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Disclosure and transparency from the RSS may finally expose decades-old ambiguities
The author, a historian and keen documentalist of the far right argues that if the RSS is compelled into legal transparency and accountability, murky details from the past could well tumble out of its century old existence
Aligarh tense after cows reportedly buried alive
Villagers found animal parts on the ground and after...
Naseeruddin Shah & backlash for Hijacked Political Narrative of Muslims
This article is complimentary to an article published in “The...
Hate Watch: Serial offender Raja Singh spews venom, reaps benefit
CJP Team -
CJP's Hate Watch tracks BJP MLA Raja Singh's hate...
Latehar Lynching: Victims’ families afraid of being targeted after HC order
On March 18, 2016, 32-year-old cattle trader Mazloom Ansari...
India: Secular Democracy or Hindu Rashtra?
With freedom of the country and later coming in...
The slow wheels of justice cannot undo decades of trauma faced by minorities
Justice has hardly been served if we consider the...
A week of whataboutery: How Naseeruddin Shah’s remarks were churned for TRP
The Bollywood veteran has received brickbats and support from...
Newsflash: Christians attending Sunday mass attacked in Kolhapur
During the Sunday worship service of New Life Fellowship...
Truth Today Is Intolerant: The Comment of Naseeruddin Shah
On a fresh autumn morning, I was going by...
Bangladesh: Islamists in the backseat, not in front
Groups like Hefazat and Jamaat are slowly starting to...
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Rights
Who owns Mumbai’s streets? The Bombay High Court, street vendors and a decade of regulatory failure
What began as a case about encroachments has become a searching inquiry into the State's failure to implement the Street Vendors Act, the rights of pedestrians and informal workers, and the growing role of identification and verification in urban governance
India
Defectors & Democracy: A critique of the Tenth Schedule of the Indian Constitution
The right of voters to recall representatives who defect—as seen in West Bengal, Maharashtra, Goa and Arunachal Pradesh—and the requirement of intra-party democracy could form part of a broader institutional redesign. Such measures would deepen democratic values and, above all, signal a refusal by citizens to accept the corruption of their mandate. These may be among the reforms that India's Parliament and democracy most urgently need
Gender and Sexuality
A regressive 2026 amendment to rights of Trans persons is under legal challenge even as pride month is celebrated
Unable to stay the statute, High Courts have charted a middle path—protecting petitioners already undergoing hormone therapy while the broader constitutional challenge awaits adjudication by the Supreme Court
India
The what’s & why’s of Data Centres and how are they hijacking the India Story
While countries such as Singapore and Sweden are curbing the environmental costs of data centres through regulation and innovation, India is actively courting these resource-intensive facilities with little regard for their water and energy demands. From Stockholm's waste-heat recovery systems to zero-water cooling technologies, solutions exist. Yet India continues to trade away land, water and public resources with scant consideration for environmental sustainability or local communities.
Politics
Telegram before NEET: When governance fails, censorship takes its place
Invoking exam security to suspend access to a platform used by millions raises serious questions about proportionality, transparency and the growing tendency to restrict communications whenever governance challenges arise
India
Yes, Savarkar did file 10 Mercy Petitions before the British, revolutionaries like Bhagat Singh refused to Compromise: Grandnephew tells Pune Court
Savarkar’s grandnephew who had lodged a criminal defamation case against LOP Rahul Gandhi, stated and admitted during his testimony that while there were other freedom fighters who refused to file clemency petitions before the British, his uncle Vinayak Savarkar had filed as many as ten!
Rule of Law
Court recognises mob lynching as aggravating factor, sentences seven to life for 2022 cow-vigilantism killing
By expressly recognising mob lynching as an aggravating circumstance, the judgment strengthens accountability for vigilante violence and underscores the application of collective liability principles under Section 149 IPC
