How fetching water is holding back India's women
Indian women and girls nearly always collect water for families - leaving them no time to work.
Indian women and girls nearly always collect water for families - leaving them no time to work.
An old saying warns that we are better off knowing neither the process by which our dinner is made nor the process by which we are governed. That bon mot seems first to have been printed in 1798, ascribed to Nicolas Chamfort, the witty noble-born secretary of the Jacobin Club
Renho Saito, who was expected to be Yuriko Koike's closest rival, places third in the race.
Subscribe now for access at a special price of only $99/year. Risk migrates to Europe from Asia David P. Goldman writes that European political risk is rising, with gains by the National Rally in France and the AfD in Germany increasing uncertainty and volatility in European
Jimmy Maladina says he is cooperating with police following reports of domestic assault.