Archive for November, 2010

What Raktha Charitra taught me about violence
November 29, 2010, 4 Comments

I must confess that I’m not exactly a fan of Ram Gopal Verma. The best response his films usually generate with me ...

A final get set go for Fund Advisers?
November 28, 2010, Comments Off

The economic downturn of 2007-2008 has instilled, with greater force, the need for sustained economic growth globally th ...

Journalism of the Dubious Kind
November 27, 2010, 8 Comments

If your primary source of information on the goings on in the world is the mainstream Indian English electronic media, y ...

Consultation Paper on the Proposed Amendments to the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 and its Impact on the Appointment of Arbitrators: Some Comments
November 27, 2010, 525 Comments

It is scarcely disputable that over the last fifteen years, arbitration has become the dominant form of international an ...

How India missed getting its first woman Chief Justice India
November 26, 2010, 13 Comments

Four women have been elevated to the post of the Judge of the Supreme Court of India in 60 years of the Court’s ex ...

Science blogging: the new frontier in science communication
November 25, 2010, 8 Comments

The new tools offered by the internet, which centre on user-supplied content and are often dubbed Web 2.0, are changing ...

Catfish and Facebook
November 25, 2010, 3 Comments

Catfish (2010) Dir. Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman ‘Facebook realism’ surely ought to be seriously considered as a s ...

IIT-Chemplast, Bergkamp and the Ashes
November 24, 2010, 1 Comment

I had a few spare hours this morning and I felt the time would be well spent by visiting the I.I.T. Chemplast Cricket Gr ...

The North London Derby
November 21, 2010, Comments Off

Consecutive victories against Wolverhampton Wanderers and Everton that followed a home loss to Newcastle United prompted ...

Where should the Court draw its Lakshman Rekha ?
November 19, 2010, 5 Comments

Shantanu’s post a few days ago highlights the fact that the Indian judiciary is very often guilty of overstepping its ...