• Newsletters
  • Gift Membership
Logo Logo
Take Scroll With You Download the app to read our award-winning journalism on the go and stay up-to-date with our notifications.
Get the app Get the app
ANDROID iOS
  • Home
  • Common Ground
  • The India Fix
  • Eco India
  • The Latest
  • The Reel
  • Magazine
  • Video
  • Trending
    • Four questions Indians must ask about Operation Sindoor
    • The Congolese philosopher who liberated ‘Africa’ from the chains of Western thought
    • Why US court’s fine on Israeli firm operating Pegasus is an indictment of the Indian Supreme Court
    • Madhya Pradesh minister apologises for remark about Colonel Sofia Qureshi
    • ‘By tearing off the skin with your teeth’: The right way to eat mangoes according to Victorian women
    • India hyphen Pakistan: US rhetoric revives New Delhi’s nightmare
    • Fiction: Should Kosuke sell his father’s shrine or should he take over and continue his legacy?
    • Why workers at an Adani power plant who gave up land for jobs went on a hunger strike
    • Don’t penalise Modi government for seeking peaceful resolution to Pakistan conflict: Mehbooba Mufti
    • Pakistan declares Indian High Commission official persona non grata
    • The 2025 Pulitzer Prizes: A readers’ guide to the seven winning books
    • Why the India-Pakistan ceasefire is giving Modi supporters heartburn
  • Sections
    • Politics
    • Culture
    • India
    • World
    • Film and TV
    • Music
    • Books and Ideas
    • Business and Economy
    • Science and Technology
    • In Pictures
    • Announcements
    • Bookshop
    • The Field
    • Pulse
    • Elections 2024

civic amenities

  • Why garbage collection in Syria is crucial to fighting the Islamic State (and how the US can help)

    Why garbage collection in Syria is crucial to fighting the Islamic State (and how the US can help)

    Mark Ward, The Conversation
    · Jan 19, 2019 · 11:30 pm
  • A rough monsoon has left India’s ramshackle cities more decrepit than ever. Get used to it

    A rough monsoon has left India’s ramshackle cities more decrepit than ever. Get used to it

    Samar Halarnkar
    · Oct 08, 2017 · 08:00 am