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    • Jagannath Prasad Das (1936-2026): A lifelong pursuit for meaning and coherence in a fragmented world

      Jagannath Prasad Das (1936-2026): A lifelong pursuit for meaning and coherence in a fragmented world

      Jatindra Kumar Nayak
    • How India is trying to use yoga diplomacy in Palestine to disguise its close ties with Israel

      How India is trying to use yoga diplomacy in Palestine to disguise its close ties with Israel

      Ben Choucroun
    • The Hindu disciple of a Muslim saint in Shah Jahan’s India

      The Hindu disciple of a Muslim saint in Shah Jahan’s India

      Syed Ali Nadeem Rezavi
    • Prey, habitat quality play key role in restoring tiger populations

      Prey, habitat quality play key role in restoring tiger populations

      Sneha Mahale
    • Elephants can socialise and forage in all-male groups, shows study

      Elephants can socialise and forage in all-male groups, shows study

      Sneha Mahale
    • Indian IT industry wants to take on ‘unglamorous’ AI work for American companies

      Indian IT industry wants to take on ‘unglamorous’ AI work for American companies

      Itika Sharma Punit, Rest of World
    • How a geologist built a Hindustani music oasis in a steel town

      How a geologist built a Hindustani music oasis in a steel town

      Malini Nair
    • ‘No matter how busy a train is, you can always find a quiet space’: Travel writer Monisha Rajesh

      ‘No matter how busy a train is, you can always find a quiet space’: Travel writer Monisha Rajesh

      Amritesh Mukherjee
    • A question to ask as the INDIA bloc turns three: Where is it going?

      A question to ask as the INDIA bloc turns three: Where is it going?

      Anant Gupta
    • Women’s Prize for Nonfiction winner: ‘The Finest Hotel in Kabul’ gives voice to Afghans

      Women’s Prize for Nonfiction winner: ‘The Finest Hotel in Kabul’ gives voice to Afghans

      Magnus Marsden, The Conversation
    • Long before AI ‘food dramas’ came Arabic and Persian culinary poetry

      Long before AI ‘food dramas’ came Arabic and Persian culinary poetry

      Neha Vermani
    • How data centres disrupt the lives of local communities

      How data centres disrupt the lives of local communities

      Neha Gour, The Conversation
      , 
      Ed Maibach, The Conversation
       & 
      Luis Ortiz, The Conversation
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  • How separate lifts in Mumbai highrises sustain caste prejudice in the city

    How separate lifts in Mumbai highrises sustain caste prejudice in the city

    Nolina Minj
    · Aug 05, 2025 · 06:30 am
  • Pulitzer Prize for biography: ‘Every Living Thing’ charts the tension between two types of ‘genius’

    Pulitzer Prize for biography: ‘Every Living Thing’ charts the tension between two types of ‘genius’

    John Long, The Conversation
    · Aug 04, 2025 · 08:30 pm
  • Is the Bangladesh Nationalist Party being co-opted into the regime it denounced?

    Is the Bangladesh Nationalist Party being co-opted into the regime it denounced?

    Abul Hasnat, Milton Northern University, Dhaka
    · Aug 04, 2025 · 07:30 pm
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    The inaugural IGF Archer-Amish Award winner: An excerpt from ‘The Way Home’, by Shalini Mullick

    Shalini Mullick
    · Aug 04, 2025 · 05:30 pm
  • The word ‘assassination’ was first used by Shakespeare in ‘Macbeth’. What are its origins?

    The word ‘assassination’ was first used by Shakespeare in ‘Macbeth’. What are its origins?

    Sumanto Chattopadhyay
    · Aug 04, 2025 · 01:30 pm
  • Malegaon blasts: After acquittal, Prasad Purohit welcomed with flower petals, ‘Jai Shri Ram’ chants

    Malegaon blasts: After acquittal, Prasad Purohit welcomed with flower petals, ‘Jai Shri Ram’ chants

    Scroll Staff
    · Aug 04, 2025 · 01:26 pm
  • Uttar Pradesh: SP member booked for teaching ‘politicised alphabets’ at Saharanpur ‘PDA Pathshala’

    Uttar Pradesh: SP member booked for teaching ‘politicised alphabets’ at Saharanpur ‘PDA Pathshala’

    Scroll Staff
    · Aug 04, 2025 · 11:18 am
  • India’s embrace of dangerous facial recognition technology is great for AI, terrible for privacy

    India’s embrace of dangerous facial recognition technology is great for AI, terrible for privacy

    Amber Sinha
    · Aug 04, 2025 · 09:00 am
  • How the Rann of Kutch became essential to the Indus Basin conflicts between India and Pakistan

    How the Rann of Kutch became essential to the Indus Basin conflicts between India and Pakistan

    Uttam Kumar Sinha
    · Aug 04, 2025 · 08:30 am
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    Start the week with a film: Amy Adams is barking brilliant in ‘Nightbitch’

    Scroll Staff
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    Why the number of bus users in Mumbai and Delhi has plummeted

    Vaishnavi Rathore Tabassum Barnagarwala
    · Aug 04, 2025 · 06:30 am
  • The racist penalty of Western visa regimes

    The racist penalty of Western visa regimes

    Lin Taylor, Thomson Reuters Foundation
    · Aug 03, 2025 · 10:30 pm
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    Warming climate could make endangered gharial population skew female

    Sneha Mahale
    · Aug 03, 2025 · 07:30 pm
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    Sunday book pick: In 2025 Booker Prize-longlisted ‘Universality’, everyone’s politics is for sale

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    ‘A Glimpse of My Life’ by Ram Prasad Bismil: A moving autobiography of a young revolutionary

    Salil Misra
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    Parliament debate on Operation Sindoor shows Indian democracy is ‘reeling’ away

    Anant Gupta
    · Aug 03, 2025 · 09:00 am
  • August fiction: From speculative to literary fiction, six new books to look forward to this month

    August fiction: From speculative to literary fiction, six new books to look forward to this month

    Scroll Staff
    · Aug 03, 2025 · 08:30 am
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    Why ‘Su From So’ has gone from under-the-radar Kannada film to a breakout hit

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    · Aug 03, 2025 · 07:45 am
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    ‘Dapaan’: Accounts from the valley rewrite the Kashmir narrative with empathy, precision, and fire

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    As young Indians turn to AI ‘therapists’, how confidential is their data?

    Karnika Kohli
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