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3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
Academics and government officials from Africa visited Buenos Aires (Argentina) between October 31st and November 7th, 2016, to discuss and interact with high level public officials in the Executive and Legislative branches and the National Audit Office as well as with academics, media and civil society organizations aimed at working on transparency and accountability.
ELLA Programme/CIPPEC/Rodrigo de la Fuente
Hold Secret Service Accountable! Director Cheatle Must Resign! Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle's failure to protect former President Trump led to a catastrophic attack. Civilians were more aware of the danger than the official security detail, resulting in multiple injuries. Blood is on Cheatle’s hands! Call for Congress to force Director Cheatle’s resignation and maintain oversight of the FBI investigation! Act Now! Learn more at: www.actforamerica.org/act-now/Force-Secret-Service-Dir-Ki...
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
…for the award-winning PW multimedia learning programme Account Ability. He got some quizzical looks from people who’d studied the programme and knew they’d seen him somewhere.
Academics and government officials from Africa visited Buenos Aires (Argentina) between October 31st and November 7th, 2016, to discuss and interact with high level public officials in the Executive and Legislative branches and the National Audit Office as well as with academics, media and civil society organizations aimed at working on transparency and accountability.
Photo: ELLA Programme/CIPPEC/Rodrigo de la Fuente
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
Naib Qasid, Cash Messneger Jobs In National Accountability Bureau Multan
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thejobs.pk/clerical-and-assistants/jobs-in-national-accou...
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NATIONALSTUD£N'I'S' UNION OF INnI A .
Towards an active, elfectlva, accountable JNUSU.
The defeats and victories ofthe fellows at the top aren't alwayscc--t o7 defeats and victories for the fellows at the bottom -Bertolt Brecht.
There Is no shortage of political rhetoric In JNU. It reaches a crescendo dur1ng the JNUSU elections. However, in this.
combination of sound and fury, one simple, basic thing gets,lost-that the student's union is a body that belongs to thestudents, and not to a handful of office-bearers or their political masters. That the strength (or dignity) of the union lies Inthe collective will of the students, not in the political connections Ol" clout of Its 'leaders'.Choosing your union representative is really a steP towards the kind ofcampus you want: Itis amplydear that In this system, the interest of the government I state I policy-makers are antithetical to that of the commonpeople. This extends Into education as well. The interests of the university administration Is in pushing the pro~lmperlalist,anti-people agenda of the state -to make the campus market-oriented, making It Inaccessible to the poor or the backwardmasses; to use education to reinforce the status quo, rather than question it. The whole point In having a union is tocollectively resist the machinations of an authority that pushes an anti-student agenda. And the only way to do it is toconfront the administration with the collective strength of the students, rather than keeping movements restricted to tokendemonstrations and Individual negotiations by union representatives. SO, an effective, accountable union will not only needto be for the students, It will need to be of and by the students as well..
Significantly, the way students' politics Is practiced by the student wing of various parllat,:nentary parties is exactlythe opposite of this. No matter what the rhetoric, left (rather, Offidal Left), right or centre-what is played out on theground Is just an extension oftheir status-quolst, anti-people agenda, trying to gamer support for their parliamentarymasters. No wonder that in most universities (including states ruled by the so-called 'Left'), student union elections arefought with brute muscle power, the parliamentary style 'settings' along caste I communal I ethnic lines and buying andselling of votes. At times, these unions become appendages of the administration-a tool to Implement the antl~studentpolicy and keep the general students under control. Of course, It is not surprising that the administration and these so-called.
student organizations end up on the same side -after all, both are Implementing the same policies formulated by theirmasters in the parliament. These practices by the mainstream student organizations not only hide the real potential of theUnion as an Invaluable weapon in the student's struggle for a democratic campus and sodety, It also turns the generalstudents away from union and activism. What's even more alarming, the ruling class parties take advantage of this messwhich Is of their own creation and tries to push right-wing measures like the Lyngdoh recommendations, which effectivelysubverts even the possibility of any meaningful student movement by making the union more subservient to the authorities..
Time to take stock: At a time when even the concept of a student's union is under attack both from outside (Lyngdoh, .· ._, government bans in various states) and inside (mainstream student organizations), the current JNUSU election becomesimmensely slgniflcant. More so because the democratic space In JNU is fast shrinking with the organized de-politldzation of.
the student community and the administration baring Its fangs to curb student protest. Let us take a look at the JNUSU.
leadership's role on certain key issues, and see if JNUSU had Indeed been an effecttve, transparent and accountable-a.
union that can resist the imperialist onslaught on education and students' rights. .
Reservation: Forced by people's movements and widespread discontent, the government has been forced to legislate onreservation. Yet, statistics show that even SC/Sf reservation has never really been implemented properly, either In jobs or in education. The same story is being repeated with the OBC reservations. The Supreme Court rushed In to help thegovernment caught In a tight spot between not being able to either withdraw or Implement the 27% OBC Reservation Act.That is the magic of the semi-feudal semi-colonial system. The various organs of dass/caste articulations of the Indianstate, the legislature, the executive or the judiciary, will always work In tandem to legitimize and perpetuate the exploitationand the age-old domination. At the idea of compromising even an lota of the upper caste domination ofeducationalresources, we have witnessed the extremely reactionary backlash of the dominant castes in the fonn of Youth for Equality.Significantly, these champions of 'equalitY and 'merit' are deafeningly silent when 'thousands of seats are reserved forcapitation fee. .
But what about the 'Left' led JNUSU? Right from the beginning the JNUSU leadership had made thedemand for 27°/o OBC reservation conditional on the demand for 540/o seat increase! Which effectively mean thattill the Interests of the real 'creamy layer' are safeguarded, there Is no question of allowing the backward castes through theportals of higher education. And given the state's reluctance to spend money on education, given that in the last 50 yearsseats couldn't be increased to accommodate students from educationally backward sections, such huge Increase of seats atone go Is realty a remote possibility, which makes the chances of 27% OBC reservation rather bleak. What more thegovernment Is even ready to start schools run by corporate sector (read SEZ) with little Intervention from Its side. And as, soon as the matter became sub-judice the JNUSU leadership was more than to sit silent. So much for thefr daims to beprogressive! Perhaps by their calculations, fighting for proper Implementation of reservation doesn't translate Into the logicof electoral arithmetic-of making the 'winning combination'. Whatever the reason, the JNUSU leadership's action on theground doesn!t really match up to their rhetoric, and only perpetuates the benefits enj6yed by the privileged ones. Thisbecomes even more evident when every year after the admissions the JNUSU publishes setf-congratulatory notices toannounce the fulfillment of quota In the overall admission procedure. What they choose to Ignore Is the non fulfillment ofSC/ST quota in a number of specific schools and centers, especially In the science schools, Center for Law and Governance,School of Arts and Aesthetics, certain centers In SIS etc. Discrimination against M. Phil candidates from oppressed sectionsIn School ofArts and Aesthetics was made public last year. The JNUSU leadership, forgetting Its pre-election promises, failed.
to ensure any mechanism to prevent that. Nor was the case further probed. .
Struggle for Workers' rights: We have seen that the united fight put up by students-teachers-workers can be a potent.
threat to the powerful contractor-administration mafia. What ha.d been the role of the JNUSU leadership? When the struggle.
began In November, the SF! faction of JNUSU leadership was nowhere to be seen. And that Is quite understandable, given .
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Academics and government officials from Africa visited Buenos Aires (Argentina) between October 31st and November 7th, 2016, to discuss and interact with high level public officials in the Executive and Legislative branches and the National Audit Office as well as with academics, media and civil society organizations aimed at working on transparency and accountability.
Photo: ELLA Programme/CIPPEC/Rodrigo de la Fuente
Academics and government officials from Africa visited Buenos Aires (Argentina) between October 31st and November 7th, 2016, to discuss and interact with high level public officials in the Executive and Legislative branches and the National Audit Office as well as with academics, media and civil society organizations aimed at working on transparency and accountability.
Photo: ELLA Programme/CIPPEC/Rodrigo de la Fuente
Academics and government officials from Africa visited Buenos Aires (Argentina) between October 31st and November 7th, 2016, to discuss and interact with high level public officials in the Executive and Legislative branches and the National Audit Office as well as with academics, media and civil society organizations aimed at working on transparency and accountability.
Photo: ELLA Programme/CIPPEC/Rodrigo de la Fuente
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...
3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...