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Jeevansaathis
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L S Aravinda
( 1 items )
JeevanSaathi Aravinda Pillalamarri has been working with AID since 1995 and has played a key role in expanding AID's vision and mission. One of her most important contributions has been to advocate a model of participatory development where issues of social justice are at the heart of developmental work. Thus she has been instrumental in forging AID's solidarity with grassroots people's movements like Narmada Bachao Andolan and the NAPM. Aravinda moved to India in 1998 on completing her Master's degree in South Asian Studies at the University of Wisconsin and has since worked full-time for AID. She also holds a Master's Degree in Library Sciences from Simmons College, Boston. Aravinda's work in India includes · championing models of livelihood that are based on ecologically sustainable methods of production, · building networks of fair trade within the context of marketing traditional artisanal work, · creating learning resources that the educated and urban middle class may use to understand the perspectives and analyses voiced by the people central to the processes of social change, who are too often marginaised from prevailaing development planning owing to poverty and oppression. · supporting cultural and political expression in local and tribal languages She has worked with AID-India in promoting village libraries, organic farming, women's groups, and sustainable technological innovations through the AID Rural Technology Resource Center in Orissa. She is a visiting Faculty at the Jagannath Institute for Technology Management in rural Orissa. Aravinda has written for The Hindu, Economic & Political Weekly and is working on "Signals in the Fog", a book-in-progress that reflects lessons learned during the course of her work with AID. Aravinda is married to Ravi Kuchimanchi, and they have one daughter, Khiyali. You can find her articles at AID's publications page.
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Balaji Sampath
( 7 items )
Joined AID in 1994, a month after coming to the University of Maryland for a PhD in Electrical Engineering. Balaji has been instrumental in providing a strong infrastructure for the expansion of AID work to 20 different chapters in the US and in coordinating activities among volunteers. He returned to India in Sept 1997, a month after securing his doctorate. Established rapport with people in the Nemeli block of villages and the Tamil Nadu science movement by living in the villages.He is playing an active role in All India People Science Network's 100 Blocks plan, that targets 10000 villages.
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Ravi Kuchimanchi
( 7 items )
While a graduate student at University of Maryland, Ravi Kuchimanchi
founded the Association for India's Development (AID) in 1991 with the
vision "problems are interconnected, so must be the solution." AID
has matured into a volunteer movement for sustainable, holistic
development with 50 chapters in USA, Australia and India. It brings
highly skilled professionals such as the Non-Resident Indian community,
to partner with the poor, and underprivileged so that there is a
deeper understanding of causes beyond the mere symptoms of poverty.
In
1998, after his postdoctoral work in theoretical particle
physics at University of Virginia, Ravi returned to India with his wife
Aravinda, to work on
development issues such as dams versus people and environment, rural
electrification and integrated development. Working in 30 villages of
Srikakulam Distrct, Andhra Pradesh, It became clear to Ravi that a poor
labourer
earning less than a dollar a day lived in darkness, not because s/he
can't afford the energy bill, but because they can't afford to pay a
large bribe of a months wage, to get the connection. In fact the
kerosene for oil-lamps that poor use, is more expensive than
electricity that could light their home. Such insights helped AID, that
raises $1 Million annually, extend its support to tackle corruption and
exploitation rather than just the symptoms of poverty.
With his collaborators Ravi developed the pedal power
generator to light remote, off-the-grid village schools where students
take turns to pedal. Demand for alternate energy in the Narmada river
valley in western India, where there is an ongoing struggle against large dams such as
the Sardar Sarovar, led Ravi to forge a collaboration between AID and
grassroots groups such as People's School of Energy, Narmada Bachoa
Andolan and Sarvodaya centre, that electrified 12 hamlets of the tribal
village Bilgaon. This inspired the Bollywood film Swades (2005) that became a
symbol for Non-Resident Indians interested in India's development. In
2006, Ravi drafted a crucial petition that challenged engineers of
Sardar Sarovar dam who were exaggerating benefits of the dam, in their
effort to speed up its construction, at the cost of tens of thousands
of village families, whose dwellings would be submerged without
rehabilitation.
Recently,
Ravi has been interested in Indian democracy's latest achievement --
the Right to Information (RTI) Act, that gives citizens of India access
to government documents and increases transparency. This along with
the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) which promises 100
days of work to all rural families at with an annual budget of $3
billion, has the potential to change the face of India. With
collaborators in the Indian state of Orissa, he has conducted audits of
the government employment program where significant parts of the funds
were being siphoned off by contractors and officials. In the USA, AID
has set up an Anti-Corruption Fund and team, that has helped support
activists in India as well as has forced the Indian embassy in
Washington DC to implement the RTI Act, so that Indians in USA can
access information from Indian government.
Ravi has a B.Tech in Civil Engineering from Indian Institute
of Technology, Mumbai and a PhD in Physics from University of
Maryland. He has published several papers in international physics
journals including Physical Review Letters. His interests and work in
physics include the Strong CP Problem, Neutrino masses, Family
triplication, Supersymmetry, Parity-symmetric theories as well as the
intriguing nature of Quantum Mechanics. In 1989 while a graduate
student, along with a friend, he obtained a US patent for a toy-puzzle
that was featured by NY Times and several Television channels in USA.
This was one of his early ideas for raising money to help tackle
poverty. However as the economy was slow at that time, despite the
interest it generated, it did not get picked up. That was when he hit
upon the idea of AID and ever since has been focussed on it. Aravinda
and Ravi have a charming 4-year old daughter Khiyali who has made
several friends in villages and cities.
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AID is registered with the US Federal Government as a non-profit charitable corporation
under category 501(C)(3). Its federal Tax-ID is 04-3652609
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