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Law and Social Justice NCERT Class 8 Social and Political life

Law and Social Justice NCERT Class 8 Social and Political life

Q1. What are the advantages to foreign companies in setting up production in India?
Ans. Advantages to foreign companies in setting up production in India are:
·           Cheap labour: - Wages that the companies pay to workers say in the
U.S.A. are far higher than what they have to pay workers in India.
·         For lower pay: - Companies can get longer hours of work.
·         Additional expenses such as housing facilities for workers are also fewer. Thus, companies can save costs and earn higher profits.
·         Cost cutting can also be done by other more dangerous means.
·         Lower working conditions including lower safety measures are used as ways of cutting costs.
For Example:-
At West Virginia (U.S.A.) computerized working and monitoring systems were in place, whereas the UC plants in Bhopal relied on manual gauges and the human senses to detect gas leaks. At the West Virginia plants, emergency evacuation plan were in place, but nonexistent in Bhopal.

Q2. Do you think the victims of the Bhopal gas tragedy got justice? Discuss. 
Ans. The victim of the Bhopal gas tragedy didn’t get justice.
·         Despite the overwhelming evidence, pointing to UC as responsible for the disaster, it refused to accept responsibility.
·         In the ensuring legal battle, the government represented the victims in a civil case against UC. It filled a $3 billion compensation case in 1985, but accepted a lowly $470 million in 1989.
·         Survivors appealed against the settlement but the Supreme Court ruled that the settlement amount would stand.
·         Even if the UC pays the full compensation set, the lives of the innocent would not come back or they won’t come back.
Money cannot be everything or compensation against a life. Neither the government nor UC has provided the survivors safe drinking water for health care facilities and the jobs. The contaminated water is still the same after 24 yrs.

Q3. What do we mean when we speak of law enforcement? Who is responsible for enforcement? Why is enforcement so important?
Ans.1.      Law enforcement means that to make sure a law or rule is obeyed. If there is a certain law, it is meant for being obeyed and followed.
2.      As a lawmaker and enforcer, the government is supposed to ensure that safety laws are implemented.
3.      It is also the duty of the government to ensure that the Right to life guaranteed under Article 21 of the constitution is not violated.
Enforcement is so important because as seen in the example of the UC plant in Bhopal –
·         Government officials refused to recognize the plant as hazardous and allowed it to come up in a populated locality.
·         When some municipal officials in Bhopal objected that the installation of an MIC production unit in 1978 was a safety violation, the position of the government was that the state needs the continued investment of the Bhopal plant, which provides jobs.
·         It was unthinkable, according to them, to ask UC to shift to cleaner technology or safer procedures.
·         Government inspectors continued to approve the procedures in  the plant, even when repeated incidents of leaks from the plant made it obvious to everybody that things were seriously wrong.
·         Instead of protecting the interests of the people, their safety was being disregarded both by the government and by private companies.

Q4. Explain the various roles played by the government? 
Ans. 1.      The government has to ensure that all the laws are implemented. This means that the law must be enforced. Enforcement becoming even more important when the law seeks to protect the weak from the strong.
2.      Through making, enforcing and upholding these laws, the government can control the activities of individuals or private companies to ensure social justice.
3.      As the lawmaker and enforcer, the government is supposed to ensure that safety laws are implemented.
4.      It is also the duty of the government to ensure that the Right to life guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution is not violated.
5.      A major role of the government, therefore, is to control the activities of private companies by making, enforcing and upholding laws so as to prevent unfair practices and ensure social justice.
6.      This means that the governments has to make appropriate laws and also has to enforce the laws.
7.      Laws that are weak and poorly unforced can cause serious harm as the Bhopal gas tragedy showed.

Q5. What are the sources of environmental pollution? Discuss with respect to (a) air; (b) water and (c) soil. What are the steps being taken to reduce the pollution?

(a) Air: There are too many vehicles in the colony and they keep brizzing on the roads all the time unnecessarily.
Steps taken to reduce it:
·         No such steps are being taken to reduce this pollution.
·         Extra space in the colony can be used to plant tree.
·         Conduct awareness campaigns and stick bills to spread awareness among people.

(b)    Water:-
·        Everyone has submersible pumps and often they forget to switch it off which results in wastage of water.
·        Most of the people use showers when bathing.
·        Water being polluted by soap water and human waste left on the open ground

One step that can be taken is – a meter can installed which detects the capacity of water that can be stored and it gives an alert when the tank is about to be filled.

(c)    Soil:
There is only one major way to reduce all these minds of pollutions are by spreading awareness by various ways:-
Campaigns or Sticking posters.

Q6.  How  was  environment  treated  earlier?  What  has  been  the  change  in perception? Discuss.
Ans.
·         The environment was treated as a free entity and any industry could pollute the air and water without any restrictions.
·         The environment was being polluted and the health of people disregarded.
·         The Bhopal disaster brought the issue of environment to forefront.
·         Environmental activists pressurized the government to introduce new laws to protect the environment. Henceforth, the polluter was to be held accountable for the damage done to environment.
·         The environment is something that people over generations will share and it could not be destroyed merely for industrial developments.

Q7. How can laws ensure that markets work in a manner that is fair? Explain with the help of an example?
Ans.) Laws are very important in a market situation.
·         Private companies or individuals to make maximum profit may deny workers their rights and not pay them wages.
·         In the eyes of law, it is illegal to deny workers their wages.
·         To ensure that workers are not underpaid, there is a law on minimum wage. A worker has to be paid not less than the minimum wage by the employer.
·         Laws help ensure that the relations between these three parties in the market – the worker, consumer and producer are governed in a manner that is not exploitative.
·         There are also laws to protect the interests of procedure and consumes in the market
.   Shops should sell goods only at MRP price by the producer.
.  Unadulterated products should not be sold. For this a quality mark fixed by the government should be put on every product.
Eg:- Right against exploitation says that no one can be forced to work for low wages or under bondage. The constitution also lays down “no child below the age of 14 shall be employed to work”.
These laws are made to minimize the unfair practices in the markets.


Law and Social,Justice NCERT Class 8 Social and Political life Extra Questions

Question-1
How do government certifications like the ISI certification help the consumer?
Solution:
When a product has the ISI mark the consumer can be certain that the product is of good quality and it is safe. Hall mark certification assures the consumer of the purity of gold they buy.
ISO certification assures the consumer that a company has a good Quality Management System.
Consumers might be put to risk by the poor quality of products such as electrical appliances, food, medicines if the government had not set up the Bureau of Indian Standards.
Question-2
How can the government ensure social justice?
Solution:
Through making, enforcing and upholding certain laws, the government can control the activities of individuals or private companies so as to ensure social justice.
Question-3
Write a brief note on the Bhopal gas tragedy.
Solution:
Union Carbide was an American Company which had a factory in Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India, which produced pesticides. At midnight on 2nd December, 1984, methyl-isocyanides – a highly poisonous gas – started leaking from the factory plant.
Within three days, more than 8,000 people were dead. Hundreds of thousands were maimed. Most of those exposed to the poison gas came from poor, working-class families.
There are nearly 50,000 people today who are too sick to work. Among those who survived, many developed severe respiratory disorders, eye problems and other disorders. Children developed peculiar abnormalities.
The Bhopal disaster is frequently cited as the world’s worst industrial disaster.
Question-4
What were the reasons for the Bhopal tragedy?
Solution:
The Union Carbide tank’s alarms had not worked for 4 years. The steam boiler, intended to clean the pipes, was out of action and water sprays designed to “knock down” gas leaks were poorly designed. No action plans had been established to cope with incidents of this magnitude. The local authorities were not informed of the quantities or dangers of chemicals used and manufactured at the factory. These were the reasons for the Bhopal tragedy.
Question-5
What are the reasons for the sharp differences in safety standards between the 2 Union carbide factories in the USA and India?
Solution:
India has a high rate of unemployment and due to this workers are willing to work in unsafe conditions. One worker can easily replace another due to over population. Ignorance and the vulnerability of Indian workers is also another reason why the safety standards in the Indian factory were very much lower than the factory in USA.
Question-6
In what way was the Government responsible for the Bhopal tragedy?
Solution:
Safety laws were lax in India and these weak safety laws were not enforced.
Government officials refused to recognise the plant as hazardous and allowed it to come up in a populated locality. Though there was some objection regarding the safety violation, the government allowed the factory to start production as it was providing jobs for the local people.
The government did not take the initiative to ask the Union Carbide Company to shift to cleaner technology or safer procedures. Government inspectors continued to approve the procedures in the plant, even when there were repeated incidents of poisonous gas leaks. So the government has to bear certain responsibility for the tragedy.

Courtesy : CBSE