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Demographic Assessment of Weaver Communities across Telangana: A Regional Socio-Economic Analysis

Assessment Overview and Methodological Scope The weaver communities of Telangana are not merely artisans; they represent a cornerstone of the state’s socio-economic architecture and cultural legacy. For the Senior Policy Consultant, these populations represent a specialized workforce whose geographic clustering dictates the efficacy of sectoral interventions. Understanding the spatial distribution and demographic weighting of these communities is a strategic imperative for optimizing resource allocation, establishing industrial infrastructure, and ensuring the sectoral resilience of the handloom and powerloom industries. This assessment provides a granular demographic mapping across all 33 districts of Telangana, encompassing eleven distinct sub-castes. The objective is to convert raw census-style data into an actionable demographic map for policy planners and government stakeholders. By identifying both high-density priority zones and specialized micro-clusters, this document faci...
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The Republic of Miracles: Why India Must Reclaim Its Scientific Soul

  Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan An appeal to reason in an age of godmen, gullibility, and engineered ignorance   The Constitution's Forgotten Promise Article 51A(h) of the Indian Constitution places a remarkable obligation on every citizen:  to develop the scientific temper, humanism, and the spirit of inquiry and reform.  This is not a guideline. It is a fundamental duty — as binding in its moral weight as any right we jealously claim. And yet, in 2026, India is watching that promise drown in a flood of sacred ash, miracle water, and prime-time astrology. We are a nation that sends spacecraft to the Moon and Mars. We produce world-class mathematicians, biologists, and engineers. And simultaneously, we are a nation where stadium-sized crowds prostrate before men who claim to materialise gold from thin air, cure cancer with cow urine, and commune directly with the divine — for a fee. This is not a contradiction we can afford to be proud of. It is a crisis.   The Godman...

Century-old and Unaccountable: The Case for Registering the RSS

   Century-old and Unaccountable: The Case for Registering the RSS India's most powerful civil organisation cloaks itself in informality. A democracy that tolerates such opacity from an entity of such influence is only asking for trouble. HYDERABAD  ·  Jun 18, 2026 There is a reliable Indian tradition of powerful organisations invoking ancient precedent to escape modern accountability. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, which celebrated its centenary last year, has mastered this art. Asked why it remains unregistered under any Indian law, its chief, Mohan Bhagwat, replied with a question of his own: should the RSS have registered with the British, against whom its founder was fighting? The rhetorical flair is admirable. The logic is embarrassing. India has been a sovereign republic for 77 years. That is a long time to forget to fill out the paperwork. The RSS occupies a position in Indian public life without parallel. It claims millions of participants, operates tens o...

The Architects of Chaos: The Brahminical Role and the Riddle of Morality

  Religion & Power in India The Architects of Chaos The Brahminical Role and the Riddle of Morality How the custodians of Hinduism built a theology of convenient truths — and what it cost the civilisation they claimed to protect   HYDERABAD   |   Special Report I n the long history of organised religion, few questions are as disorienting as a simple one posed by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar at the opening of his seminal work Riddles in Hinduism: why is a Hindu a Hindu? A Parsi can answer in a sentence. A Muslim can answer in five words. A Christian's answer fits on a bumper sticker. Ask a Hindu, and the question opens into a labyrinth — of competing gods, contradictory scriptures, incompatible philosophies, and a social order that claims divine sanction while being visibly constructed by human hands. This is not an accident. It is, Ambedkar argued, the product of a sustained and largely successful project of institutional design — one whose architect...