The Unknown and the Uncounted
If Bangladesh can spend decades debating who qualifies as a Freedom Fighter, why has it never undertaken a house-by-house, district-by-district effort to document those who perished?
Professional Fiduciary Duty in the Age of AI
The client eyes you across the desk, not the screen. Efficiency kneels to trust; betray it, and no algorithm absolves. Guard that human bond fiercely: Our future depends on it.
The River Doesn't Forget
The people living along the southwest's rivers want the river back. A barrage and a river are different things.
The River Doesn't Forget
The people living along the southwest's rivers want the river back. A barrage and a river are different things.
The Nuclear Poison Pill in the US Trade Deal
The recent trade agreement with the US could stop Bangladesh from building any more nuclear power plants.
When Hospitals Cannot Save Us
The doctors of Bangladesh are not the disease. They are symptoms of a system that has been starved, stretched, and left to collapse quietly while our politicians fly to London and Singapore for their own check-ups. Someone needs to call this what it is. A national emergency. A moral failure. A crusade waiting for people willing to fight it.
Anti‑US Narratives and Chinese Influence in Bangladesh’s Political Transition
In this environment, terms like “deep state conspiracy,” “foreign funding,” etc provide a ready‑made vocabulary for dismissing the July uprising as manufactured rather than acknowledging the real anger that drove it.
Iran Has Already Won
A nation fighting for its survival generates a depth of will that a nation fighting for its credibility simply cannot match.
What Does Farakka Long March Day Mean to Us?
The Farakka Long march of 1976 was ultimately a march for dignity, justice, and survival. Even after five decades, its meaning has not faded. Rather, it has become more urgent than ever before. Because when rivers survive, nations survive too.
The Cost of Anti-Export Bias
When the domestic market offers higher returns with lower risks, firms naturally prioritize domestic sales over exports.
Can Government Run Without Taxes?
When citizens pay taxes, they demand services, transparency, and governance in return. This creates a feedback loop between the state and its people
A Day’s Trade, A Night’s Debt
Financial inclusion cannot be measured solely by account ownership. It must be judged by whether a vendor can access 10,000 taka at 2 AM at a known cost, without humiliation or hidden charges, and with a pathway to better finance.
Why Students Need A Better Understanding of the Constitution
Incorporating constitutional education into all faculties could play a significant role in developing informed, responsible, and constitutionally aware citizens.
The Quiet Discipline of My Father
Ten years have now passed since his execution. Another ten will pass. Then another. Generations will arrive knowing his name only through history books, political arguments, or fading photographs. Time inevitably erodes public memory.
Bangladesh Keeps Mourning Its Daughters. Why Does Nothing Change?
Visibility is not cosmetic. It is accountability. A case should not disappear into bureaucratic darkness simply because the public has moved on.
The Unknown and the Uncounted
If Bangladesh can spend decades debating who qualifies as a Freedom Fighter, why has it never undertaken a house-by-house, district-by-district effort to document those who perished?
Professional Fiduciary Duty in the Age of AI
The client eyes you across the desk, not the screen. Efficiency kneels to trust; betray it, and no algorithm absolves. Guard that human bond fiercely: Our future depends on it.
How Dhaka’s Gig Workers are Getting Squeezed
West Asia is burning again as the US-Iran conflict takes new turns. The heat of the conflict has reached the queues for fuel in Dhaka’s filling stations, where a new class of working poor is born in real time.