Small Change, Big Impact: the One-Line Revolution in Land Rights in Rural India
A simple tweak to land titles recognizes women as property owners, empowering them to build livelihoods and assets.
A simple tweak to land titles recognizes women as property owners, empowering them to build livelihoods and assets.
Roger Thurow shares stories of hunger across the world in a new podcast produced in collaboration with the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.
This photo essay documents how the Ithai hydroelectric dam, infrastructure projects, regional armed conflict, and climate change threaten the Loktak Wetland.
Portraits of Resilience takes viewers up close to nine individuals to understand the delicate relationship between the Meiteis and the Loktak Wetland as well as their fight for survival.
SECMOL, an alternative school located in Ladakh in northern India, has emerged as an eco-friendly institution where students from small rural villages have found hope.
The floating islands of Loktak Lake, known as “phumdis,” are home to unique animals and plants and an indigenous community threatened by a hydroelectric project.
Sintu is a transgender activist. While the debate about LGBTQ rights in India has revolved around the right to privacy, a glimpse into her daily life blurs the line between public and private.
The feminization of agriculture could mean healthier soil and forests, organic produce for urban markets, higher incomes for rural families.
SECMOL, an alternative school in Ladakh, built on a mountain desert at an altitude of 11,000 feet, educates children through sustainable community living.
Tea entrepreneurs are trying to save the "Champagne of teas."
Tea is the second most-consumed drink in the world, after water. Yet the industry has seen little innovation. Kaushal Dugar is changing all that.
As President Trump announces a new strategy for the war in Afghanistan, Pakistan says it is being singled out for blame.