This fellowship was supported by Jamshedji Tata Trust
February 10, 2011 – April 10, 2011
Millions of people are linked to forests, some derive their livelihoods from them, others call them home. The forests, however, are subjected to continuous exploitation due to varied reasons beyond the realm of sustenance, rendering the forest dwellers most vulnerable.
To protect these communities against harassment, eviction, displacement and encroachment, the Forest Rights Act was introduced in December 2006. For the first time in history, these villagers got recognition of their rights to their homeland and awarded the responsibility of managing the forests and forest resources.
Industry and the state, however, continue to have a vested interest in forests. Corporates entice the state with their ambitious proposals and dreams of development, fell the forests, dig out the minerals and leave without reclamation displacing the entire forest community.
Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) offers a media fellowship to Indian journalists to study, investigate and report on the implementation, violation and drawbacks of the act and its fallout on the forest dwelling communities.
Selection procedure
Applications accompanied by their resumes, samples of work and letter of support from their editors were received from across the country. A total of 54 applications were received out of which 39 were shortlisted for final selection.
A jury comprising of legal experts and senior media professionals was constituted to select the fellows. The jury members were
* Mr Sanjay Upadhyay: Managing Partner, Enviro Legal Defense Firm, NOIDA
* Mr Manish Mitta: Senior Editor -Legal, Times of India, Delhi
* Mr Pankaj Pachauri: Senior Desk Editor (Hindi) - NDTV, Delhi
* Ms Sunita Narain: Director, CSE
* Ms Lata Jishnu, Senior Editor, Down To Earth
* Mr Richard Mahapatra, Senior Editor, Down To Earth
The parameters for assessing the candidates included originality of ideas; grasp of issues covered; relevance of the issues covered; range of the issues covered; analytical skills; writing skills; and initiative. The jury was requested to finalise the selection of journalists for the fellowship, enrich proposed story ideas with fresh perspectives and suggest ways to make future fellowships more challenging and meaningful.
The jury selected the 12 most promising candidates for awarding the fellowship grant. The fellows are given from february 10 - April 2011 for working on their subjects. We present to you the fellows and their proposals.
The reports and articles published by our fellows are available as an exposé of the ground reality of the plans.
Fellows
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Abhijeet Anand Abhijeet will research on and publish a series of articles in The Statesman. Concentrating on Kandhamal and Kalahandi districts, he will report on a) Changes in the way of functioning of the forest department after the act was rolled out. See the articles |
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Aloka As per Aloka's proposal, she will research on and publish a series of articles in Nai Dunia. Concentrating on Khuti-Nidhiya, Torpa, Marcha, Kunda; Gumla-Raideh Block; Lohardagah Kudu; Chatra-Simaria; Hazaribag-Badkagaon; Palamu-Betla Areas, she will report on a) Land rights and allotment of land under various Acts and regulations The jury would also like her to report on (a) the tenancy laws in the state and (b) the connection between scheduled areas governance and forest areas governance. See the articles |
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Anil S Anil will research on and publish a series of articles in The New Indian Express. Concentrating on tribes and regions like Irula, Muduga, Kurumba and Malapandaram, he would cover a) Promised land to the tribal families inside the forested areas- status Besides these, the jury would also like him to write a story on ecological fragile land issues. See the articles |
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Atul Kumar Singh Atul will research on and publish a series of articles in Hindustan. a) The Act’s negative impacts – especially on nomadic tribes. The jury would like to see reports from Madhya Pradesh, Gujrat and South Rajasthan. See the articles
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Baba Mayaram As per Baba's proposal, he will research on and publish a series of articles in Daily Chhattisgarh. He would be reporting, concentrating on Hoshangabad, Harda and Betul districts about a) The individual and community rights allotted to tribals and the forest dwellers under the Act -- status The jury also suggested him to cover villages in Chhattisgarh, as there are a lot of similar issues. See the articles userfiles/Report 1- Vanbhoomi se Bedakhal.pdf userfiles/Report 2- Patte nahi milne se_.pdf userfiles/Report 3- Jangal hamara maika_.pdf |
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G Srinivas As per Srinivas' proposal, he will research on and publish a series of articles in Dhimsa highlighting the issues that he has listed concentrating on Srikakulam, Vishakapatnam, Vizianagaram and East Godavari Districts of A.P a) Discrepancy in constitution of FRC. Besides these areas of research, the jury would also like him to do a series on the Pollavaram issue. See the articles userfiles/Article on FRA violations in Development Projects - March 12 - Eenadu Daily.pdf |
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Jupinderjit Singh As per Jupinderjit's proposal, he will research on and publish a series of articles in The Tribune, highlighting the issues that he has listed in Jammu and Kashmir
a) Non implementation of FRA affecting Gujjars and Bakkarwals. See the articles userfiles/JK plus, July 13, 2011.jpg |
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Rajnish Gambhir Rajnish will research on and publish a series of articles in Chauthi Duniya among other dailies. He plans to concentrate on Dudhwa National Park and write about
a) The displacement issues under the act. Relocation and resettlement under the act. Apart from that, the jury would also like him to look at the “fixed land demand” issues (a term for village). See the articles userfiles/18 april amar ujala surama ne dekhye raha.jpg |
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Rajkumar Robindro As Rajkumar's proposal, he will research on and broadcast a series of stories in Doordarshan Kendra. He will be concentrating on Ukhrul and Chandel districts in Manipur about
a) The importance and urgency of implementing the Forest Rights Act, 2006 in the state of Manipur. |
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![]() Shalini Singh
Senior Reporter The Hindustan Times New Delhi- Shalini will research on and publish a series of articles in The Hindustan Times highlighting the following
a) Taking Vedanta and POSCO projects as models where the tribals won their rights over power giants using FRA- See the articles
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Soma Basu
Staff Reporter The Statesman,Kolkata West Bengal Soma will research on and publish a series of articles in The Statesman. Concentrating on West Midnapor and North Bengal forest dwelling tribes
North Bengal a) Illegalities and the abnormalities in the implementation of the FRA
b) The harassment the tribals are subjected to. c) Illegal felling of trees and timber smuggling, and illegal way of settling land claims. d) The 90 million dollars World Bank – GEF funded India eco-development project a scam. e) Indigenous people dispersed and with them loss of language, culture and conversational practise of sustenance.
South Bengal
a) Widespread migration due to maoist migration. Tribals move towards fringes where they are susceptible to exploitation.
b) Patta distribution illegal. c) Illegal mining. Besides these, the jury would also like her to write a critic on the left party's achievements of implementation of FRA in the light of the upcoming elections.
See the articles
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| Attachment | Size |
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| Act.pdf | 69.76 KB |
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