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Introduction:
Pamela Aall, of the U.S. Institute of Peace, describes a South Asian conference held by the Institute, in which the media and academic communities put pressure on the Indian government to be more sensitive to Muslims in that country.
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This rough transcript provides a text alternative to audio. We apologize for occasional errors and unintelligible sections (which are marked with ???).
Academia and the Media as Watchdogs over Government Policy
Pamela Aall
Director of the Education Program at the United States Institute of Peace
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I am thinking about a conference that we ran last May, I guess,
in Sri Lanka with a Sri Lankan partner. The conference was a regional
conference, we invited academics and journalists from all over South Asia, or
southern Asia, because we included Afghanistan. A topic of the conference was
the role of education and the media in the ethnic and religious conflicts in the
region. As I said we use the sort presenting paper idea because everybody knows
what that is and we had asked people to write papers about the role of education
in the conflict and then other journalists who write papers about the role of
the media in the conflict.
And what was very clear in this, I mean you are talking about Sri Lanka,
India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Afghanistan, is that in a country like
India in which the government is trying to, they call it the "saffordization"
of the textbooks and they are including, they are encouraging the
inclusion of pro-Hindu language in the textbooks which even if it isn't
anti-Muslim is just by being pro-Hindu in a mix country like that is pretty
provocative. What we found is that both the academic community and the press
were on the government's case on this. So there you have a situation
where you can have both education and the media working on both sides of the
conflict and you know that the academic community was acting as a watchdog on
the government here. But there are also academics that are used to these
textbooks that promote this one-sided view.
Q: Wow, that is a great example of a self-correcting mechanism.
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