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From Panchayats to Parliament: Why women’s political rights remain unfulfilled

By Vikas Meshram*  Whenever a bill comes before India’s Parliament, it is not merely a piece of legislation. It carries the weight of decades of history, the hopes of millions—especially women—and the tangled calculations of political parties. On April 16, the government tabled the Women’s Reservation Amendment Bill , the 131st Constitutional Amendment Bill 2026 , alongside the Delimitation Bill 2026 and the Union Territory Laws Amendment Bill 2026 in the Lok Sabha. Ultimately, the bill was defeated. It received 298 votes in favour and 230 against, falling short of the two-thirds majority required for a constitutional amendment.
Recent posts

Staggering toll of clinical trials, 8,205 deaths: Supreme Court seeks accountability

By A Representative   In a significant legal proceeding on April 21, 2026, the Supreme Court of India addressed ongoing concerns regarding unethical medical research during a hearing of the Public Interest Litigation filed by Swasthya Adhikar Manch against the Union of India. Presided over by Justice Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha and Justice Alok Aradhe, the Court examined the persistent regulatory gaps in the country’s clinical trial framework despite reforms introduced over the last decade. 

MASUM flags arbitrary voter deletions in Swarupnagar, appeals to Election Commission

By A Representative   The rights group Banglar Manabadhikar Suraksha Mancha (MASUM) has written to the Election Commission of India alleging grave constitutional violations in Gobindapur village under Swarupnagar Assembly Constituency , North 24 Parganas district, where names of bona fide Indian citizens have been arbitrarily deleted from the electoral roll. 

Faith vs reason: Supreme Court’s Sabarimala question

By Rosamma Thomas*  “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” Would someone please cite Shakespeare to Justice P.B. Varale and the nine-judge bench hearing the Sabarimala matter in the Supreme Court? On Tuesday, Justice Varale asked whether advances in technology, education, thinking, and exposure would leave a “believer” able to suspend rationality and follow age-old practices.

Citizenship settled by 2015 land pact, yet voters struck off rolls in Bengal: Rights body

By A Representative   Banglar Manabadhikar Suraksha Mancha (MASUM) has written to the Election Commission of India alleging grave constitutional violations in the Dinhata Assembly Constituency, Cooch Behar district, where names of bona fide Indian citizens have been arbitrarily deleted from the electoral roll.  In a letter signed by MASUM Secretary Kirity Roy , the rights group claims that the deletions disproportionately affect erstwhile enclave dwellers who were granted Indian citizenship following the 2015 Land Boundary Agreement between India and Bangladesh. The letter argues that such actions undermine the constitutional guarantee of equality and the Commission’s principle that “No voter be left behind.”

Why's Sanatan Dharma being debated amidst economic and social pressures

By Sudhansu R. Das Hinduism , often described as Sanatan Dharma , has long been understood by its adherents not only as a religion but also as a civilisational framework shaping ethical conduct, social organisation, and philosophical inquiry. Thinkers such as Adi Shankaracharya characterised it as an enduring and universal order concerned with duty, righteousness, and the pursuit of both material well-being and spiritual growth.

World Book Day: Celebrating the power of reading in the Indian context

By Mohd. Ziyaullah Khan*  Written language is one of humanity’s greatest achievements, setting us apart from all other living beings. In a country like India, home to diverse languages, cultures, and traditions, books play an even more powerful role. They are not just tools of communication but bridges across generations, regions, and ideologies.  When we read the works of Munshi Premchand or Rabindranath Tagore , we are not merely reading stories; we are engaging in a silent conversation with minds that lived decades, even centuries ago. That is the true power of books: they preserve thoughts, ideas, and emotions beyond time. Recognising this immense value, the world celebrates World Book Day , a day dedicated to honouring books, authors, and the joy of reading.  

India’s USD 9.4 billion textile blind spot: Waste that isn’t waste

  By Jag Jivan   India's textile sector, valued at approximately USD 225 billion and projected to reach USD 350 billion by 2030, is sitting on a USD 9.4 billion opportunity buried in its own waste. Yet fragmented systems, absent infrastructure, and a near-total reliance on virgin materials are destroying that value annually, according to a major new report released by FICCI under the Resource Efficiency and Circular Economy Industry Coalition (RECEIC). 

Who is watching the watchdog? Gujarat’s proactive disclosure mandate in shambles

  By Jag Jivan   A stunning failure in transparency has been uncovered in Gujarat , where only 75 out of 11,883 public authorities have submitted mandatory compliance certificates for proactive disclosure under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 2005 . This revelation comes from an analysis of an official government press note and related RTI correspondence obtained by a citizen. 

India's Earth crisis: Unbalanced development and ecological destruction

By Rajkumar Sinha*  Earth is the home of humankind — a planet that harbours life. This Earth is nature, and nature provides everything humanity needs to survive. But today, the Earth’s environment is in danger. We live at a time when it is essential to discuss the very real possibility of total ecological collapse .