Dalit Bahujan Adivasi

An Adivasi woman once in bonded labour now serves her village as a Sarpanch

As India marks 50 years of the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976, cases of bonded labour still surface in states like Telangana where many workers in sectors such as agriculture, brick kilns, fishing and construction remain trapped in debt and coercion; here the author reflects on a transformative journey of an Adivasi woman who serves as a Sarpanch.

Valley of fear, depths of despair

As unrest continues to brew in the Kashmir valley,...

Introduction

The commission and its taskOn October 29, 2004 the...

Constitutional and Legislative Provisions Regarding the Minorities

Who are the minorities? 1. The Constitution of India uses...

Criteria for Identification of Backward Sections among Religious Minorities

Observations of the commission41. he existing criteria for identifying...

Demands for Amending Constitution (Schedule Castes) Order 1950

Constitutional provisions1. The Constitution of India does not restrict...

Recommendation and Modalities for their Implementation

1. In the preceding chapters, we have discussed at...

Dereliction of duty

How Gujarat’s top cops deserted residents of Gulberg Society   CP...

Dereliction of duty

How Gujarat’s top cops deserted residents of Gulberg Society   CP...

My cousin, the suicide bomber

A brutalised Afghan society does not know whether to...

Alpine Bigotry

Roman Orthodox Church in Hama, Syria   The Swiss vote against...

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An Adivasi woman once in bonded labour now serves her village as a Sarpanch

As India marks 50 years of the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976, cases of bonded labour still surface in states like Telangana where many workers in sectors such as agriculture, brick kilns, fishing and construction remain trapped in debt and coercion; here the author reflects on a transformative journey of an Adivasi woman who serves as a Sarpanch.