A life devoted to India’s unity and progress
Today, 6th July, is a special day for countless people who cherish the ideals of nationalism and selfless service.
Today, 6th July, is a special day for countless people who cherish the ideals of nationalism and selfless service.
The Supreme Court may have upheld the Election Commission’s Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, but it did so while drawing an equally important constitutional boundary.
For generations, the American presidency rested not merely on constitutional limits but also on unwritten conventions.
The mountains, for now, survive on a stay order and a committee’s promise; the corporate ledger survives on something thinner still.
Time is a fundamental aspect of justice. The efficiency of the justice system dep ends no t only on accurate judgments but also on how courts utilise their time.
Last week the Republic said something true about itself, and the nation recoiled. The Ministry of External Affairs clarified on Passport Seva Divas that a passport is a travel document and not a document of citizenship. The statement was legally unimpeachable.
America’s 250th birthday has naturally prompted reflection on what remains the world’s most consequential republic.
India’s economic story has reached an unusual turning point. For years, policymakers focused on removing the structural bottlenecks that discouraged private investment.
The Aravallis were old before the Himalayas were born, raised in the Proterozoic more than a billion years ago, and for most of that unimaginable span they have done the quiet, unglamorous work of a frontier: turning back the Thar, recharging the aquifers beneath Rajasthan, holding the air over Delhi a fraction cleaner than it would otherwise be.
As the states of Assam, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh prepare for enactment of a Uniform Civil Code (UCC) following Uttarakhand which became the first in the country to do so, the discourse around UCC pertaining to individual rights is under much discussion.