Arvind Kejriwal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article is missing citations or needs footnotes. Using inline citations helps guard against copyright violations and factual inaccuracies. (January 2008) |
| Arvind Kejriwal | |
|---|---|
Arvind Kejriwal |
|
| Place of birth: | Hissar, Haryana |
| Movement: | Right to Information |
| Major organizations: | Parivartan (परिवर्तन) - citizen's movement |
Arvind Kejriwal (Hindi: अरविंद केजरीवाल) (born: 1968) is an Indian social activist and crusader for greater transparency in Government. He was awarded Ramon Magsaysay Award for Emergent Leadership in 2006, for activating India's Right to Information movement at grassroots and social activities to empower the poorest citizens to fight corruption by holding the government answerable to the people [1].
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Arvind Kejriwal was born in Hissar, Haryana [2] in 1968 [3], and graduated from IIT Kharagpur as a Mechanical engineer in 1989. Later, he joined the Indian Revenue Service (IRS), a part of the Indian Civil Service (ICS) in 1992, and was posted at the the Income-tax Commissioner's Office in Delhi. Soon, he realized that much of the corruption prevalent in government is owing to lack of transparency in the process. Even while in his official position, he started crusading against the corrupt practices [4]. Initially, Arvind was instrumental in bringing in a number of changes to increase transparency in the Income Tax office.
In January 2000, he took a sabbatical from work and founded Parivartan - a Delhi based citizens’ movement which works on ensuring a just, transparent and accountable governance. Thereafter, in February 2006, he resigned from the job, to work full-time at 'Parivartan' [5].
Together with Aruna Roy and others, he campaigned for the Right to Information Act, which soon became a silent social movement, Delhi Right to Information Act was passed in 2001 [2] and eventually at the national-level Act the Indian Parliament passed the Right to Information Act (RTI) in 2005. Thereafter, in July 2006, he spearheaded an awareness campaign for RTI across India [6].
The right to information holds as much importance in the lives of the poor as it does for the general public and professionals. Yet many Indians remain passive spectators in the process of electing governments. Arvind uses the Right to Information Act to equip individual citizens with the power to question their government. Through his organization Parivartan he promotes participation in governance by people. It may be a long way to go before RTI becomes a powerful tool for the common citizen. Arvind though has shown us that there is indeed a way possible! [7]
On February 6, 2007, Arvind was named CNN-IBN 'Indian of the Year' in Public Service for the year 2006.
[edit] Awards
- 2004: Ashoka Fellow, Civic Engagement.
- 2005: 'Satyendra Dubey Memorial Award', IIT Kanpur for his campaign for bringing transparency in Government [2].
- 2006: Ramon Magsaysay Award for Emergent Leadership.
- 2006: CNN-IBN, 'Indian of the Year' in Public Service [8]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Citation The 2006 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Emergent Leadership-CITATION.
- ^ a b c Profile IIT Kanpur Alumni Association. Satyendra K. Dubey Memorial Award citation.
- ^ In electing Kejriwal, 38,... Times of India, 31 Jul 2006.
- ^ Profile at Ashoka Fellow website Citation.
- ^ About us Parivartan Official website.
- ^ Don’t throttle RTI Arvind Kejriwal, livemint, Jul 6 2007.
- ^ Profile of Arvind Kejriwal 6bridges.com - A community site for global Indian Professionals
- ^ CNN IBN Indian of the Year winners 2006

