Search results (6)
  • Kenneth Mohanty
    Times of India
    2024

    Since 2015, more than 11,000 women married to Indians abroad have approached India’s foreign missions with complaints of domestic crises. Many cases involve allegations of fraud and abuse. But in most instances, overseas officials are able to do only so much to help.

  • Saptarshi Das
    Hindustan Times
    2024

    All marriages between Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) or Overseas Citizens of India (OCIs) and Indian citizens should be compulsorily registered in India, the Law Commission recommended to the Union government on Friday.

  • Sudha Pillai
    Deccan Herald
    1999

    The stark white room is echoing with dreams. "I want to become a doctor... I am engineer... I want to become a nun... (this evokes a riot of laughter) I want to become a dress designer... My dream is to become a social worker ....

  • Shireen J. Jejeebhoy
    Studies in Family Planning
    1998

    This report examines the linkages between wife-beating and one health-related consequence for women, their experience of fetal and infant mortality.

  • L S Vishwanath
    Economic and Political Weekly
    1998

    The British first discovered female infanticide in India in 1789. Jonathan Duncan, then the resident in Benares province was asked by the Bengal council to settle the revenues in the province acquired by the raja of Benares.

  • Surekha Raman
    The Lawyers
    1995

    A society is judged by the way it treats its women and children. So is a judicial system. Nothing is more horrifying than the sexual abuse of a child: nothing more reprehensible than a judicial system that subsequently victimises the victim, police behaviour that adds terror to agony.