WOMEN POWER TO SAVE LOKTAK LAIREMBEE Published: 25 August 2021 Article Nature nurtures the mankind. However, when mankind tries to fiddle with nature, it faces the wrath of the latter. Loktak Lake in the state of Manipur is a glaring example of how human intervention can damage a natural setting and also adversely affect those depending on it. Loktak, measuring about 235 square kilometres, is the largest freshwater lake in Northeast India. This article is an attempt to capture the lives of the fisherwomen of Loktak and their continuous struggle for survival amidst the wave of aggressive lopsided developmental projects. By Nandini Thockchom
COVID-19: Who cares about trans bodies? Published: 23 July 2021 Interview Dr. Rima Ghosh speaks to Shalini Yog Shah about transgender people’s ordeals during the pandemic and what needs to be done. By Shalini Yog Shah and Dr. Rima Ghosh Patranabish
A flawed right to safe abortion in India: What more can we do? Published: 8 March 2021 Interview Interview with Dr. Suchitra Dalvie by Shalini Yog Shah By Shalini Yog Shah
COVID-19: Women workers bearing the brunt Published: 7 March 2021 Article Millions of workers in the informal economy in Delhi were adversely affected due to COVID-19 pandemic and the national lockdown implemented in a short notice of few hours in March 2020. There were horrific tales of workers losing large percentages of their income, incurring massive debts to meet their basic needs and running the risk of exposure to the deadly virus while trying to earn a living. This article highlights how informal workers, especially women, have been among the worst sufferers of the pandemic facing sudden shrink in livelihoods without any support system and how they are finding it difficult to recover even after the gradual reopening of the economy following the easing of the lockdown. The article suggests some medium and long term measures that can contribute to a more just and equitable post-pandemic situation. By Shalini Sinha , Avi Singh Majithia and Malavika Narayan
Section 377: Not yet a lost cause Published: 15 January 2014 11.12.13 will be remembered as a Black Day in India for criminalizing homosexuality once again after four years. The Supreme Court of India overturned a historic ruling of 2009 by the Delhi High Court, which legalised homosexual intercourse for the first time in India since it had been criminalised by the British colonial government in 1860 By Gitanjali More and Caroline Bertram
Religion, Politics and Gender Equality Published: 28 July 2011 Modernity predicted that religion would retreat into a private zone of worship and practice. However, recent decades have seen religion become increasingly salient on the political stage worldwide. This politicized religion impinges on women’s rights in problematic ways.
10 Years UN Resolution 1325 Published: 19 December 2010 Ten years after the adoption of UN Resolution 1325 "Women, Peace and Security", the Gunda Werner Institute (GWI) of the Heinrich Böll Foundation in cooperation with the German Women's Security Council and Peace Women Across the Globe hosted an international conference.
Sharia, Fatwas and Women's Rights Published: 17 December 2010 Every now and then media reports fatwas issued by muftis in India, Saudi Arabia and other countries. One mufti in Saudi Arabia even suggested that if a Muslim woman has to keep a man for household work and interact with him though he is not mehram (from prohibited degree for marriage), she should suckle him from her breast to make him mehram. This fatwa was based on a hadith narrated by hazrat A’isha. By By Dr. Asghar Ali Engineer
Translation: UN Resolution 1325 (in Manipuri) Published: 10 September 2010 As a part of the ‘Northeast India Women's Initiative for Peace’, an initiative between the Control Arms Foundation of India (Manipur Women Gun Survivors Network) and the HBF, the UN Resolution 1325 has been translated into 3 local languages spoken in the Indo-Burma border
A Debate on the Public Role of Religion and its Social and Gender Implications. Published: 24 May 2010 The largest minority of the world i.e. women still struggles for their basic rights and denial is justified through various religious and political processes. The report tries to explain the complex dynamics of religion and politics and their gender implications. The cross cultural nature of study have added various dimensions and perspectives