Whose home is it, anyway?
The Maldharis of the Gir national park face eviction because their "unsustainable" economy if threatening the Asiatic lion
UNEP set to navigate a new course
The United Nations Environment Programme, which had previously advanced legal instruments to solve global environmental problems, is now …
Mira Behn: A friend of nature
The urge to be close to nature guided Madeleine Slade, who came to be known as Mira Behn, throughout her life
An identity crisis for the South
The developing world needs to define what the South represents, for otherwise it risks its legitimacy as a negotiating bloc
Peasant women list their woes to scientists
At a recent conference, women farm workers got a chance to discuss their problems with agricultural experts.
Industrialising agriculture dooms the sources of life
Greens contend that agricultural productivity can be increased many times with minimal use of water and a few external inputs, but most …
Why are we begging for eco-clean technology?
If industrialised countries were legally barred from exporting anything considered eco-unfriendly, industries in the developing countries would …
Wanted: an independent appeals institution
If the World Bank does not withdraw from the Narmada dam, it will undermine the credibility it gained from setting up the review team. US NGOs …
THE BIG BAD WHITE MEN
To villagers in Bihar, the Dunkel Draft and GATT are not proposals or agreements but a couple of angrez out to play havoc with their lives.
High talk
Unspeak has piled up mountains of words on sustainable development of the world's fragile peaks, and action courses seem to have been lost on the …
Some knowledge is forever
The validity of traditional ecological practices, in terms of sustainability, has to be examined scientifically
Two new worlds
'Aid fatigue' in the West is changing the perception of the development paradigm of the poorer countries
Junking reality
The cleaning force of every country has an indispensable worker, the rag picker. But the health and safety of this person is conveniently ignored
The minister and the menace
A recent workshop on people's management of the Rajaji National Park brought out in full fury the debate whether the local communities are wiser …
Unfriendly neighbourhoods
In their rush to meet the housing requirements of cities, planners are turning a blind eye to the quality of the built environment
Under siege
India, seen as a dumpyard by the developed countries for toxic wastes, is under pressure not to ratify the Basel Ban
Gifted writers
The life of a journalist on the motoring beat is replete with foreign trips, cash and expensive gifts, all in exchange of a slippery pen
Serving in god's name
This dedicated band have abandoned their egos and selfishness to go about performing social service without any fanfare
Fuel for food
While energy consumption surveys have shown a very high level of firewood consumption, various forest departments have shown very low levels of …
Woods for women
Poor rural women in India need easy access to and control over forests
Mean inheritance
Scavengery continues to remain one of society's ills in spite of laws created to abolish it
Pathogen paradigms
Foresight and planning are necessary to counter the new outbreaks of infectious diseases
How green is “green”?
Consumers can determine that by demanding eco-friendly products
The sleepy saw-scaled viper
Largely nocturnal, this brown snake is seen under rocks and fallen logs
The city before the Taj
The interests of Agra and its citizens must figure prominently in any effort to save the Taj