Indian Elections 2024: Social Media, Misinformation, and Regulatory Challenges Article How India navigates the many competing forces and interests at play in the social media landscape will be critical in determining the future and health of its democracy. By Rohini Lakshané
The labour of certifying and digitising transgender bodies Article A proof of identification is necessary for all individuals. But asking trangender persons to undergo medical certification as proof of existence violates their right to privacy. By Brindaalakshmi. K
Robots for Ageing Societies: A View From Japan Article In Japan, despite the hiking single elderly population, there is a chronic shortage of caregivers for home visit. As many single seniors struggle to find a conversation partner, what about interacting with a robot instead of a human? Recently, the United States introduced communication robots to minimise medical costs incurred from the elderly’s social isolation. What can the world learn from Japan? By Miyako Takagi
Perspectives Asia #11: Transitions Web Dossier Perspectives Asia is a publication series of the Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung published in cooperation with the offices of the foundation in Asia. With this series, we intend to provide a German and European readership with an understanding of Asian perspectives, as well as an analysis of global trends and greater insights into developments and current political issues across the Asian region. Perspectives Asia focuses mainly on East, Southeast and South Asia where the foundation has established offices.
Digital Threads for A New Social Fabric: The Case of Shanghai Article At the end of March 2022, Shanghai was plunged into surreal silence, and scarcity. The country’s strictest Covid-19 pandemic lockdown lasted for two months. Never, since decades, had the people minded their three meals that much, to the extent of becoming the only thing they cared about. In their struggles for self-sufficiency and survival, group buying came to rescue. Did dwellers find a new sense of community or were they more fragmented? By Haili Cao
Editorial - Transitions in Asia Editorial Change is all around us; experiencing it can be exciting or worrisome, confusing or even disturbing. By contrast, the idea of “transition” stands to provide a sense of direction, in a sea of change and insecurity. Change may be happening to us; a transition has direction, it can be planned, perhaps even be initiated. It moves into a positive, sustainable direction – or so we hope. The equivalent German term “Wende” and its numerous composite terms play a prominent role in the programme of the German Green and in the international work of Heinrich Böll Stiftung (hbs).
Beyond Data Bodies Reclaiming our data bodies from the matrix of capital requires us to move beyond a narrow focus on the protection of sensitive personal data towards a feminist data sovereignty approach By Avantika Tewari , Shreya Bali , Nandini Chami , Anita Gurumurthy and IT for Change
Disruptive Technologies: The Case of Indigenous Territories of Andhra Pradesh, India Article Sagari Ramdas shows how agribusiness use big tech and big data to fulfil their ‘sustainability goals’ from indigenous Adivasi farmers of Andhra Pradesh, India. It turns out to be a case of exploitation in the name of sustainability. By Sagari Ramdas
Trans lives under surveillance Article This article explores how State (data) systems in India are designed to surveil upon and certify the humanness of every transgender person in order to access their basic human rights. The intent is to understand the extent of this need to categorise and qualify human bodies within the binary genders and consequent the struggles and violations experienced by transgender persons, both online and offline. By Brindaalakshmi. K
Your Health Data is Others’ Wealth Over the past few years, there has been a drive towards the digitisation of healthcare in India. Though policy frameworks have begun taking cognizance of this increasing datafication of health, they are responding to it within frameworks, which incentivise further datafication by considering health data to be a commodity. Recognising the intimate interconnections between our bodies and data through a feminist lens, an analysis of the health datafication in India through emerging developments under the National Digital Health Mission (NDHM) ecosystem is done, with a focus on private health insurance companies, and the implications for the bodies and rights of patients. By Radhika Radhakrishnan