Gandhi-Nehru Tradition and Indian Secularism
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Gandhi-Nehru Tradition and Indian Secularism

P.C. Joshi   Among the developing countries, India is distinguished by its proclaimed commitment to secularism as the guiding principle of state policy and action. The conception of Indian secularism is not just an intellectual abstraction; it is not a product only of logical constructions and academic debates. It acquired flesh and blood, a moral…

Nehru and Indian Socialism
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Nehru and Indian Socialism

Arjun Sengupta   Jawaharlal Nehru was not the only aristocrat who entered politics and joined the struggle for independence in India. There were also others who came from similar background of secure family roots, extravagance and style, and who courted imprisonment, flirted with hardship and enjoyed the luxury of sacrifice.   If Nehru was a…

Bolivia and Venezuela: Two Countries, But Same Hybrid War
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Bolivia and Venezuela: Two Countries, But Same Hybrid War

    Nino Pagliccia   A coup took place in Bolivia on November 10. The fact that the president of the country, Evo Morales, resigned does not contradict the fact that a coup has taken place. Morales was forced by the military to resign. The perpetrators of the Hybrid War were envisioning this same scenario…

Bolivians Bravely Fight Back Against Coup: “We Are Going to Resist Until the Last”
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Bolivians Bravely Fight Back Against Coup: “We Are Going to Resist Until the Last”

Zoe PC   It has been five days since the violent, racist coup d’état forced the resignation of President Evo Morales and Vice-president Álvaro García Linera. Since then, the people of Bolivia and the world have remained firm in their resistance against the coup and in defense of Morales and the process of change in…

Has Supreme Court Caved in to Hindutva?
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Has Supreme Court Caved in to Hindutva?

Ajaz Ashraf   The Supreme Court’s majority decision to club the issue of women’s entry into the Sabarimala temple with pending matters of similar nature and refer all these to a larger, seven-member bench for consideration echoes, even though subliminally, the Hindu Right’s arguments and cribs against religious reforms.     These pending matters include whether…

Sinking MGNREGA
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Sinking MGNREGA

Subodh Varma It would have seemed natural—indeed, imperative—that, as India grapples with a deadly slowdown, with agricultural economy growing only at around 2% and rural joblessness hovering at a shocking 8%, the government would infuse some energy in the implementation of the rural jobs guarantee scheme (MGNREGA). This would put more money in the hands…

9 Million Jobs Lost in 6 Years, a First in Indian History
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9 Million Jobs Lost in 6 Years, a First in Indian History

Courtesy: The Wire A recent working paper published by the Centre for Sustainable Employment, Azim Premji University has contested official claims on employment, showing an “unprecedented” fall in total employment from 2011–12 to 2017–18. Written by Santosh Mehrotra and Jajati K. Parida, the study says employment dropped by 9 million between these years—“for the first…

Ayodhya Verdict: Judges Missed Chance to Speak With Courage
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Ayodhya Verdict: Judges Missed Chance to Speak With Courage

Apoorvanand That unanimity hurt. It did. One had hoped, or wished to have a hope, that there would be a chink in the armour somewhere. An ambiguity. The absence of it—the full glare of a “unanimous” majoritarianism—came like a stab in the heart of the idea of India. To be frank, there was not much…

What the Ayodhya Judgment Means for the Future of the Republic
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What the Ayodhya Judgment Means for the Future of the Republic

Siddharth Varadarajan The Supreme Court’s verdict in the Ayodhya matter has settled the ‘title suit’ in favour of the main Hindu plaintiff—essentially the Vishwa Hindu Parishad—but it is clear that there is much more at stake for the country than the ownership of 2.77 acres of land on which a mosque stood for 470 years…