Sibling rivalry.
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Ever since partition in 1947, South Asia’s two biggest players have been locked in sibling rivalry.
North Korean cheerleaders support the South Korean men’s ice hockey team in PyeongChang.
Larry W. Smith/EPA
Sometimes diplomacy won the day, sometimes it didn’t.
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Climate change could hurt Indian farmers’ income by up to 20-25% in the medium term.
EPA-EFE/Divyakant Solanki
It is not the first time that a Bollywood film such as Padmavaat has sparked controversy and tensions among diverse communities in India.
A scene from Sir Clarmont Percival Skrine’s film Quetta-Damghan, almost certainly the only colour footage of the Indian Long Range Squadron in action. The film recently has been digitised by the Royal Geographical Society and the British Film Institute.
British Film Institute/Royal Geographical Society
More than 100 historic expeditionary and travel films have been digitised recently by the Royal Geographical Society and the British Film Institute.
A protest to mark the first anniversary of the Delhi gang rape, in New Delhi, 2013.
REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
Millennial Indian women have been leading a new kind of feminism since the early 2000s.
China is increasingly viewed by the United States as a full-spectrum adversary.
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The contestation of Asia will continue this year, with many countries facing internal and external battles.
Many Americans would be appalled to think that caste might exist in the supposedly meritocratic U.S. But is the country’s persistent, entrenched inequality really so different?
Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
An Indian scholar makes the case that caste explains inequality in America better than race and class.
Padman starring Akshay Kumar.
Picselect
A new Bollywood movie based on the story of an Indian entrepreneur who created affordable sanitary pads is helping to counter myths and taboos around menstruation.
The cancer Kaposi sarcoma. South Africa has large productivity losses because of deaths caused by it.
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Policies encouraging lifestyle changes that reduce the risk of cancer could have positive effects on the economies of BRICS countries.
For many victims of violence, the police are a large part of the problem.
Reuters
How our work with Indian police is helping women and girls find justice.
Local residents holding Chinese and Olympic flags attend a rehearsal in Chongli county of Zhangjiakou ahead of the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.
Reuters/Jason Lee
Sporting extravaganzas are a way for globalising cities in emerging market economies to try and play the “modernity game”. But they don’t make the rules, and so they can never “win”.
A pall of inaction and apathy hangs over Delhi’s reaction to its air pollution crisis.
Reuters/Anindito Mukherjee
While India struggles for answers to its urban air pollution crisis, Beijing is moving forward with strong resolve and effective policy.
Sun, sea, sand and tower blocks in Benidorm, Spain.
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How to make your holiday better for the environment through sustainable tourism.
Rajat Gupta / EPA
Winter has once again brought severe air pollution to the Indian capital.
Nigerians don’t trust the police and often resort to mob justice.
Reuters/Afolabi Sotunde
Nigeria is on the verge of passing a law to criminalise rampant mob lynching. Other countries have tried to do this and failed.
As cities in developing countries - like Lagos in Nigeria, pictured here - grow, so do obesity risks.
Reuters/Akintunde Akinleye
Governments must understand that the factors making cities convenient and productive also make their residents prone to obesity. They must confront this challenge with intelligent, focused policies.
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The astronomic rise of the price of bitcoin over the past 12 months raises fears that the cryptocurrency is set to crash which could see many people lose money.
University students clash with policemen during a protest about university fee hikes in Chandigarh, India.
Ajay Verma/Reuters
The Indian higher education system faces challenges like underfunding, lack of research work and poor curricula.
Women’s NGOs work hard to improve the lives of women in the developing world, including in countries like India and Tanzania. But then they’re often cut out from the process. This photo was taken in the remote village of Uzi on Zanzibar Island in Tanzania in April 2016.
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NGOs (non-government organizations) run by women in India and Tanzania fuel the success of development projects, but the women are too easily marginalized once the projects get off the ground.