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Articles 121 through 152 of 152:
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Jul 12, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Jul 11, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- How To Prevent Female Foeticide (Tribune, K.B. SAHAY, Jul 06, 2001)
EVER since the publication of the Census 2001 Provisional Report highlighting the decline in the child (0-6 years) sex-ratio from 945 in 1991 to 927 female child per 1000 male child in 2001.
- Condemned Before Life (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 26, 2001)
Perhaps taking a cue from a recent directive issued against female foeticide by the Sikh religious leaders, a large number of their counterparts from other faiths shared a dais in New Delhi on Sunday to condemn the heinous practice.
- Mother Of All Crimes (Hindustan Times, Kusum Mehta, Jun 26, 2001)
The last few years have witnessed miraculous advancements in medical science.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Jun 19, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- How To Prevent Female Foeticide (Tribune, K.B. SAHAY, Jun 18, 2001)
EVER since the publication of the Census 2001 Provisional Report highlighting the decline in the child (0-6 years) sex-ratio from 945 in 1991 to 927 female child per 1000 male child in 2001.
- From Net To Noon Meal (Times of India, VIDYA SUBRAHMANIAM, Jun 03, 2001)
WHEN, last year, I wrote about Chennai's transformation from once conservative village to hi-tech city, my southern friends said I was glamour-struck, writers of nasty letters condemned me as a Tamil chauvinist and academics typically dismissed me. The me
- Mother Of All Crimes (Hindustan Times, Kusum Mehta, May 30, 2001)
The last few years have witnessed miraculous advancements in medical science.
- How To Prevent Female Foeticide (Tribune, K.B. SAHAY, May 27, 2001)
EVER since the publication of the Census 2001 Provisional Report highlighting the decline in the child (0-6 years) sex-ratio from 945 in 1991 to 927 female child per 1000 male child in 2001.
- Fighting Female Infanticide (Hindu, Mythili Sivaraman , May 12, 2001)
PANDIAMMA (NOT her real name), in her early Twenties, was devastated when her husband's family did not come to see her for ten days after her first baby girl was born.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, May 07, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- Condemned In The Womb (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, May 07, 2001)
IT’S THE writing on the wall, often with a not-so-hidden subtext, which sends out the first dubious signal.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, May 04, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, May 02, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- Children As Chattel (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Apr 29, 2001)
Child adoption rackets keep coming to light every now and then.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Apr 29, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Apr 26, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- Without My Daughter (Times of India, Asish Bose, Apr 25, 2001)
THE census commissioner J K Banthia has brought out with lightning speed the first set of provisional tables based on the decennial census of 2001.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Apr 23, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- Akal Takht On Girl-Child (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Apr 21, 2001)
ALARMED at the increasing imbalance in the male-female ratio, as revealed by the latest census, in the region an NGO has sought the intervention of the Punjab and Haryana High Court.
- How To Prevent Female Foeticide (Tribune, K.B. SAHAY, Apr 21, 2001)
EVER since the publication of the Census 2001 Provisional Report highlighting the decline in the child (0-6 years) sex-ratio from 945 in 1991 to 927 female child per 1000 male child in 2001.
- Female Infanticide And Falling Status Of Women (Tribune, D. R. Chaudhry, Apr 15, 2001)
PATRIARCHY in social organisation has been the dominant reality to define the nature of gender relations in human society that rendered it male-dominated in most parts of the world since the dawn of human civilisation.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Apr 13, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- Sex ratio shows a positive trend (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 05, 2001)
CHENNAI, APRIL 4. The sex ratio in the State has shown a positive trend with an increase in the female sex ratio in all but one district - Dharmapuri-as per the provisional figures of the Census 2001.
- Matter of concern (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Dec 22, 2000)
The ratio of women to men in the country, including Karnataka, has declined during the period 1901 to 1991. While the State figures seem relatively better at 960 females for every 1000 men, down from 983 for 1000 in 1901, the national figures show a fall
- Some thought on women's quota bill (Hindu, Neera Chandhoke , Dec 06, 2000)
THE IRRESPONSIBLE and rather cavalier way in which the male members of our political class have either dismissed or shortchanged the Women's Reservation Bill is irritating at best and obnoxious at worst. Because, such attitudes not only exhibit a callousn
- Status of women in present day world (Daily Excelsior, Anjini Razdan, Oct 25, 2000)
In human history, the place of man and woman has been universally acknowledged as the two wheels of a cart. Each plays the contributory role in the world for which each was granted life and gifted with inherent physical, mental, moral and other faculties.
- The tale of the rising `sons' (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Sep 26, 2000)
THE ongoing brawl in the DMK party, involving two possible heirs to the party throne, exploded last week with the supporters of Mr M. K. Azhagiri -- son of Mr M. Karunanidhi, DMK President -- going berserk in the temple town of Madurai.
- Glimpses of girlhood in India (Daily Excelsior, Vivek Raina, Sep 24, 2000)
The convention on the Rights of the Child is founded on the principle of Universality, embodied in India's Constitution, which demands that all children and women without exception, every-where, have equal rights. It envisages a Society in which children
- UNENDING FEMALE PERSECUTION Haryana society in throes of change (Tribune, D. R. Chaudhry, Sep 20, 2000)
JAUNDHI is an obscure, sleeping village in Jhajjar district of Haryana. Recently it shot into dubious prominence. The Jats in the village belong to two gotras — one constituting the majority while the other having a handful of households. All those who be
- Breaking out of the mould (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Sep 08, 2000)
THE STARK contrasts in gender issues the world over never cease to surprise. In India, there is a wide gulf between the thoughts, concerns and priorities of Indian women of different classes.
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