Geoeconomics of alternative energy
Political negotiations can help Nepal benefit from Chinese power projects as long as India is kept out of the arrangement.
Political negotiations can help Nepal benefit from Chinese power projects as long as India is kept out of the arrangement.
Elected versions of tinpot tyrants are erecting structures of self-aggrandisement across the country called view towers!
The liberal voice in India remains ambivalent, if not silent altogether.
What public roads are for the Nepalis, airports are for the ultrarich in bigger plutocracies.
There are laws in place that proscribe usury, but their enforcement is fraught with institutional hurdles.
Literary festivals offer an occasion to indulge in the guiltless pleasures of the middlebrow bourgeois culture.
Hopefully, Singapore will regain the creativity, passion, courage and confidence it was once known for.
Senior faculty are often found in programmes of NGOs or political parties rather than in universities.
The poor youths have always been pushed out of the country to wherever they could find work for survival.
Can federalism and the empowerment of local governments help reverse the movement of population?
The clamour for readopting ‘Hindu Rashtra’ reflects the Hindutva sweeping through India’s Hindi heartland.
At least in Madhesh, federalism has little to do with better governance and faster development.
The government must discourage disaster tourism for domestic and international do-gooders.
The accommodative Hindu way of life has become the Hindutva strain of European fascism.
Nepal has much to lose by aligning itself with any grouping perceived to be anti-China.