An Irular tribal community, in the remote pockets of Coimbatore district, is fighting for its basic needs such as electricity, road and housing, which in any case doesn’t have to be negotiated in today’s world.
Distant Village, Distant Dreams
By Arunima Maini Lack of connectivity coupled with immense poverty and deep-seated patriarchal beliefs prevents girls from accessing higher education…
Healthcare – A distant dream for Meerut residents
It takes 10-15 km for villagers to access healthcare in four villages of Uttar Pradesh By Anoushka Sawhney
Daily Struggles of Ghaziabad’s Bhubalia Lohar community
By Vani Sharma

The unseen pandemic
By- Divyakriti Singh
Bhandara Norgyeling Tibetan settlement
By Shweta Dabholkar
How the Panchayat system fails the Irulas?
Why the aborigines of Pillur are demanding a separate Panchayat? Palanivel Rajan C
Life on Edge: Roadside Settlements in Gurgaon
Narratives of daily-wage earners living in makeshift settlements for generations -Shrimansi Kaushik
Ranchi’s clay artisans: Wrapped in misery
With no water to drink or a piece of land to call their own, the potters and sculptors of Kumhar…

HIDE AND SEEK: FISHERMEN’S SEARCH FOR CATCH IN ROCKY WATERS
Climate change is making fishing an increasingly unpredictable livelihood for fisherfolk in Thazhampettai, a village on the Tamil Nadu coast.…
Why Hajipur’s banana farmers and wholesalers are disappointed
By Aayushee Bajoria
Vanishing forest in Kinwat poses a threat to tribal livelihoods
Teak trees worth lakhs, felled and smuggled by a mafia network, have pushed the Kinwat forest in the Nanded district…
Kannagi Nagar: The “art district” with substandard living conditions
By Ayaan Paul Chowdhury
Paradise, but no Purpose
Delhi’s “best homeless shelter” has facilities lauded by its residents, but now they need something beyond food, clothing and shelter:…
Chadar Badar Artists in West Bengal Struggle to Save their Art and Themselves
By- Shreeja Bhattacharya
Off the beaten path
In rural Himachal Pradesh, untarred ‘Kacha’ roads are a daily impediment for residents. So they took matters in their ‘own…