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What will it take for political parties to increase women’s representation in electoral politics?

There’s no shortage of talent. For over two decades, women have occupied 33% of seats in panchayats and done so well that states like Bihar bumped up their quota to 50%. Political parties that speak loudly about women’s rights should, by now, be reflecting this enthusiastic political participation by fielding more women. Right?(PTI) Exactly 101

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The climate is changing. Yet, why does it continue to be so hard for women to speak up?

Courage in a climate where the naysayers mutter about ‘false accusations’ and ‘why she didn’t speak up earlier’, where we shine the spotlight on victims rather than the accused and where we speculate about ulterior motives. In all the thunder of a furious October have we paused to think about the courage it takes to

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Hell house ‘shelter’ horror

Muzaffarpur is emblematic of the large-scale systemic abuse of institutionalised children that we choose not to see Brajesh Thakur, main accused in the Muzaffarpur shelter home case , after a woman allegedly threw ink on his face while he was being taken to a special POCSO court, in Muzaffarpur, August 8(PTI) One fought with her

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There’s nothing new in Thomson Reuters Foundation’s report on women’s safety in India

Frankly, I find this business of ranking ‘worst’ countries to be tedious. To be bad is bad enough; better or worse is an academic argument Women protest against rape in New Delhi. A Thomson Reuters yearly survey called India as the most dangerous place for women, which the government rejected saying it’s an opinion poll.(HT)

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The bigot in my drawing room

Atul Kochhar is the symbol of a far more widespread problem – the normalization of prejudice against Muslims. People offer namaz out side the Bandra ststion on the occasion of Eid – al – Fitr in Mumbai on June 16.(HT Photo) I run into my college friend after a gap of some years. Post the

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