Make India Great Again?* The Tightening Grip of Hindu Nationalism in Postcolonial India

As the title to this piece may suggest, India’s political climate has me worried. In order to explore these worries, I am going to focus on two organizations: a volunteer organization known as the Rasthriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and, by extension, India’s current ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

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“We Must Take Sides” – The Ongoing Struggle for Montgomery’s Past

Montgomery, Alabama is a city of real struggle. Everywhere you turn there are plaques, information boards, murals, memorials, and statues, dragging the tourist gaze back to the South’s tumultuous past. Walking around the city, it is hard not to feel deeply affected by both the gruesome and truly heroic stories which have come to shape the state and the country.

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American Exceptionalism: Rights for All Children Except Our Own

Does it matter if the U.S. refuses to sign yet another Human Rights Convention? Bryce Bahler argues that not joining the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child does not only impede policy development and monitoring, but also the development of scholarship and knowledge on child-related issues, resulting in often harmful social practices.

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A Select History of Suing Oil Companies

For as long as stereotypes about the judicial system have existed, US-Americans have been infamous for suing. Indeed the USA’s fascination with litigation is enshrined in its constitution, the writers of whom made sure to include that a right to a ‘speedy trial’ was included in the documents first 10 amendments. In reality, however, our legal rights aren’t so easily executed.

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