News
From the Fields to Kitchen: Journey of Red Chillies
Shraddha Jain, in Point of View, explores the unseen labour that goes into bringing red chillies to our kitchen.
What happens when Bengaluru’s taps run dry?
To reimagine the city’s waterscape, it is essential to rebuild our lost relationship with the many meanings of water, writes Seema Mundoli, in The Indian Express.
How Bengaluru grew and thrived around lakes
Bengaluru’s development as a city is inextricably linked to the development of multiple lakes, writes Harini Nagendra, in The Hindu. These lakes were created not only by rulers but also by common people.
For working moms, breastfeeding is a privilege
We need to understand the struggles of parents, mostly mothers, who walk the tightrope of breastfeeding while working, writes Rani Rohini Raman, in The Indian Express. How can we ensure that women have access to the support and information they need?
Flash Fiction 2.0 | Meet the Winners
Presenting the captivating stories written by young wordsmiths who made it to the winning league of Flash Fiction 2.0.
We could make up for the covid disruption if we try
India need not have an educationally lost generation but it requires us to acknowledge the problem. We must not delude ourselves that this huge problem has been solved, writes Anurag Behar, in Mint.
தொடரும் ஆணாதிக்கச் சிந்தனையும் தீவிரமடையும் பாலியல் குற்றங்களும்
ஸ்ரீனிவாசன் ராகவன் அவர்கள் அனைத்துத் துறைகளிலும் பாலினச் சமத்துவம் குறித்த புரிதலை உருவாக்க உருவாக்குவதன் அவசியத்தை, தி ஹிந்து தமிழ் நாளிதழிலில், வலியுறுத்துகிறார்.
Campus Bengaluru
An interview with Prof. Hannele Cantell on what goes into developing textbooks
Hannele Cantell talks to Kinnari Pandya about textbook development and the role of textbooks in Finnish schools, in The Hindu.
For securing Bengaluru’s water future, let us look to its past
We need to return to our traditional history of ecological wisdom by protecting lakes and wetlands surrounding the city, bringing back old traditions of prudent water usage and rain water harvesting — with a modern twist, writes Harini Nagendra, in The Times of India.
Fakeness and flakiness are not hard to spot in the social sector
There is plenty of authenticity and rigour but some organisational cultures are weak on both aspects. Anurag Behar, in Mint, shares a handy guide to the sector.
Flash Fiction Contest | Meet the Winners
Read the captivating stories by budding writers who made it to the winning league of round 1 of the Flash Fiction Contest
Campus Bhopal
Exploring Urban Perceptions Around Freshness of Vegetables
Seema Purushothaman, Vidya Sadashiva and Anjali V Raj, in Ideas for India, contend that a relationship of trust between producers and consumers can enable convergence of quality, nutrition and food safety in farm produce.
How to make Common University Entrance Test (CUET) a success
A collaborative approach will ensure a more comprehensive and well-informed assessment that will accommodate the diversity of state board curricula, writes Shilpi Banerjee, in The New Indian Express.
The ‘Red Queen Effect’ in Bannerghatta
The shortsighted vision of cities — assuming all ecological spaces to be ‘waste’ lands, areas that can be sacrificed for urban infrastructure development whenever we choose — needs to be combated, writes Harini Nagendra, in Deccan Herald.
Wages of inequality: The income-growth gap
Gap between wage and GDP growth indicates a worsening of income distribution as well as weak improvements in welfare, write Amit Basole and Zico Dasgupta, in The Indian Express.
Azim Premji University sees over 120 firms participate in placements
The placements demonstrate the competitive nature of the opportunities available to graduates, highlights Business Today. Explore the key highlights.
How healthy is the health budget?
The health budget for 2024 – 25 does not inspire much hope for the public health sector despite the 10% increase in the budget allocated for the National Health Mission, write Mampi Bose and Sunit Arora, in Deccan Herald.
जन स्वास्थय की कविता
अमर उजाला में प्रकाशित मयूर त्रिवेदी की पब्लिक हेल्थ की कविता बीमारी एवं इलाज़ आधारित दृष्टिकोण पर सवाल उठाकर स्वास्थ्य को असर करते समाज और विकास के पहलू पर ध्यान आकर्षित करती है।
Health: Band-aids will not heal a system that needs deep attention
The sector’s basics need to be addressed for substantive progress to be made. Nutrition, primary healthcare and preventive and community health should be focus areas too, writes Anurag Behar, in Mint.
Let children be children
We need to fight against a popular culture that demeans and destroys childhood and poses a severely fractured notion of the ‘body’ as an object rather than a part of the body-mind whole, write Vikash Sharma and Ananya Pathak, in Deccan Herald.
Designing a science communication course for science and non-science majors
Ananya Mukherjee and Rukma Prince, in IndiaBioscience, share what prompted them to create this course and the kind of educational issues that the course aims to address.
Campus Bhopal
Shift in India’s female workforce sees increase in salaried women but gender wage gap persists
Moving up the salary ladder reduces the gap. Policy responses that encourage improved access to education for girls and expand formal employment can help, highlight Amit Basole and Rosa Abraham, in Scroll.
Issues around Prejudices and Morality in Children
Tarannum Shaikh, in The New Leam, explores ideas around prejudice and morality among young minds and looks at how it impacts their engagement with the world.
#DataViz: Over Half of Delhi’s Garbage Ends Up in Landfills
In three charts, Anshul Rai Sharma, in IndiaSpend, explains Delhi’s garbage and sewage crisis, which is threatening the health of its 20 million citizens.
Collectively blind to pollution
Harini Nagendra, in Deccan Herald, explains how rubber tyres constitute an invisible link between air and water pollution and may have severe impacts on human health.
How we can make school celebrations inclusive
Children come to school in traditional or festive clothes and celebrate festivals together. Here, we need to question the norms and ideas that must change to suit our times, writes Shefali Tripathi Mehta, in The News Minute.
देशाचा विकासदर खरेच गतिमान आहे का?
India Development Rate : या लेखात आपण राष्ट्रीय उत्पन्न कसे काढतात हे समजून घेऊया.
Harini Nagendra, Seema Mundoli — “Caste shapes access to water in so many ways”
The authors of Shades of Blue discuss climate change, its impact on the most disadvantaged sections of society, and the ongoing water crisis across Indian cities, with Arunima Mazumdar, in Hindustan Times.
Each cup of tea, a step towards self-sufficiency
Founded by Alina Alam, an alumna of Azim Premji University, Mitti Café has provided an inclusive space and sound livelihood for hundreds of people with disabilities, writes Sweekruthi K, in Deccan Herald.