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Our Mothers Make Panjiri: A Case Study in How Narrative Change Travels Through People, Not Platforms
You can buy panjiri on Amazon now. The ingredients are accurate. The packaging is clean. What the packet cannot carry is the knowledge of what those ingredients were actually for, or the understanding that the making of panjiri was never separable from its medicine. The wellness industry solved the distribution problem and lost the knowledge. This is what that looks like, and what it reveals about how narrative change actually travels.
11 min read


When Law Meets Power: Women’s Inheritance Rights in India and the Implementation Gap Between Legal Equality and Economic Reality
How women's inheritance legal rights in India are undermined in practice, why the quiet reallocation of wealth matters for economic justice, and what it would take to close the gap between law and lived reality.
7 min read


When Care Becomes a Feature: Synthetic Intimacy and the Individualization of Care
At two in the morning, a chatbot answers immediately. It doesn't ask why you're awake. It doesn't rush you. It responds in calm, affirming language, trained on millions of conversations and designed to sound attentive without ever becoming overwhelmed. For people who can't access therapy, who are burned out from leaning on friends, or who need support outside office hours, that responsiveness feels like care. This isn't because chatbots are deep. It's because they're availabl
8 min read


Care Without Citizenship: How Migrant Women Subsidize Public Systems Without Rights
This paper examines how migration policy and underinvestment in public care systems combine to produce a workforce of migrant women who effectively subsidize national economies while remaining excluded from basic labor and social protections. Across the world, migrant women perform the labor that makes everyday life possible. They care for children, older people, people with disabilities, and those who are ill. They clean homes, prepare food, and provide emotional and physica
5 min read


Untouched: Sex Trafficking in India isn’t a Law Enforcement Problem, It’s an Economic Justice Problem
India has laws against sex trafficking. Strong ones, in fact. The Immoral Tracking Prevention Act prescribes seven years to life imprisonment for perpetrators. The Indian Penal Code criminalizes kidnapping and selling minors into prostitution. Analysis of the policies shaping why India's anti-trafficking laws fail in practice and what the persistence of trafficking reveals about the economic and institutional structures that sustain exploitation is needed. Yet an estimated 20
5 min read
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