Unfounded fears
Although non-governmental organisations have come of age, apprehensions about their work persist
In short supply
... amongst us, is the common sense to see the effects of continuing eco-degradation and do something about it
Mass destruction knocking at the door
The threat of terrorists using biological weapons has become a reality. How prepared is India to a fight a possible germ war?
Deal or no deal
Experts from around the world assess the worth of the latest agreement to implement Kyoto Protocol, designated to reduce greenhouse gas emissions …
Perils of mutant food
With no risk assessment protocol to precede release of GMOs into the environment, the human race could well be faced with unknown dangers
The high moral ground
The abortion issue was given more importance than it deserved at the recent Cairo conference on population
The numbers game
Can the cold logic of statistics ever breathe life into yardsticks for deciding whether a nation has done good or bad by its people?
A fig for social concerns
The holy cow of structural adjustments holds supreme sway, leaving the people to shift for themselves
Disjointed and confused
Because it means too many things to as many people, joint forest management in India will remain elusive to all
Fall from grace
From archangels to archfiends - the reputation of IAS officers has certainly nosedived. Anil Agarwal, director, Centre for Science and Environment,…
What they say, what they mean
Today's scientist is no longer the absent-minded cosmic thinker, the entity has emerged as a brash species that believes in elbowing its way up
A bright crystal
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, crystallographer and Nobel laureate in chemistry, sparkled in a predominantly male preserve
Where have all the Indians gone?
Until we shed our communal, regional and caste identities, the quintessential Indian will remain a rare species
A demon slumbers
Perhaps the largest potential AIDS factory in the world, India remains blissfully apathetic to a scourge that could rip its social fabric apart
Environmentalist, prove thyself
It is getting imperative for green dreamers to marshal together their facts and place hair-tearing emotion on the backburner
Persistence helps masquerading ant raiders
Similarities between human beings and social insects extend to even stealing. One ant species, probably too lazy to forage, has found that when …
Democracy and approaches towards nature
Local decision-making and an integrated approach towards nature hold the key to planning for a sustainable future
'Sab kuch chalta hai!'
When 4,000 scientists gather for their annual session, there's more than serious academic review that takes place. RUSTAM VANIA records his …
Just (w)right!
Removing their blinkers is what scribes should do in order to promote an international environmental communication order that is fair and just
Carrying over
Solid waste management could benefit from adopting the traditional method of decentralised composting
For whom the school bells toll?
India's education policy has only sought to alienate the students and also deepen the urban-rural divide
Lillehammer
One town in Europe has shown how to host a major world sporting event, with all its attendant chaos, and still avoid environmental devastation
Time to sit up
A green clean or the polluted nether worlds? The choice must be made soon. May be global 'redistribution of opportunities' in the countries of …
Mad hatter's tea party
Some US-based environmental wisemen started out to debate Bihar's problems, sans field knowledge, and went back home foot-in-mouth
Winding roads to welfare
Humans just do not live by bread alone. But to climb the steps leading to total welfare, somewhere that equilibrium between work and …