Indian Englishes with the new Corpus of Regional Indian Newspaper Englishes (CORINNE) Asya Yurchenko, Sven Leuckert and Claudia Lange Technische Universität Dresden Abstract This article introduces the new Corpus of Regional Indian Newspaper Englishes (CORINNE). The current version of CORINNE contains news and other text types from regional Indian newspapers published between 2015 and 2020, cov- ering 13 states and regions so far. The corpus complements previous corpora, such as the Indian component of the International Corpus of English (ICE) as well as the Indian section of the South Asian Varieties of English (SAVE) cor- pus, by giving researchers the opportunity to analyse and compare regional (written) Englishes in India. In the first sections of the paper we discuss the rationale for creating CORINNE as well as the development of the corpus. We stress the potential of CORINNE and go into detail about selection criteria for the inclusion of news- papers as well as corpus compilation and the current word count. In order to show the potential of the corpus, the paper presents a case study of ‘intrusive as’, a syntactic feature that has made its way into formal registers of Indian English. Based on two subcorpora covering newspapers from Tamil Nadu and Uttarakhand, we compare frequencies and usage patterns of call (as) and term (as). The case study lends further weight to the hypothesis that the presence or absence of a quotative in the majority language spoken in an Indian state has an impact on the frequency of ‘intrusive as’. -
Effective Aug 06, 2019
Effective Aug 06, 2019 Classified Display Classified Run on Line Single Column Advt (ROL) Advt Centre Publication Edition SAP Code Base Add-on Base Add-on EL Base EL Add-on Ahmedabad The Times of India THE TIMES OF INDIA - AHMEDABAD TOIA 335 151 650 650 130 130 Ahmedabad The Times of India THE TIMES OF INDIA - AHMEDABAD - BARODA BAR 116 47 276 105 55 21 Ahmedabad The Times of India THE TIMES OF INDIA - AHMEDABAD - RAJKOT RAJK 40 32 155 47 31 9 Ahmedabad The Times of India THE TIMES OF INDIA - AHMEDABAD - SURAT SUR 75 35 125 25 125 25 Ahmedabad The Times of India SUNDAY TIMES OF INDIA - AHMEDABAD STOIA 335 151 650 650 130 130 Ahmedabad The Times of India SURAT TIMES SRT 65 30 115 48 23 10 Ahmedabad The Economic Times THE ECONOMIC TIMES - AHMEDABAD ETA 125 80 270 130 54 26 Ahmedabad Navgujarat Samay NAVGUJARAT SAMAY - AHMEDABAD NGAHM 73 73 140 10 28 2 Bangalore The Times of India THE TIMES OF INDIA - BANGALORE TOIBG 650 247 1390 1235 278 247 Bangalore The Times of India THE TIMES OF INDIA - MANGALORE MANG 20 10 65 40 13 8 Bangalore The Times of India THE TIMES OF INDIA - MYSORE MYS 20 10 65 40 13 8 Bangalore The Times of India THE TIMES OF INDIA - BANGALORE @ HUBLI HUB 20 10 65 40 13 8 Bangalore The Times of India SUNDAY CL. PULLOUT-NON MATRI-BANGALORE STOIBG 650 247 1390 1235 278 247 Bangalore The Economic Times THE ECONOMIC TIMES - BANGALORE ETBG 75 35 250 150 50 30 Bangalore Mirror BANGALORE MIRROR -BROADSHEET MRBG 95 50 500 295 100 59 Bangalore Vijay Karnataka VIJAY KARNATAKA - BAGALKOT EDITION VKBAG 50 40 Bangalore Vijay Karnataka -
Media Accreditation Index
LOK SABHA PRESS GALLERY PASSES ISSUED TO ACCREDITED MEDIA PERSONS - 2020 Sl.No. Name Agency / Organisation Name 1. Ashok Singhal Aaj Tak 2. Manjeet Singh Negi Aaj Tak 3. Rajib Chakraborty Aajkaal 4. M Krishna ABN Andhrajyoti TV 5. Ashish Kumar Singh ABP News 6. Pranay Upadhyaya ABP News 7. Prashant ABP News 8. Jagmohan Singh AIR (B) 9. Manohar Singh Rawat AIR (B) 10. Pankaj Pati Pathak AIR (B) 11. Pramod Kumar AIR (B) 12. Puneet Bhardwaj AIR (B) 13. Rashmi Kukreti AIR (B) 14. Anand Kumar AIR (News) 15. Anupam Mishra AIR (News) 16. Diwakar AIR (News) 17. Ira Joshi AIR (News) 18. M Naseem Naqvi AIR (News) 19. Mattu J P Singh AIR (News) 20. Souvagya Kumar Kar AIR (News) 21. Sanjay Rai Aj 22. Ram Narayan Mohapatra Ajikali 23. Andalib Akhter Akhbar-e-Mashriq 24. Hemant Rastogi Amar Ujala 25. Himanshu Kumar Mishra Amar Ujala 26. Vinod Agnihotri Amar Ujala 27. Dinesh Sharma Amrit Prabhat 28. Agni Roy Ananda Bazar Patrika 29. Diganta Bandopadhyay Ananda Bazar Patrika 30. Anamitra Sengupta Ananda Bazar Patrika 31. Naveen Kapoor ANI 32. Sanjiv Prakash ANI 33. Surinder Kapoor ANI 34. Animesh Singh Asian Age 35. Prasanth P R Asianet News 36. Asish Gupta Asomiya Pratidin 37. Kalyan Barooah Assam Tribune 38. Murshid Karim Bandematram 39. Samriddha Dutta Bartaman 40. Sandip Swarnakar Bartaman 41. K R Srivats Business Line 42. Shishir Sinha Business Line 43. Vijay Kumar Cartographic News Service 44. Shahid K Abbas Cogencis 45. Upma Dagga Parth Daily Ajit 46. Jagjit Singh Dardi Daily Charhdikala 47. B S Luthra Daily Educator 48. -
Currency Daily Report for 22 July 2016
Currency Daily Report for 22nd July 2016 Commentary:- Global Equity Market Movement on 21/07/2016 Rupee opened marginally lower Indices LCP PCP %change at 67.22/USD. Despite of selling in ASIA domestic equity market we NIFTY 8510 8566 -0.65 witnessed rupee appreciating. Thus to end the day rupee ended with a SENSEX 27711 27916 -0.74 gain of 3 paisa at 67.17/USD. NIKKEI 16810 16682 0.77 HANGSENG 22000 21882 0.54 NIFTY opened on a positive note SHANGHAI 3039 3028 0.37 and even since opening level we KOSPI 2012 2015 -0.16 witnessed a selling pressure AMERICA continuing till the market closes. DJIA 18517 18595 -0.42 Thus to end the session, NIFTY NASDAQ 5074 5090 -0.31 closed with a loss of 56 points at S&P500 2165 2173 -0.36 8510 levels. EUROPE CAC 4376 4380 -0.08 FIIs were net buyer on last DAX 10156 10142 0.14 trading session for Rs 420.22 cr. FTSE 6700 6729 -0.43 USDINR spot is expected to trade in a range of 67 to * Indian Markets remained closed on 07/03/2016. 67.30/USD levels. Veracity. Research Currency Daily Report for 22nd July 2016 Pivot Table Future S3 S2 S1 PIVOT R1 R2 R3 (July16) USD/INR 67.07 67.1275 67.175 67.235 67.28 67.3375 67.385 EUR/INR 73.64 73.84 73.94 74.14 74.24 74.44 74.54 GBP/INR 87.4775 87.97 88.2575 88.75 89.0375 89.53 89.8175 JPY/INR 62.485 62.75 62.9625 63.2275 63.44 63.705 63.9175 Economic Data Releases on 22nd July, 2016 Time Data Releases For Today Forecast Previous Implications 2:00pm Manufacturing PMI (GBP) Actual > Forecast = Good For 47.8 52.1 Currency 2:00pm Services PMI (GBP) Actual > Forecast = Good For 48.9 52.3 Currency Veracity.