Recently in a capital, new public vehicle has been launched with the mission of providing safe, cheap and smooth journey. It was sure that I used that vehicle because of cheap journey to my college.
A post about the polarising discourses of race, Muslims and violence and how it has affected a mixed-race family living in Nepal. Martin Punaks argues that: “If we are ever to overcome extremism and terrorism, then we first need to mourn for the victims of all societies, regardless of their colour or creed".
'Rising Voices, an outreach initiative of Global Voices, aims to help bring new voices from new communities and speaking new languages to the global conversation by providing resources and funding to local groups reaching out to underrepresented communities.Founded in 2004 by a group of pioneering international bloggers, Global Voices aggregates, curates, and amplifies the global conversation online – shining light on places and people other media often ignore.
A brief piece about Possible an incredible health organisation which uses lessons from the corporate sector to make healthcare possible throughout the world.
Significant steps are being taken to improve the level of accountability within the national public schools. CIAA is pushing hard to curb corruption but also the Department of Education has been working seriously to make the sector less corrupted and this is also thanks to the work of Dr. Awasti, its former Director General who was recently transferred back to the Ministry of Education.
Mahesh Dattani's Thirty Days in September, directed by Anup Baral, is being staged at Theatre Village, everyday at 5 p.m., from Feb 5 to 24, 2015. Share with friends, find your suitable date and come with family. But don't bring minors with you!
Kathmandu was lucky, yesterday, to get an opportunity to understand and discuss issues of sustainability with Samar Jodha. As a thought leader, his body of work represents and coalesces many disparate strains of our built environment. People are central. Social communication is never easy but always best projected in experiential terms. We tend to reduce rather than mitigate.