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Women: Nation builders, missing from the nation’s books
An exploration of the path-breaking verdict delivered by the SC declaring “housewives as nation-builders”[1]. The author, an academic explores, academically and historically, how societies and nations have only imagined economies and valued production through narrow prisms while feminist scholars have spent decades challenging this hierarchy; the real challenge that the June 11 judgement throws is whether we are prepared for a substantive re-set and re-construct
Call for all citizens to wear black bands for “at least a week”; Muslims must go beyond “pointless protests”, says lawyer
Muslims, wearing black bands on their arms in protest...
Talk to Modi on Human Rights Violations: Dutch Parliamentarians, India Committee of the Netherlands
A relative of victims lynched in Jamshedpur. (Source: Express...
One Year of Una: National call for “Azaadi Kooch”
Facebook ImageOn one year of Una-kand Appeal from Jignesh Mevani,...
Eid Mubarak, In solidarity, United We Stand Against the Hindu Rashtra
HariBhakt.comAt some point during the Khalistan movement, I came...
Pandith in Srinagar & Junaid in Ballabhgarh: Comparing a Yesterday of Violence
Images Courtesy: India Today Mohammad Ayub Pandith, the Deputy...
An Alien’s Letter to the new President Elect
We must learn to accept you in Rashtrapati Bhawan,...
Cow Vigilantes Strike in Delhi’s Outskirts: Bloody Eid for Young Junaid, Bros Out for Eid Shopping
Photo Courtesy: India TodayVictims, shocked and injured received no...
P.N. Bhagwati: Judging a Judge from a Human Rights Perspective
Bhagwati, J. has been celebrated as the pioneer of...
No, the Attack by Naxals on the CRPF Killing 25 personnel in Sukma is Not a Human Rights Violation: CRPF
The Government of India’s powerful Central Reserve Police force...
Open Letter to Rajasthan CM,Vasundhara Raje on Gruesome Lynching of Zafar Hussain, Political Activist, Zafar Khan: PUCL
Death by lynching of an activist for the first...
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Rights
The cost of a wrongful deportation
The return of four West Bengal residents after Supreme Court intervention highlights the constitutional consequences of deporting individuals before verifying their citizenship
Gender and Sexuality
Women: Nation builders, missing from the nation’s books
An exploration of the path-breaking verdict delivered by the SC declaring “housewives as nation-builders”[1]. The author, an academic explores, academically and historically, how societies and nations have only imagined economies and valued production through narrow prisms while feminist scholars have spent decades challenging this hierarchy; the real challenge that the June 11 judgement throws is whether we are prepared for a substantive re-set and re-construct
Rule of Law
Promising Principles Poor Outcomes: What the judicial record on security force accountability actually shows
The Supreme Court has said that AFSPA is not a license to kill, sovereign immunity does not protect the State from liability for custodial death, and rape by a soldier requires no special court. At the same time, the number of armed forces personnel convicted by an ordinary civilian criminal court for rape in a conflict area is, on the available record, low.
World
The arbitrary detention of Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya: A call for justice
The appeal by the Palestinian Embassy in New Delhi has called on all Indians to support and join the call for the immediate and unconditional release of Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya; advocating for the protection of Palestinian healthcare workers, hospitals, ambulances, and medical facilities in accordance with international humanitarian law.
Labour
Though sewer deaths have crossed the 100 mark this year, government is silent: SKA
With three deaths on the same day in two different incidents in Madhya Pradesh, 101 people have died so far in sewers and septic tanks across the country in 188 days this year, according the data compiled by Safai Karamchari Andolan (SKA). NCR Delhi alone accounts for 12 deaths.
India
The Battle of Belonging: Why India’s Passport Controversy Matters
A passport is undeniably a travel document, but it is also the republic’s assurance of belonging and sovereign protection in moments of crisis. Reducing it to mere travel facilitation strips it of its civic meaning, since passports are issued not to transients but to members of a political community.
India
Rajasthan: From Giral to Islampur, how locals are contesting development and historical identity
The author traces similarities of people’s mobilisations in Giral, Barmer and Islampur, Jhunjunu wherein both involve local communities asserting agency against decisions made elsewhere. In Giral, villagers have been robustly protesting the “benefits from mineral extraction in the name of development,” while in Islampur, residents have been questioning the communal (read majoriatrian moves to re-name and thereby, re-define a region’s identity
