We walked and We protested, We raised placards and We pleaded, We were mocked at and we prayed, We shouted, we howled but it fell on deaf ears, Development is the key to growth, No one had the answer when asked, But Who will eat the fruits of blowth?
Few were seeing it coming but most were busy winning, Yesterday we were fighting pollution and today we are fighting corona, we are not allowed to touch, tomorrow we will not be allowed to see, Today we cannot step out, tomorrow we might not (…)
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Most recent articles
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Waiting to be in the “Bird Box”? | Jeevesh Gupta
25 June 2021 -
Breathe For India | S Maria Reagan
25 June 2021, by S. Maria ReaganIt’s autumn
Human lives will spill
It’s autumn.
Who to write for? : For those who died this morning?
Who to write for? : For those who are going to die every morning?
Who to write for? : For those who wander for oxygen?
Who to write for? : A woman carrying her dead husband on her lap and crying?
Who to write for? : For people who put a damp cloth on their stomach?
Who to write for? : For useless government?
Who to write for? : For The begging politician?
The noise of death is (…) -
Mussoorie Bypass Tunnel is Expensive, but Its Ecological Costs Will Be Even Higher | Bharat Dogra
25 June 2021, by Bharat DograMany people cherish memories of visiting Mussoorie ( located bear Dehradun, capital of Uttarakhand ), even called the Queen of Hill Stations in India. The famous hill resort houses the L.B.S. IAS Academy where the country’s future top civil servants are trained. The Mussorie hills divide the Ganga and Yamuna river systems which have their origin in Western Himalayan region and hence water aquifers here a wider ecological importance which extends much beyond the local region. The limestone (…)
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Photo: Ismat Chughtai with Majrooh Sultanpuri, Ali Sardar Jafri and Kaifi Azmi in Hyderabad [unknown date]
25 June 2021 -
Photo of the bill announcing the Dec 1857 play in London in response to the Indian Mutiny
25 June 2021In Christmas week 1857 in London .... there was a play being performed in London at the Astley’s Amphitheatre, December 1857 it covered the Indian Uprising or ‘Indian Mutiny’, the relief of the siege of Cawnpore (Kanpur) and its aftermath, and finally the assault on Delhi and its capture by British troops. These events took place from May to September 1857. The play opened in London on 25 November 1857, just two months later. It portrayed these events, as both popular entertainment and a (…)
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Tribute to Milkha Singh | Cartoon by Jayaraj Vellur
25 June 2021, by Jayaraj Vellur -
Tribute to Michel Foucault | Cartoon by Jayaraj Vellur
25 June 2021, by Jayaraj Vellur -
Book Review: Mugloo on Bose and Jalal’s Kashmir and the future of South Asia
25 June 2021Reviewed by Anayat Ullah Mugloo
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Kashmir and the future of South Asia
(ed) Sugata Bose & Ayesha Jalal
published in 2021 | 162 Pages
ISBN: 9781003119357.
by Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group
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South Asian politics is splintered by diverse narratives jockeying for position! To a certain extent, it is discernible that South Asia has remained a hotspot for militarisation, violence, conflict, and resistance, more importantly since decolonization. President Bill (…) -
Masters on Rajan, Sedrez, eds. The Great Convergence: An Environmental History of BRICS
25 June 2021Reviewed by Lesley Masters (University of Derby)
S. Ravi Rajan, Lise Sedrez, eds. The Great Convergence: An Environmental History of BRICS.
New York: Oxford University Press, 2018. xix + 442 pp. $49.95 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-19-947937-5.
This edited volume presents a detailed account of the emerging field of environmental history within the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) states. While Jim O’Neill’s identification of these emerging states[1] may have been born from (…) -
‘No bread, no democracy’ Latin America’s feudal castle | Renaud Lambert
25 June 2021by Renaud Lambert*
The 2000s saw a pink tide sweep through Latin America as progressive governments replaced authoritarian ones and people’s satisfaction with democracy grew. But those leaders are all gone, and the battle for true democracy is far from over.
Alain Rouquié, former French ambassador to Brazil, summed up Latin America’s progress in 2010: ‘After decades of instability and dictatorship, democracy seems to have taken root everywhere.’ He had in mind the electoral victories of (…)
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