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Developing countries battle Big Tech’s grip on global data
Damilare Dosunmu, Rest of World
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Fiction: Sammy has a privileged life, yet the pandemic has ripped open all his past insecurities
Avtar Singh
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What is the future of honey in the face of globalised neoliberal trade policies and climate change?
Lucy M Long
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Hindi should become language of science, technology and judiciary: Amit Shah
Scroll Staff
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A former judge examines how the Supreme Court began adopting technology and digitisation
S Muralidhar
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A cardiologist explains how heart attack patients benefit from beta blockers
Tomas Jernberg, The Conversation
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Two decades later, wildlife has returned to national park caught in Bodoland conflict
Shailesh Shrivastava
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Can cricket, blood flow together: Opposition criticises BJP, BCCI for allowing India-Pakistan match
Scroll Staff
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‘I Found Myself’: Egyptian Nobel laureate Naguib Mahfouz dreams of political freedom and anxieties
Rosie Milne, Asian Review of Books
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Assam: Lakhs of acres reclaimed from ‘infiltrators’, claims PM Modi
Scroll Staff
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‘Death of a Gentleman’: A largely fun, tongue-in-cheek satire about Mumbai’s elite
Debasmita Bhowmik
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First person: Songs my mother taught me
Nirupama Menon Rao
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How ‘Sabar Bonda’ draws us into the heads and hearts of its lovers
Nandini Ramnath
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A graffiti in Nepal may find resonance in India
Tanya Shrivastava
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Sunday book pick: Namita Gokhale’s 1984 debut novel, ‘Paro’, is sassy, sexy, and savage
Sayari Debnath
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‘This Place of Mud and Bone’: A profound novel about erosion of friendships in the face of violence
Pranvi Khare
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The chilling parallels between famine in Palestine and colonial Bengal
Sajjad Hassan
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‘Turning to Stone’: In Marcia Bjornerud’s memoir, the stories of rocks intertwine with her own life
Janice Pariat
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September global nonfiction: Six new books, including one by Nobel laureate Annie Ernaux
Scroll Staff
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‘Their light is enduring’: Publisher-writer Dharini Bhaskar is sure literary fiction will never die
Sayari Debnath