As India celebrates its 68th Republic Day, in this photo essay Mahima A. Jain showcases the highlights of LSE South Asia Centre's exhibition 'Law and Nationhood: India at 70' curated by Dr Nilanjan Sarkar and Dr Charlotte de Mille, and the story of the hand-written and illustrated Constitution of India
The push towards the digital economy is leading to the digitisation of the lives of Indians in unpre...
India, like other large countries, hopes its own vaccine, Covaxin, can help the nation find routes t...
Sanjay Subrahmanyam's latest book, Europe's India: Words, People, Empires, 1500-1800 is an erudite s...
As India turns 75, the LSE South Asia Centre will publish commemorative posts till August 2023 to dw...
Soon after announcing plans for an orange cover for passports of 'unskilled' Indians, the government...
After a long period of military and diplomatic tension between the two South Asian nuclear powers, I...
With tensions between India and China growing along India’s northern border, Mike Todman (Lancaster ...
As workers face lay-offs in the Middle East and America makes it increasingly difficult to get worki...
The search for the Hindu nation is closely linked to the development of archaeology and it's manipul...
In The Constitution of India: A Contextual Analysis, Arun K. Thiruvengadam provides a concise introd...
In Broken Ladder: The Paradox and Potential of India's One Billion, Anirudh Krishna offers a 'worms ...
Ashok Desai (1932-2020) graduated from LSE in 1956 with a BSc in Economics. Here Mariam Faruqi (Sout...
As India and China continue to vie for supremacy of the highly geopolitically prized Indian Ocean, S...
Having qualified in the UK during the late 1960s in General Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, I join...
In this post, Niraja Gopal Jayal traces the life of one of India’s pioneering feminists Hansa Mehta,...
The push towards the digital economy is leading to the digitisation of the lives of Indians in unpre...
India, like other large countries, hopes its own vaccine, Covaxin, can help the nation find routes t...
Sanjay Subrahmanyam's latest book, Europe's India: Words, People, Empires, 1500-1800 is an erudite s...
As India turns 75, the LSE South Asia Centre will publish commemorative posts till August 2023 to dw...
Soon after announcing plans for an orange cover for passports of 'unskilled' Indians, the government...
After a long period of military and diplomatic tension between the two South Asian nuclear powers, I...
With tensions between India and China growing along India’s northern border, Mike Todman (Lancaster ...
As workers face lay-offs in the Middle East and America makes it increasingly difficult to get worki...
The search for the Hindu nation is closely linked to the development of archaeology and it's manipul...
In The Constitution of India: A Contextual Analysis, Arun K. Thiruvengadam provides a concise introd...
In Broken Ladder: The Paradox and Potential of India's One Billion, Anirudh Krishna offers a 'worms ...
Ashok Desai (1932-2020) graduated from LSE in 1956 with a BSc in Economics. Here Mariam Faruqi (Sout...
As India and China continue to vie for supremacy of the highly geopolitically prized Indian Ocean, S...
Having qualified in the UK during the late 1960s in General Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, I join...
In this post, Niraja Gopal Jayal traces the life of one of India’s pioneering feminists Hansa Mehta,...
The push towards the digital economy is leading to the digitisation of the lives of Indians in unpre...
India, like other large countries, hopes its own vaccine, Covaxin, can help the nation find routes t...
Sanjay Subrahmanyam's latest book, Europe's India: Words, People, Empires, 1500-1800 is an erudite s...