Corporate governance codes work only where firms believe working in a legal, ethical and transparent fashion also means good business. It is not in dispute that good corporate governance is all about commitment of a company to run its businesses in a legal, ethical and transparent manner, and that the tone must be set at the top. But are companies in India convinced that good business is all about good corporate...
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Local and global in Hyderabad by Sanjaya Baru
In his engaging book on a love affair between a Hyderabadi princess and an Englishman in the 18th century, William Dalrymple reminds us that “the road from Hyderabad to the port of Masulipatam was one of the most beautiful in the Deccan”. In unearthing this fact from travelogues of the time, Dalrymple draws attention not just to the wealth of Hyderabad, inherited from the richest kingdom of the Deccan, Golconda,...
More »Gaon Ki Awaaz: Grassroots media finds a voice
Rampur-Mathura (Uttar Pradesh): It is not yet 5 p.m. but the light has started fading in Rampur-Mathura, a village of barely 5,000 people, in Sitapur district. A group of village elders settle down comfortably in wooden chairs around a small fire lit under a tree. It is here that they gather every evening to discuss the day's events before retiring for the night. Until now, the village's busybodies used to keep...
More »Economist Paul Samuelson passes away
CAMBRIDGE (Massachusetts): Economist Paul A. Samuelson, a Nobel laureate and winner of the National Medal of Science, has died. He was 94. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where Mr. Samuelson taught, said he died on Sunday at his home in Belmont, Massachusetts. Mr. Samuelson was one of the leading economists of the 20th century and served as an adviser to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. He won...
More »Privatisation of Judiciary! by K G Somasekharan Nair
The increase in the number of civil cases in a country is its social mascot, as it symbolises the abundance of law abiding civilised citizens accepting the authority of the judiciary to get their grievances redressed. Otherwise, they would have turned to self-retaliation or employed roughnecks, a usual practice in America and Britain enkindled by their criminal heritage, to enforce justice in their own way; hence all civil litigants may...
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