Soon after announcing plans for an orange cover for passports of 'unskilled' Indians, the government rescinded the proposal. Kalathmika Natarajan writes that the passport has always been a document of privilege through which the Indian state has defined the ideal upper class/caste citizen eligible to travel abroad
In this post, Niraja Gopal Jayal traces the life of one of India’s pioneering feminists Hansa Mehta,...
The Supreme Court of India's ruling that privacy is a fundamental right is a victory for privacy adv...
The Troubled Families Programme, launched by the coalition in the aftermath of the 2011 riots, was t...
As India turns 75, the LSE South Asia Centre will publish commemorative posts till August 2023 to dw...
As India celebrates its 68th Republic Day, in this photo essay Mahima A. Jain showcases the highligh...
As workers face lay-offs in the Middle East and America makes it increasingly difficult to get worki...
LSE South Asia Centre recently invited Snigdha Poonam, journalist at Hindustan Times and author of D...
Having qualified in the UK during the late 1960s in General Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, I join...
The push towards the digital economy is leading to the digitisation of the lives of Indians in unpre...
In March, the courts in the Indian state of Karnataka upheld a ban on Muslim women students wearing ...
CoWIN, an app and website to book appointments to be vaccinated, was introduced by the Government of...
In Where India Goes: Abandoned Toilets, Stunted Development and the Costs of Caste, authors Diane Co...
I grew up in a household that crossed boundaries.And as a result, I faced relentless questions from ...
Abstract This essay traces the movements of a library from New York to Lahore in the wake of the Fir...
The eighteenth century, perhaps more than any other, was a pivotal time in the development of the me...
In this post, Niraja Gopal Jayal traces the life of one of India’s pioneering feminists Hansa Mehta,...
The Supreme Court of India's ruling that privacy is a fundamental right is a victory for privacy adv...
The Troubled Families Programme, launched by the coalition in the aftermath of the 2011 riots, was t...
As India turns 75, the LSE South Asia Centre will publish commemorative posts till August 2023 to dw...
As India celebrates its 68th Republic Day, in this photo essay Mahima A. Jain showcases the highligh...
As workers face lay-offs in the Middle East and America makes it increasingly difficult to get worki...
LSE South Asia Centre recently invited Snigdha Poonam, journalist at Hindustan Times and author of D...
Having qualified in the UK during the late 1960s in General Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, I join...
The push towards the digital economy is leading to the digitisation of the lives of Indians in unpre...
In March, the courts in the Indian state of Karnataka upheld a ban on Muslim women students wearing ...
CoWIN, an app and website to book appointments to be vaccinated, was introduced by the Government of...
In Where India Goes: Abandoned Toilets, Stunted Development and the Costs of Caste, authors Diane Co...
I grew up in a household that crossed boundaries.And as a result, I faced relentless questions from ...
Abstract This essay traces the movements of a library from New York to Lahore in the wake of the Fir...
The eighteenth century, perhaps more than any other, was a pivotal time in the development of the me...
In this post, Niraja Gopal Jayal traces the life of one of India’s pioneering feminists Hansa Mehta,...
The Supreme Court of India's ruling that privacy is a fundamental right is a victory for privacy adv...
The Troubled Families Programme, launched by the coalition in the aftermath of the 2011 riots, was t...