The Future of Indian Universities
byWill it be possible to repair India’s broken education system? Can we ensure that it isn’t commodified and politicised?
Will it be possible to repair India’s broken education system? Can we ensure that it isn’t commodified and politicised?
As China and India woo Sri Lanka through trade and investment, there’s a delicate diplomatic balancing act at play.
Urban waste is one of the most pressing problems in India. It needs urgent and immediate attention from policymakers.
Since its inception, the UN has not had a single woman Secretary General. Does this point to a deep-rooted disparity?
The Samba Spy Scandal saw over 60 officers arrested on charges of spying for Pakistan. The charges were later revealed to be fabricated.
In India, doing business is easy – for those who know the right people and know how to grease their palms.
Despite signing international treaties, India has yet to outlaw female genital mutilation.
How many farmers have to die before the Indian state will see their plight?
“Why did they have to set me on fire?…They could have beaten me instead of pouring petrol and burning me”.
Recharging groundwater is crucial. But there is no data to support policy formulation, making it an ad-hoc exercise.
Malaria has killed more people than any other disease. The rise of drug-resistant strains could undo the gains made against it.
[ARTICLE] 15 years have passed since the last National Wildlife Action. In the earlier plans of 1978 and 2002, India’s wildlife policy underwent incremental changes, but climate change had yet to find a mention. This changed on October 2, 2017, when the Union Ministry for Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF) Harsh Vardhan released the latest National Wildlife Action Plan (NWAP) for 2017-2031 in New Delhi. The latest plan, whose full details are yet to be published on the MoEF website, includes seven conservation actions and 11 projects relating to climate change for the first time. The minister released the new plan at the inauguration of the Global Wildlife Programme, a global partnership by the World Bank that aims to tackle the threat of illegal wildlife poaching. The third edition of the GWP, hosted in Delhi, saw 19 Asian nations meet on the issues of poaching such as that of tigers and rhinoceroses. Illegal poaching persists in India, but the country has made headway in places like Kaziranga – albeit through brutal means (poachers are shot on sight, and vigilantism is not uncommon). At the programme, the Union Minister emphasized the use of modern technology to counter poachers and wildlife crimes. Such measures could include the increased use of Unmanned Aerial Drones to monitor wildlife populations – which have already been deployed by agencies like the National Tiger Conservation Authority and the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), Dehradun. The Kaziranga National Park has already made headway in using drones to track illegal poachers. -30- Copyright©Madras Courier, All Rights Reserved. You may share using our article tools. Please don’t cut articles from madrascourier.com and redistribute by email, post to the web, mobile phone or social media.Please send in your feed back and comments to editor@madrascourier.com
After 12 years of Angela Merkel, India stands to gain by fast tracking key trade with her key project – the European Union.
Fake doctors claiming to have magic or miracle cures for severe ailments are breaking the law.
Will the Government of India be able to enforce the provisions of the Code of Wages Bill and guarantee a minimum wage?