Running up skyscrapers? Well, there’s a new fad for you.
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COVER STORY
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The lesson of burning its fingers earlier in Sri Lanka should guide India’s ties with Nepal.
Nepal goes ‘secular’. But India fumes at the constitution’s ‘unfair’ federal structure.
The articles are well-written and give us interesting, unexpected perspectives
Assam CM Tarun Gogoi on why he thinks Congress will retain the state in the assembly elections next year.
If national progress is our aim, the freedom to think, to dissent is essential. The irrational must be weeded out.
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The lesson of burning its fingers earlier in Sri Lanka should guide India’s ties with Nepal.
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Nepal goes ‘secular’. But India fumes at the constitution’s ‘unfair’ federal structure.
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Is Union culture minister Mahesh Sharma for real?
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<i>Outlook</i> in retrospect.
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The articles are well-written and give us interesting, unexpected perspectives
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The magazine could do with a bit of humour.
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Assam CM Tarun Gogoi on why he thinks Congress will retain the state in the assembly elections next year.
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A regular column on the essential buzz
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If national progress is our aim, the freedom to think, to dissent is essential. The irrational must be weeded out.
OTHER STORIES
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Ireland done, will Modi’s UK visit be a mere diaspora event?
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They’ve dash and pizzazz, these inheritors of grand enterprises. But will they have the moxy to outsmart upstarts and keep leading their packs?
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The bars are closed. No worries, the Malayali takes to beer, wine.
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The states of the nation: news, headlines, gossip, rumours, things we learnt
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All the chatter and goss from around the world.
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Chiki Sarkar's brand new publishing house and a prayer for holidays
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The start-up genre has revolutionised entrepreneurial streaks globally
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A new game from the developers of Angry Birds, how to combat dengue fever and more...
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Given the hype, the food disappoints.
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Stuffy clubs are passe, businesses prefer informal avenues for meetings
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The global health advocate, singer, songwriter and actress on her career
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The rough, the raw and the ribald are engagingly portrayed
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It’s a paradise on earth and Italians are simply the nicest people.
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Two books touch on the shortcomings of the larger-than-life icon
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The non-conformist that he was makes Steve Jobs a role model
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Marriages of convenience and ambition rule in Indian business families
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Check if you know some unusual facts about some well-known entrepreneurs
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And why India must learn to forgive start-up failures
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B-schools, and corporates, prepare for students dreaming of start-ups
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Murad Ali Baig raises the sibling rivalry between the sons of Shah Jahan to epic heights in this new rendering of the state of the nation in 17th century Mughal-dominated India.
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He genuflected before the empire and regarded ‘Kaffirs’ with open racism. Meet Mohandas Gandhi in South Africa.
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<i>Outlook</i> asks a few worthies to suggest the books that have influenced them the most
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Are our B-schools ready to ride the start-up wave? And the big churn in our mid-segment rankings.
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B-schools wake up to a new pedagogy demanded by the start-up boom
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In Munnar, women tea workers dump the unions in fight for fair wages
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The new secretarial standards should lead to cleaner company practises
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Despite placatory nods, reservation in the private sector is yet to take off
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Success lies beyond just the idea. <i>Outlook</i> creates a primer.
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Are our companies doing too little, wanting govt to do too much?
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Long work hours, impossible targets make the IT universe living hell
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India Inc is being unfairly maligned. Its animal instincts are intact.
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A complex 21st century calls for an overhaul of MBA courses
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Big ideas, big business. Then some others you have to follow. And finally, <i>Outlook</i>’s pick of speakers who are must-listens this year.
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Business schools easily lend themselves to credible ranking. Here are three prominent ones, showing that Indian schools aren’t far behind.