Sign In | Register | Text Size Decrease size Increase size Default size

Without people's participation, the right to information will remain a non-starter

By Anu Kumar

Maharashtra's Right to Information Bill, which has just been passed, is the most progressive legislation of its kind. Now, it's upto people to use it More...

Despatches from Choutuppal, where handloom weaver Shankariah committed suicide

By Safia Sircar

Choutuppal looks fairly prosperous, with a myriad ISD and Internet kiosks. But in this and other centres of the handloom industry in Andhra Pradesh, around 400 weavers, struggling to make a living, are estimated to have killed themselves in a single year. What is going wrong? A first-hand report by Safia Sircar More...

The benefits of advocacy on women's rights

By Rashmi Arora

Chandni Joshi, regional programme director, South Asia, of the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), the women's fund of the United Nations, talks about the impact of globalisation on women, and the difference that advocacy has made to the way women's rights are perceived More...

Women workers demand visibility and a voice

By Laxmi Murthy

On March 8, 1908, women workers in the needle trade in New York marched in the streets, demanding suffrage and an end to sweatshops and child labour. Almost 100 years on, over 100,000 workers took to the streets of New Delhi this February, to register their protest against the government's anti-worker policies and the severe impact of liberalisation on women workers More...

The costs of river-linking

By Dr Sudhirendar Sharma

External funding for the ambitious river-linking project has been rejected. Instead, industry has been called upon to support the costliest endeavour that the country has ever undertaken. But, by opening up the floodgates to private sector investment, the government could be bargaining away the traditional rights of people over water resources More...

River Inc

By Dr Sudhirendar Sharma

Following on Chhattisgarh's heels Kerala has been planning to give easy access to groundwater to private operators. And some 30 Indian cities are inviting bids for their municipal water supplies from a handful of multinational corporations specialising in water More...

Nowhere does a mother give poison to her children except here'

By Safia Sircar

People living in Andhra Pradesh's Nalgonda district are forced to drink water that contains dangerously high levels of fluoride. Many suffer its effects -- bent bodies, nervous disorders and premature ageing. But little is being done about the problem. Safia Sircar tours the district where over 600,000 people are severely affected More...

How to evaluate rural development schemes

By Arpita V Bedekar

In 2000-01, almost Rs 10,000 crore was spent on rural development schemes. The central government has almost a dozen major schemes in operation. But how is the success or failure of these schemes to be evaluated? By the quantum of funds allocated? By the fulfilment of targets?Or do we need a social cost-benefit analysis for each scheme? More...

Can loans eradicate poverty?

By Dr Sudhirendar Sharma

Do loans actually help ease poverty? If one were to go by the results of the World Bank-supported District Poverty Initiatives Project in Rajasthan, it would seem not More...

Sex selection: Getting down to business

By Laxmi Murthy

An estimated 20 million females in this country have been eliminated following sex-determination tests. But not a single doctor has been convicted. It is the providers of this technology who have to be held ethically as well as legally accountable. Will the recent amendment to the PNDT Act change anything? More...

Adverse sex ratio results in no brides in Rohtak

By Rashme Arora

Decades of female foeticide and infanticide have finally caught up with the people of Haryana. With the sex ratio in Rohtak district down to 796 females per 1000 males and the rest of the state faring not much better, young men are desperate to get married but cannot find themselves brides More...

Water vending is a booming business

By Dr Sudhirendar Sharma

Farmers in Goa and Tamil Nadu are abandoning their farms for the more lucrative business of extracting and selling groundwater. The groundwater trade is close to Rs 30 billion today, with 50% of the urban and industrial demand met through groundwater. And yet, there are no regulations to prevent this dangerous over-exploitation of groundwater resources More...

 

View articles by page
<< Start < Previous 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Next > End >>
Page 36 of 42

Submit Content | About Us | Useful Links | Disclaimer | Acknowledgement | Newsletter | PDF Ebook | Site Map | Navigation Aid | Announcement | Series | AuthorPage
Query String: option=com_content&Itemid=74&id=0&lang=en&limit=15&limitstart=525&task=blogcategory&
Itemid: 74
current menu name: Features