Blogs and Articles

The India–U.S. trade deal aims to reduce tariff barriers and boost labour-intensive exports, improving competitiveness, employment and market access.

India–U.S. Trade Deal: Tariff Reduction and Its Impact on Labour-Intensive Exports

India–U.S. Trade Deal: Tariff Reduction and Its Impact on Labour-Intensive Exports The India–U.S. trade deal marks a significant development in India’s external trade policy by proposing a sharp reduction in U.S. tariff barriers on Indian goods. At a time of global trade uncertainty and supply-chain realignments, this understanding has important implications for export competitiveness, employment […]

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A critical analysis of hydrological connectivity of Indian wetlands, examining urbanization, administrative lapses, and the role of GIS and remote sensing in restoration.

Hydrological Connectivity of Indian Wetlands: Impact of Urbanization and Role of GIS & Remote Sensing

Hydrological Connectivity of Indian Wetlands: Impact of Urbanization and Role of GIS & Remote Sensing The hydrological connectivity of Indian wetlands is increasingly under stress due to rapid urbanization and persistent administrative lapses. Disruptions in natural water flows between wetlands, their catchments and downstream systems have intensified urban floods, groundwater decline and ecological degradation. In

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An in-depth analysis of the public-led Capex model in India, examining budgeted vs actual capital expenditure and its impact on industrial growth and long-term domestic demand.

Public-Led Capex Model in India: Implications for Industrial Growth and Domestic Demand

Public-Led Capex Model in India: Implications for Industrial Growth and Domestic Demand Introduction: Public-led capital expenditure refers to the State using budgetary resources to drive economic growth by investing directly in infrastructure, industrial capacity and strategic sectors, with the expectation that such spending crowds in private investment and stimulates demand through multiplier effects. Over the

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Chinese Economy Structural Shift: From Investment-Led Growth to New Productive Forces and Lessons for India

Chinese Economy Structural Shift: From Investment-Led Growth to New Productive Forces and Lessons for India

Chinese Economy Structural Shift: From Investment-Led Growth to New Productive Forces and Lessons for India The Chinese economy structural shift represents a long-term transformation in the composition of growth drivers, sectoral output, and sources of productivity. China’s recent economic trajectory illustrates such a shift—from a high-investment, export-heavy model to one increasingly driven by domestic consumption

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Loss and Damage is central to climate justice, but in India it is reduced to disaster compensation. This critical analysis explains how narrowing Loss and Damage weakens climate governance, planning, and resilience.

How Narrowing ‘Loss and Damage’ Hampers India’s Climate Policy Responses

How Narrowing ‘Loss and Damage’ Hampers India’s Climate Policy Responses Introduction Loss and Damage refers to the irreversible and residual impacts of climate change that occur beyond the limits of adaptation, encompassing not only physical destruction but also loss of lives, livelihoods, ecosystems, cultural heritage, identity, and social cohesion. Internationally, it has emerged as a

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Neo-colonialism explains how states remain sovereign in law but are controlled through economic dependence, sanctions, finance, and strategic coercion.

Neo-Colonialism: Independent in Theory, Directed from Outside

Neo-Colonialism: Independent in Theory, Directed from Outside Neo-colonialism refers to a condition where a formally sovereign state retains constitutional independence, international recognition, and domestic institutions, yet its economic structures, policy choices, and strategic autonomy are decisively shaped by external powers. The term gained prominence during the post-decolonisation phase of the mid-20th century, when political freedom

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Strengthening the Rajya Sabha after delimitation can act as a corrective mechanism to balance federal representation, preserve cooperative federalism, and address population-based imbalances in the Lok Sabha.

Strengthening the Rajya Sabha after Delimitation: A Federal Corrective Mechanism

Introduction Strengthening the Rajya Sabha after delimitation has emerged as a crucial constitutional debate as India prepares for a major restructuring of political representation. Delimitation refers to the constitutional process of redrawing electoral boundaries and reallocating seats to reflect population changes. India’s inter-State allocation of Lok Sabha seats has been frozen since the 1971 Census,

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Unsafe land use practices in the Himalayas such as slope cutting, tunnelling, and muck dumping are amplifying disaster risk through landslides, floods, and ecological instability. Understand how unscientific development is turning natural hazards into recurring catastrophes.

Unsafe Land Use Practices in the Himalayas and Rising Disaster Risk

Unsafe Land Use Practices in the Himalayas and Rising Disaster Risk Unsafe land use practices in the Himalayas have emerged as a major driver of disaster risk, intensifying landslides, flash floods, land subsidence, and ecological degradation. Activities such as indiscriminate slope cutting, poorly assessed tunnelling, and unscientific muck dumping are transforming naturally fragile mountain systems

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The removal of High Court judges in India is governed by Articles 217 and 124 and the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968. This article examines whether the current system fairly balances judicial independence and accountability.

Removal of High Court Judges in India: Constitutional Framework, Independence and Accountability

Removal of High Court Judges in India: Constitutional Framework, Independence and Accountability Introduction The removal of High Court judges in India represents one of the most delicate constitutional questions in Indian democracy, situated at the intersection of judicial independence and democratic accountability. The Constitution consciously adopts the term “removal” rather than “impeachment” for judges, underscoring

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The revival of Spheres of Influence in contemporary geopolitics is reshaping power politics in the Western Hemisphere and Southeast Asia. This article evaluates how this trend challenges the authority, legitimacy, and enforcement capacity of the United Nations.

Revival of Spheres of Influence in Contemporary Geopolitics and the United Nations Crisis

Introduction The concept of Spheres of Influence refers to an informal geopolitical arrangement in which a powerful state claims predominant strategic, political, or security interests over a defined region, limiting the autonomy of other states and discouraging external intervention. Though never codified in international law, this practice shaped 19th- and early 20th-century imperial politics and

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