News

The official story on Iraq has never made sense. The connection that the Bush administration has tried to draw between Iraq and al-Qaida has always seemed contrived and artificial. In fact, it was ...
A recent lawsuit filed by Americans United for Separation of Church and State (AU) against the Department of Health and Human Services aims to force the Bush administration to cease violating the ...
Muslim Perspectives" is being released on 7th July, 2010 at the House of Lords,London. This book explores and articulates the insights, reactions and experiences of a range of Muslim men and women ...
The organization believes that two areas of concern need to be addressed by the government authorities as a matter of urgency, namely the need to deliver justice to the victims and the protection of ...
The Commission's report, entitled, "Without land or Livelihood. The Indira Sagar Dam: State Accountability and Rehabilitation Issues", states: ...
This paper explores a Quranic framework for engaging with the ethical and spiritual traditions of Hinduism. It argues that the Quran, while asserting its unique… ...
Paradoxically, President Donald Trump appears to have secured an end or perhaps a pause to the 12-day Iran-Israel war with a fragile ceasefire but there is no guarantee that it will not resume again.
Colonialism, whether from the 17th century or 21st century, depends on racist syllogism. In the absence of strained thrusts of hackneyed and racist tropes, colonialism has no intellectual grounding… ...
Syngenta doesn’t sell sustainability. It sells the story of it. It’s one of the world’s largest agrochemical firms—born from the merger of Novartis and… ...
Bayer doesn’t sell seeds. It sells obedience. Wrapped in the language of innovation, Bayer’s model is a closed loop: proprietary seeds that require proprietary herbicides… ...
Periyar: Caste, Nation and Socialism published by People’s Literature Publications, Mumbai is a fascinating conversation between S V Rajadurai and Vidya Bhushan… ...
They don’t sell seeds. They don’t own tractors. They don’t run warehouses or ship grain. But BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street are among the most powerful actors in global agriculture.