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Articles 21321 through 21420 of 21907:
- An Agenda For Cultural Action - Ii (Hindu, K. N. Panikkar, Jan 10, 2002)
What is required is the creation of a counter culture through constructive undertakings, which would alter the existing public discourse generated by globalisation and communalism.
- Unbundling Benefits Of Ownership (Business Line, K. M. Thiagarajan, Jan 10, 2002)
THE concept of ownership has always been a powerful source of motivation and competition in human societies. It is pivotal to the organisation of societies and their power structures.
- One World (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 10, 2002)
Identity is always an elusive concept. It is impossible to tie it down to one particular thing.
- An Agenda For Cultural Action - Ii (Hindu, K. N. Panikkar, Jan 10, 2002)
What is required is the creation of a counter culture through constructive undertakings, which would alter the existing public discourse generated by globalisation and communalism.
- Iron Mask (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 10, 2002)
Political ideologues also need to be politicians. That might be the very hard lesson that Mr K.N. Govindacharya, the former Bharatiya Janata Party general secretary, is learning.
- Hurried And Ill Considered (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 10, 2002)
THE SUDDEN TURNABOUT in the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Information Technology's stand on foreign investment in the print media would seem more the result of high pressure lobbying from both within and without and the political parties' fear.
- Unbundling Benefits Of Ownership (Business Line, K. M. Thiagarajan, Jan 10, 2002)
THE concept of ownership has always been a powerful source of motivation and competition in human societies. It is pivotal to the organisation of societies and their power structures.
- Hurried And Ill Considered (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 10, 2002)
THE SUDDEN TURNABOUT in the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Information Technology's stand on foreign investment in the print media would seem more the result of high pressure lobbying from both within and without and the political parties' fear.
- Kerala Unveils Harsh Steps To Overcome Financial Crisis (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jan 10, 2002)
Under the voluntary off-duty scheme, the employees will be given 75 per cent of their basic salary and dearness allowance in the first year and 50 per cent in the second year.
- An Epistle To Mr Advani (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jan 09, 2002)
Dear Advaniji,
You have begun what is unquestionably the most profound and consequential interaction between our country and the United States of America.
- To Douse The Home Fires (Telegraph, Kamalika Mukherjee, Jan 09, 2002)
“It is better to die in one go than a little everyday” had been the last few words recorded in a diary by Vijayalakshmi, a victim of domestic violence in India.
- The Opportunity In Kashmir (Hindu, Harish Khare , Jan 09, 2002)
It is now for the Hurriyat Conference leaders to prove their democratic credentials in a democratic contest (the Assembly elections due in seven months) under the watchful international eye.
- Slipshod Indian Diplomacy (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Jan 09, 2002)
Handshakes - or lack of them - have been leaving their imprint on diplomacy long before the SAARC summit at Kathmandu.
- In The Divided Desert (Indian Express, Seema Alavi, Jan 09, 2002)
I love to watch the birds fly. The uninhibited freedom they enjoy inspires me. Following the flight paths of these unrestrained bundles of joy has sensitised me to the constrained existence that we lesser mortals lead.
- A Distant Dream (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 09, 2002)
THE KATHMANDU SUMMIT of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) saw yet another pledge to work towards a free trade area.
- The Opportunity In Kashmir (Hindu, Harish Khare , Jan 09, 2002)
It is now for the Hurriyat Conference leaders to prove their democratic credentials in a democratic contest (the Assembly elections due in seven months) under the watchful international eye.
- Despondency Before And After (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 09, 2002)
On the face of it, bracketing Agra and Kathmandu may not be proper, but there is a connecting link because of which a comparative analysis is in order.
- Tonyic For The Soul (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 09, 2002)
It was an ambitious itinerary, cutting a swathe through what must arguably be one of the hottest regions in the world: two nations with their armies in battle formation across their common border, and another that has barely emerged from the war zone.
- Tactics To Combat Cyber-Attacks (Business Line, Prem Kumar , Jan 09, 2002)
INFORMATION networks are the lifelines of any organisational set-up, be it military or corporate.
- Relevance Of Gadgil's Economics (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Jan 09, 2002)
Indian economics has a rich tradition. Even economists such as Lewis and Nurkse had recognised that the Indian scene had specificities and heterogeneities in its geographical, historical, political, economic and social settings.
- Slipshod Indian Diplomacy (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Jan 09, 2002)
Handshakes - or lack of them - have been leaving their imprint on diplomacy long before the SAARC summit at Kathmandu.
- A Distant Dream (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 09, 2002)
THE KATHMANDU SUMMIT of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) saw yet another pledge to work towards a free trade area.
- Tactics To Combat Cyber-Attacks (Business Line, Prem Kumar , Jan 09, 2002)
INFORMATION networks are the lifelines of any organisational set-up, be it military or corporate.
- Despondency Before And After (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 09, 2002)
On the face of it, bracketing Agra and Kathmandu may not be proper, but there is a connecting link because of which a comparative analysis is in order.
- Relevance Of Gadgil's Economics (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Jan 09, 2002)
Indian economics has a rich tradition. Even economists such as Lewis and Nurkse had recognised that the Indian scene had specificities and heterogeneities in its geographical, historical, political, economic and social settings.
- Ominous Signals (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 08, 2002)
THE VIOLENCE IN a village near Beypore in Kerala that left five people killed, several others injured and property worth a couple of crores (including fishing vessels) destroyed may have been contained.
- ‘Co-Operation In Biotech And Pharmaceuticals Can Do Wonders’ (The Financial Express, HUMA SIDDQUI, Jan 08, 2002)
Expertise in sugarcane production notwithstanding, Cuba is fast catching up in other areas as well, says the Cuban ambassador Jose Eloy Valdes.
- It Slowdown Has Its Own Share Of Opportunities (The Financial Express, Ashu Kumar, Jan 08, 2002)
The temptation of freezing investments in new information technology (IT) systems and applications is hard to resist in times of economic slowdown. But then, doing this carries the risk of snipping off the vital cords essential for holding together.
- The Military And The Militants (Telegraph, Sudhir Kumar Mishra, Jan 08, 2002)
The attack on Parliament might appear to have brought comrades with the same goals in power politics onto a common platform.
- Euro’s Popularity Caught Between Cautious Brown And Impatient Blair (The Financial Express, N. Madhavan, Jan 08, 2002)
If initial euphoria is anything to go by, the successful launch of euro notes and coins may in fact catalyse the United Kigdom’s decision on whether to retain its popular pound sterling or give it up.
- To Chase The Crooked Line (Telegraph, SRINJAY CHAKRAVARTI, Jan 08, 2002)
There is good news on the inflation front, or at least that is what the Central government claims.
- Get The Arms For The Man (Telegraph, BRIJESH D. JAYAL, Jan 08, 2002)
As war cries once again reverberate across the sub continent, one cannot help but ponder over the state of preparedness of our armed forces.
- Ominous Signals (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 08, 2002)
THE VIOLENCE IN a village near Beypore in Kerala that left five people killed, several others injured and property worth a couple of crores (including fishing vessels) destroyed may have been contained.
- India, Cuba Need To Go In For More Expertise Exchange Programmes (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jan 08, 2002)
India and Cuba are closely linked through ties of friendship, solidarity and mutual co-operation. Since 1960, both the countries have established diplomatic ties and have shared close and cordial relations.
- To Chase The Crooked Line (Telegraph, SRINJAY CHAKRAVARTI, Jan 08, 2002)
There is good news on the inflation front, or at least that is what the Central government claims.
- Frozen Frame (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 08, 2002)
It is too early to say if the tension between India and Pakistan has been reduced after the recent summit of the south Asian association for regional cooperation at Kathmandu.
- Limited By Law (Indian Express, Anil Divan, Jan 08, 2002)
Over 50 years of the working of the Constitution have brought about a radical change in our democratic institutions. There is a steep fall in the values of public men.
- Why Flog A Dead Nam? (Indian Express, Subramaniam Narasimhan, Jan 08, 2002)
This is apropos of recent columns invoking the ‘glorious days of the Non Aligned Movement’ by Kuldip Nayar and Mani Shankar Aiyar in this paper. Messrs Nayar and Aiyar, both members of Parliament, are excellent men of letters.
- Out On Dolly’s Limb (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 07, 2002)
Dolly the Sheep has arthritis. And once again all’s not quite well in our brave new world.
- Imf: It's Monetary Fratricide! (Business Line, Alex Abraham, Jan 07, 2002)
WHEN the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was established many years ago, its founding fathers enshrined within its constitution great and noble ideals and intentions.
- Eyewash, Whitewash... (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 07, 2002)
OR hogwash? That is the question in one's mind on reading the report of Reuters that a `peer review' by Deloitte & Touche, an accounting firm in the Big Five league, has given a "clean bill of health" to Anderson.
- Economy And Elections (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jan 07, 2002)
CURRENT conventional wisdom has it that much of the drumming up of the "conflict situation" with Pakistan is directed at whipping up support for the BJP in the Assembly elections scheduled to be held in the next few months in states such as Uttar Pradesh.
- After The Expose (Indian Express, Tarun J Tejpal, Jan 07, 2002)
In my 18 years in journalism, had I spent more time hanging around with politicians, and less with other kinds of achievers, I would have known better.
- Because Mrs G Didn’t Bargain (Indian Express, ARVIND KALA, Jan 07, 2002)
India’s biggest defence and foreign policy blunder was committed by Mrs Indira Gandhi after the 1971 Bangladesh war.
- More To Rape (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 07, 2002)
Indian law needs to broaden its understanding of rape. The law commission’s level-headed revaluation of the rape laws might prove to be more useful than the Union home minister’s unthinking advocacy of capital punishment for convicted rapists.
- Making It With Dolly (Telegraph, Indranil Basu, Jan 07, 2002)
From gene therapy to genetically modified foods, issues involving DNA evoke ethical rhetoric and fiercely polarized opinions.
- Economy And Elections (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jan 07, 2002)
CURRENT conventional wisdom has it that much of the drumming up of the "conflict situation" with Pakistan is directed at whipping up support for the BJP in the Assembly elections scheduled to be held in the next few months in states such as Uttar Pradesh.
- Imf: It's Monetary Fratricide! (Business Line, Alex Abraham, Jan 07, 2002)
WHEN the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was established many years ago, its founding fathers enshrined within its constitution great and noble ideals and intentions.
- The Calm Before A Storm (Hindu, KESAVA MENON, Jan 06, 2002)
For a fortnight in December, it seemed that the dialogue between the Israelis and the Palestinians was dead and buried... But now the two sides are back to jockeying for advantage.
- The Calm Before A Storm (Hindu, KESAVA MENON, Jan 06, 2002)
For a fortnight in December, it seemed that the dialogue between the Israelis and the Palestinians was dead and buried... But now the two sides are back to jockeying for advantage.
- War At What Cost? (Hindu, ALOK MUKHERJEE, Jan 06, 2002)
The Indian economy can no doubt survive a war, but the sacrifices it will have to make in terms of development will be substantial.
- Tying Up Against Terrorism (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Jan 06, 2002)
With the increased terrorist threat, there has been a dramatic escalation in U.S.-Philippines military cooperation.
- Tying Up Against Terrorism (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Jan 06, 2002)
With the increased terrorist threat, there has been a dramatic escalation in U.S.-Philippines military cooperation.
- Capital Punishment (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 06, 2002)
When the British first came to India in the 17th century, Bengal was one of the first places they came to trade and to set up their “factories’’ (warehouses in the jargon of the time).
- Tapping Discontent (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jan 06, 2002)
The shoe-bomber's case has focussed attention on an apparently widespread campaign by Muslim extremists in Britain to recruit socially maladjusted youth.
- Where There Is No Will (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 06, 2002)
Even the Maoists seem to pose less of a problem. For Nepal, the SAARC summit is proving to be a nightmare.
- War At What Cost? (Hindu, ALOK MUKHERJEE, Jan 06, 2002)
The Indian economy can no doubt survive a war, but the sacrifices it will have to make in terms of development will be substantial.
- Globalisation And Decentralisation (Hindu, Supriya Roy Chowdhury, Jan 05, 2002)
Where existing structures of inequality are left intact and become compounded with the disadvantages of marketisation, political empowerment is a useful slogan, not a realistic or genuine goal.
- Reaching Out To Conquer (Indian Express, Shekhar Gupta, Jan 05, 2002)
What wisdom do you glean from the way Musharraf and Vajpayee have routed their flights to Kathmandu?
- An Unconventional Meeting (Telegraph, Khushwant Singh, Jan 05, 2002)
I have attended many writers conferences in different parts of the world: Phillipines, England, Scotland, the United States of America and India.
- Globalisation And Decentralisation (Hindu, Supriya Roy Chowdhury, Jan 05, 2002)
Where existing structures of inequality are left intact and become compounded with the disadvantages of marketisation, political empowerment is a useful slogan, not a realistic or genuine goal.
- Beneath The Veil: How Afghan Artists Beat The Taliban At Their Own Game (Indian Express, Kevin Sullivan, Jan 05, 2002)
KABUL: It was a moody impressionist painting of a cobblestone street winding down a hill-deserted, until Mohammad Yousof Asefi came along with his wet sponge.
- Why Saarc Does Not Spark? (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Jan 04, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 3. The failures of the South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation over the last two decades have led to agonising soul searching among sections of the intelligentsia in the subcontinent.
- India And The Global Slowing (Hindu, Pulapre Balakrishnan, Jan 04, 2002)
The prevalent tendency to link the slowing of the Indian manufacturing sector to the recession in the U.S. economy needs to be rejected as deluding.
- Beyond Terrorism And Recession... -- Us Looks Ahead With Hope (Business Line, S. Sethuraman, Jan 04, 2002)
AMERICANS opened the New Year with a renewed sense of confidence, overcoming the traumatic experience of the terrorist attacks of 2001, and with strong expectations of economic recovery in the first half of 2002.
- Mission Kashmir (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 04, 2002)
Jammu and Kashmir is labouring under many disadvantages.
- Why Saarc Does Not Spark? (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Jan 04, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 3. The failures of the South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation over the last two decades have led to agonising soul searching among sections of the intelligentsia in the subcontinent.
- India And The Global Slowing (Hindu, Pulapre Balakrishnan, Jan 04, 2002)
The prevalent tendency to link the slowing of the Indian manufacturing sector to the recession in the U.S. economy needs to be rejected as deluding.
- Peak Season Blues (Indian Express, Sukhmani Singh, Jan 04, 2002)
IT’S peak tourist season in old world Bikaner, but the town looks desolate and dead. The slew of heritage resorts — palaces, havelis, hunting lodges, et al, present a sombre appearance.
- Beyond Terrorism And Recession... -- Us Looks Ahead With Hope (Business Line, S. Sethuraman, Jan 04, 2002)
AMERICANS opened the New Year with a renewed sense of confidence, overcoming the traumatic experience of the terrorist attacks of 2001, and with strong expectations of economic recovery in the first half of 2002.
- No Small Change (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jan 03, 2002)
THERE IS LITTLE doubt that the New Year switch to the euro marks a watershed in the history of Europe, governed the past centuries by strong nationalist aspirations.
- The Partition Debate - Ii (Hindu, Mushirul Hasan, Jan 03, 2002)
As a metaphor, an event and memory, Partition has to be interpreted and explained afresh to remove widely-held misconceptions.
- No Small Change (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jan 03, 2002)
THERE IS LITTLE doubt that the New Year switch to the euro marks a watershed in the history of Europe, governed the past centuries by strong nationalist aspirations.
- The Partition Debate - Ii (Hindu, Mushirul Hasan, Jan 03, 2002)
As a metaphor, an event and memory, Partition has to be interpreted and explained afresh to remove widely-held misconceptions.
- A Journey With Other People (Telegraph, SUDIPTA BHATTACHARJEE, Jan 03, 2002)
Today, the Nagas just want peace, believesBy Sudipta Bhattacharjee.
- History And Community Sentiment (Hindu, Rajeev Bhargava, Jan 02, 2002)
The history textbooks from which selected portions are deleted do not condemn the way of life of any community... They do, however, discourage a deferential attitude... This is how it should be.
- All Quiet On The Ipo Front (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jan 02, 2002)
MOBILISATION through the IPO route was a dismal Rs 392 crore in 2001, which is moderately higher than the mop-up in 1995 which stood at Rs 314 crore.
- The Corporate Transformation (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 02, 2002)
THE RECENT TRANSFER of a 10 per cent stake in Larsen and Toubro (L&T) from Reliance to a company belonging to the A.V. Birla group has been remarkably free from the bitterness.
- Chautala Hints At Seat Arrangement With Nda For Up Elections (The Financial Express, C. R. Rathee, Jan 02, 2002)
GURGAON: In a potentially interesting political development, the Haryana chief minister, Om Prakash Chautala, has confided in close circles, including his elder son Ajay Chautala, MP, and political advisor, Sher Singh Badshami.
- Tourist Deals Send Indians Rushing To Lanka (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jan 02, 2002)
THE Taj Samudra in Colombo is known for the sumptuous buffet breakfast it offers and its employees can be forgiven for boasting that it is the best breakfast deal in Colombo.
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