Education

How the Supreme Court built a binding legal framework to protect student mental heath

In a case where the father of a NEET aspirant sought fair investigation into the suspicious death of his daughter, the SC in a pivotal July 2025 ruling, apart from intervening on that question went further: in establishing a comprehensive, binding legal framework to protect student mental health across India. An analysis of the Supreme Court judgment in Sukdeb Saha v. State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors.

JNUSU Polls: The Crashing of Sangh Parivar’s Cherished Dream

Rising discontent against Narendra Modi and his government’s policies...

After humiliating defeat in JNUSU elections, ABVP attacks student leaders

After being squarely trounced in the Jawaharlal Nehru University...

JNUSU elections: Counting of votes halted due to alleged violence by ABVP

Counting of votes for the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU)...

Controversy surrounds DUSU polls with allegations of EVM-tampering

The RSS-affiliated right-wing Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) secured...

ABVP election campaigners unleash violence on Delhi college campus

Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) members reportedly vandalised property...

The Politics of presence in JNU: Najeeb Ahmed, the Muslim identity and the Left’s hypocrisy

The Students Islamic Organisation of India (SIO) is just...

A school rebuilt in 72 hours: Keralites once again show exemplary community work

 When the deadly monsoon wreaked havoc in Kerala, it...

Panjab University elects its first woman student president

22-year-old Kanupriya, a second-year student of MSc in Zoology,...

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Rahul Gandhi alleges ‘industrial-scale vote theft’ in Haryana Polls, claims 25 lakh fake voters added with EC-BJP collusion

At a press conference ahead of Bihar’s first phase of polling, the Congress leader unveiled “The H Files,” alleging systematic manipulation of Haryana’s electoral rolls, use of a Brazilian model’s photo in 22 voter IDs, and “industrialised rigging” under the Election Commission’s watch

Pregnant woman deported despite parents on 2002 SIR rolls, another homemaker commits suicide

In West Bengal, a pregnant woman’s deportation despite her parents’ names on the 2002 voter list, and a homemaker’s suicide amid renewed SIR-NRC fears, lay bare a growing climate of dread—where citizenship, identity, and the right to belong have become matters of anxiety and loss

Seven Dimensions of Zohran Mamdani’s Win Hold Significance For Indians

His triumph demonstrates that that an authentic progressive position has political rewards even in a city identified with capitalism, that youth can overcome entrenched political leaders, that economic redistribution still motivates voters, and that moral consistency on difficult issues can be rewarded rather than punished.

Silence in the Statistics: What NCRB data won’t tell you about dissent

When fewer crimes are recorded, it may signal not peace, but the success of a system designed to silence without a trace

Uttarakhand HC pulls up police over mob attack in Ramnagar, seeks action against BJP leader for inciting communal violence

Bench directs action taken report by November 6; Petitioner alleges political protection to main accused

Ritwik Ghatak transcended realms unexplored to reinvent art of Indian revolutionary film making

One hundred years of Ritwik Ghatak on November 4 (November 4, 1925-February 6, 1976), revolutionary filmmaker, visionary artist, and committed Marxist. His work continues to influences profoundly, unsettling and inspiring in equal measure

The Silencing of Dissent: Bar Council’s suspension of Advocate Asim Sarode is a stark case of selective justice

While Pune-based lawyer Asim Sarode is punished for critiquing judicial complacency and political overreach, lawyers who have delivered actual hate speeches walk free. The Bar Council’s action marks a chilling moment for freedom of speech in the legal profession