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Movie Review: The Hunger Games (2012)
Director: Gary Ross The Hunger Games follows Katniss Everdeen, a talented and courageous archer living in District 12, one of the poorest regions of the dystopian nation of Panem. Each year, the Capitol forces children from the districts to participate in the Hunger Games, a televised fight to the death designed to maintain control and intimidate the population. When Katniss volunteers to take her younger sister’s place, she faces deadly challenges, alliances, and moral dile
Era Robbani
Oct 242 min read


A Bond beyond Green
When I close my eyes, I see the images of rain falling on earth and hear the sounds of frogs during the rainy season, the serenity of early morning, and picking mangoes in the night after a nor’wester with my childhood friends. I barely forget the village memories of spending my whole night gossiping with my siblings and enjoying the beauty of a full moon on the rooftop of our house. At that time, I used to wake up seeing the heron bird sitting on the top branch of a bamboo t
Mahfuza Chowdhury
Oct 244 min read


Urbanization, Slums, and the Question of Natural Rights
Urbanization is considered a sign of advancement. Skyscrapers, transportation networks, and digital lines of communication are often regarded as symbols of progress. But behind these shiny facades, more than 1 billion people in the world live in slums characterized by deprivation, the UN Statistics Division says. From Kibera in Nairobi to Dharavi in Mumbai and Rio de Janeiro’s favelas, slums remind us that rapid urban expansion is not synonymous with better living conditions.
Era Robbani
Oct 243 min read


Heat, Dust, and the Weight of Statelessness: Living Standards and Lost Dignity in the Rohingya Camps
Photo by the Author The Rohingya crisis is not a new tragedy; it is a recurring wound in the conscience of South and Southeast Asia. For generations, the Rohingya people, an ethnic Muslim minority native to Myanmar’s Rakhine State, have lived as a community stripped of belonging. The crisis deepened in August 2017 when a brutal military operation in Rakhine drove over 700,000 Rohingya across the Naf River into Bangladesh. It was not the first exodus; smaller waves had occurr
Sabrin Sultana
Oct 1515 min read


Extinction or Prosperity? Sovereignty for Nature and Natural Rights Governance for Sustainable Future
Part 1 The Status Quo: A Broken System It’s hard to ignore the cracks that are starting to show in the picture of “advancement” that...
M. Zakir Hossain Khan
Oct 87 min read
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