Building the India of the future, a nation of entrepreneurs
Chetna Sinha founded the first bank for rural women in India. She's optimistic that female entrepreneurs will build a better future for the country.
Chetna Sinha founded the first bank for rural women in India. She's optimistic that female entrepreneurs will build a better future for the country.
Business leaders are increasingly expected to take a stand on social issues.
More and more people are migrating to urban areas, most of them young. This presents a huge opportunity to address the current crisis in mental health - here's how.
Six million children still die each year for want of simple health solutions that cost less than a cup of coffee.
One young woman saw an alternative to the exploitation and environmental waste that was happening on her doorstep.
When Carlos Pereira’s daughter was born with cerebral palsy, he quit his job and got to work on an app that would give her a voice.
Women carry the burden of water - literally, writes Eleanor Allen, the CEO of Water For People.
Meet Luvuyo Rani, a Davos participant and social entrepreneur who started his business selling computers from the boot of a car.
India's economy is one of the fastest-growing in the world. But is its growth including everyone? As jobs move out of villages and into cities, migration from rural to urban areas follows...
The teen brain is "nothing short of miraculous" as a learning machine.
Bringing financial services to the doorsteps of India's rural poor is expensive – but it could transform both the banking industry and the lives of millions of hardworking people.
With widespread concern about how to manage the consequences of India's rapid urbanization, it seems doubly foolish to overlook the cheap mobile workforce which is doing much of the heavy...
Distantly situated healthcare facilities with inconvenient opening hours are denying India's most disadvantaged access to decent treatment. But the growth of doorstep medical services is ...
The idea is simple: players pledge 1% of their salaries to a collective fund for investment in football-based charities around the world.
The magnitude of India’s tuberculosis (TB) crisis is staggering.