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Social watch process would be the key agenda setter for the government. It will redefine the politics of knowledge, and usher in a new dynamics in the process and quality of governance. It will reclaim the process of governance to the people at various levels -national, state, and panchayat.
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The national social watch coalition is an attempt at a broad based network of civil society organisations,
citizens and communities to build a process of monitoring governance towards professed goals of social development,
particularly with respect to the marginalised sections of our country. As an attempt to check rhetoric against the
real, it tries to monitor the institutions of governance and their commitment towards citizens and principles of
democracy.
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The Social Watch process is the collective response of a number of development organisations, social action groups,
and citizens to ensure that there is a critical engagement with the process of governance. This is a part of the
initiative to make democracy meaningful and participatory.
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The innovative approach of the Social Watch process is unique in terms of looking at the functioning and efficiency
of the key institutions of governance - executive (in terms of policy and practices), the judiciary, the legislative
represented by the parliament), and the institution of local self-governance. Every year the social watch report
would undertake the monitoring of the institutions of governance and democracy through the lenses of fundamental
economic and social values such as rights, development, freedom, and security. In 2004 the report examines the
sensitivity, efficiency, and efficacy of the institutions of governance in ensuring three fundamental rights -
health, education, and livelihood (food and work)
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Social Watch also envisages to contribute to the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG).
It would strive towards furthering the ownership of the MDG - from state owned to citizen owned through a vigilant
and responsive civil society coalitions. It would weave state based, and local civil society actions into a nation
wide movement. It would seek to actualise the MDG as National/Peoples' Development Goals.
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How are you a part of Social Watch? |
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The social watch coalition is peoples process. It can only be successful in its vision and
mission of taking governance to the grassroots through active and voluntary participation of
the masses, not as passive voters but as a proactive 'civicus'. You can contribute to the process
as a responsible stakeholder, voicing your concerns through the wider platform of social watch.
The social watch report would serve as a useful tool, equipping the citizens to ask informed questions. |
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The key contributions of the Social Watch process includes the annual social watch report, which impacts a wide
cross section of the society in its scope, scale, and quality. It has also promoted a broad based coalition of
actors which includes civil society organisations, sensitive parliamentarians, 'engaged' media, policy makers,
and the academia. The coalition provides the space and scope to a wide array of actors to engage in participatory
monitoring of the institutions of governance. NSWC is a platform and a forum where the above actors can come together,
dialogue, debate, and reflect to ensure that people have a stake in governance and governance is pro-poor. |
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National Social Watch Coalition India (NSWC) has been formed primarily to establish citizens role in monitoring
the performance of the institutions of governance, making them more accountable and transparent to promote effective
governance in the realm of social development in India. NSWC is associated with the international Social Watch
( www.socialwatch.org) process which is a civil society response to pursue the agenda of World Social Summit held in
Copenhagen that the state should pursue and demonstrate changes in social development parameters beyond the economic
development.
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It is envisaged that NSWC would publish report every year on the performance of the institutions of governance so
that voice of the civil society gets recognized in the development processes. s The social watch report would serve
as a useful tool, equiping the citizens to ask informed questions. NSWC will work towards making the social watch
coalition a peoples' process. NSWC will make it successful in its vision and mission of taking governance to the
grassroots through active and voluntary participation of the masses, not as passive voters but as a proactive
'civicus'.
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