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Robindra Subba: Crime and corporal punishment

EducationWorld November 10 | EducationWorld

Media frenzy, the irate belligerence of urban Indias upper middle classes newly acquired sensibility and the righteous indignation of the National Centre for the Protection of Child Rights following the caning of class VIII La Martiniere student Rouvanjit Rawla in February this year is bewildering. All these constituencies seem to have accepted that theres a direct linkage between the caning of Rouvanjit and his tragic suicide four days later — a cause-and-effect relationship not proven or accepted by this prestigious schools board of governors or its alumni association. The over-reaction to mild caning seems incongruous, inconsistent and testimony to the double standards prevalent in urban upper class India.It cant be denied that violent chastisement is rampant in Indias schools. Reports of abuse of children constantly appear in the press and other media, not necessarily as ‘breaking news, but as a steady stream of information routinely reporting often permanent disability and even death, imposed upon hapless children by rogue teachers. But the line between formally delivered punishment and abuse seems to have disappeared, and corporal punishment and abuse have somehow become indistinguishable. The difference has been blurred in a haze of borrowed psychological babble which if true, would make most Indians over 40 who scho-oled in India or even Eton College (UK), dysfunctional adults, lunatics, criminals and/or sexual deviants. Abuse of children must end, but paradoxically it may require well-organised disci-plining in schools to attain this laudable objective. By general definition, corporal punishment in a school setting entails physical reprimand of a student with intent to cause pain, but not injury. The blinkered polarisation of the pro and anti corporal punishment camps tends to overshadow the circumstances that necessitate this recourse. The trendy ‘ban corporal punishment and the die-hard ‘pro corporal punishment lobbies must arrive at a realisation that there may be situations in which infliction of exemplary formal corporal punishment will do more good than harm. Yet to argue the case for formally administered punishment is not to endorse arbitrary use of fists, canes, straps and slaps which besides being illegal and immoral, serve no purpose at all. If Indian society can condone snapping a mans neck at the end of a noose as justifiable in some circumstances, surely formal caning can be — and should be — administered to make the point that grave misbehaviour will result in painful consequences and that wrong-doers must face the music. Therefore if a student bullies, beats, cheats, plays truant, copies, deals drugs, indulges in forcible sex or commits other heinous offences which impact the safety and well being of other children, any school principal worthy of the design-ation has to act. If corporal punishment is legal in 20 states of the US there must be something to be said in favour of it. In a systematic review of literature produced on corporal punishment, researchers John Lyons, Rachel Anderson and David Larson of the National Institute of Healthcare Research, USA, found that 83 of the 132 identified articles published in clinical and psychological

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