Type of site Digital Journalism Owner CounterMedia Trust | Area served Online Editor Palagummi Sainath | |
Available in English, Assamese, Urdu, Telugu, Hindi, Malayalam, Kannada, Marathi, Bengali, Tamil Founded December 2, 2014; 2 years ago (2014-12-02) |
People's Archive of Rural India (PARI, /pɑːrɪ/) (pronounced pāri) is a digital journalism platform in India. Founded by veteran journalist and former Rural Affairs Editor of The Hindu, Palagummi Sainath, PARI is a volunteer-run rural journalism platform. With more than a thousand volunteers from across India and other countries, PARI specialises in rural labour and the working lives of Indians PARI is a multi-lingual platform that has content in up to ten Indian languages, including English, which is translated and reviewed by volunteers. PARI as online photojournalism interface showcases the occupational, linguistic and anthropological diversity in India.
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At the Lawrence Dana Pinkham Memorial Lecture on May 3, 2016. N. Ram, Chairman, Kasturi & Sons Ltd, former Editor-in-Chief and Publisher of The Hindu cited PARI as "one of the brightest spots of public-spirited journalism”
People's Archive of Rural India provides a comprehensive documentation of the agrarian crisis in India as documented by P. Sainath, Jaideep Hardikar, Aparna Karthikeyan and Priyanka Kakodkar. PARI is unique in its focus on and extensive documentation of rural lifestyles, economics and crises in India. Its coverage ranges from the detailed three decade work of veteran journalist and founder-editor P. Sainath on the agrarian economy and current devastating agrarian and water crisis in rural India, to the award-winning works of Aparna Karthikeyan on vanishing rural lifestyles, Jaideep Hardikar on agrarian distress and environmental crisis in Central India, Priyanka Kakodkar on documentation of farmer suicides in Maharashtra, Shalini Singh on systematic environmental destruction by illegal mining to Purusottam Thakur and Chitrangada Choudhury on the lives, occupations and struggles of the tribal populations of Orissa and Chhattisgarh.
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The content at People's Archive of Rural India is contributed by volunteers, students, journalists and by PARI fellows. PARI contributors have included award-winning journalists like Madhusree Mukerjee, Priyanka Kakodkar, Anubha Bhonsle, Shalini Singh, Chitrangada Choudhury, Jaideep Hardikar and Purusottam Thakur. PARI also carries articles written by students and volunteers. Fellowships are awarded for work on regions in India. A PARI fellow works on a specific region for a year, spending at least three months full-time in fieldwork amongst the region’s people and communities. Contributors also include Guggenheim fellow Madhusree Mukerjee, former editor of Scientific American and writer of the book Churchill's Secret War: The British Empire and the Ravaging of India during World War II, Prince Claus Award winner photo artist Dayanita Singh and founding member of CNN-IBN (now CNN-News18) journalist Anubha Bhonsle
The archive documents rapidly disappearing languages like the Saimar language which had only 7 speakers left at the time of publication. "Resources" section of PARI archives searchable reports on rural India like the 2007 Report on Conditions of Work and Promotion of Livelihoods in the Unorganised Sector by the National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector This section also has rare, out-of-print books and notable works. On its first anniversary PARI hosted the out of print, difficult to access, 1944 book Famine Over Bengal by the then Hindu correspondent T. G. Narayanan. Based on a first-hand reportage of the Bengal famine of 1943, Famine Over Bengal is a pioneering work of journalism.
The story on Pithoragarh's post office went viral on social media immediately on publishing and was shared by several prominent personalities like Nikhil Wagle and Rajdeep Sardesai as something needing addressing. Union Minister for Communication and Technology Ravi Shankar Prasad took keen interest in the matter. Within 4 days of the article being published, Pitthorgarh finally had its own post office.
The content on the online journal has been translated into up to ten Indian languages including English, Assamese, Urdu, Telugu, Hindi, Malayalam, Kannada, Marathi, Bengali and Tamil. Stories reported on the People's Archive of Rural India have been re-published by Economic & Political Weekly, Scroll.in, BBC Hindi, Times of India, Youth ki Awaaz, Saddhahaq.com, SunTV, Mathrubhumi Weekly. All content on People's Archive of Rural India is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial- NoDerivatives, 4.0 International License