Protect Human Rights

International Law

International law is the set of rules, agreements, and treaties that are binding between the sovereign countries which make them or bind themselves by it. Countries come together to make binding rules that they believe will benefit their citizens. Well-drafted international laws promote peace, justice, common interests, and trade. International law applies to all governments.

World Peace and Security

  Peace and security are very important for an individual, a society, a nation and the world. It is a condition where individuals, institutions, regions, nations and the world move ahead without any threat.         PEACE AND SECURITY When there is some violent activity in a city or in any other area

DEEN DAYAL HOSPITAL

The art and science of designing a hospital anywhere is a complex affair. Beyond technical requirements that modern medicine demands and rigid functional relationships between different medical departments, the designer has to cope with a host of more subjective issues like the anxiety of the patient, the stressful work environment of the staff and the

PUBLIC GRIEVANCE CENTER

  INTRODUCTION In contemporary society, State plays an important role in socio-economic development. The success of democracy and development depends to a greater extent on the efficiency of the government machinery. However, in the exercise of administrative powers, there is always a possibility of malpractices. This results in public grievances towards the administration. According to

THE ACCURACY NEWS

THE ACCURACY NEWS  The Nature and Problem of Objective News Objective news is essentially an epistemic kind. What is sometimes called the “journalism of verification” is merely what yields accurate news: verification (or justification) is an epistemic notion. The editorial adage “When in doubt, leave it out” also expresses its epistemic nature. More specifically, objective

THE POLITICAL MONITORING

  The international community has increasingly come to acknowledge that ‘politics matters’1 for development, and consequently there is a small but growing, number of projects and programs that are seeking to ‘work politically’. But what does this new way of working mean for monitoring and evaluation practice? The challenges of thinking and working politically –