Contemporary democracies rarely collapse in a single moment. They erode gradually, often through technically legal means.
Gautam Bhatia’s latest novel explores the “centralising drift”, critiquing power dynamics, judicial interpretations, and federalism in India.
Service to ‘humanity’ is too wide to grasp. One caste-based Hindu government is all India needs, finds Aakar Patel in ...
The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh is celebrating its centenary and its epic successes in the cultural and, especially, ...
In Italy, the Corte Costituzionale has long treated rent control as a site of normative tension between property rights and social goals. Drawing on Articles 3, 41, and 42 of the Italian Constitution, ...
For nearly eight years, the Rohingya crisis has remained one of the world’s most intractable humanitarian tragedies. Close to ...
WASHINGTON – Congress is staring down a Sept. 30 deadline to extend federal funding and avoid a government shutdown after competing proposals from Republicans and Democrats were blocked Friday in the ...
Reacting sharply, Congress general secretary in charge of communications, Jairam Ramesh, wrote on X that Modi had sought to ...
THE demand for Sabah and Sarawak to hold 35 per cent of Malaysia’s parliamentary seats is not merely a political proposition; it is a clarion call for justice, rooted in the historical political ...