Volume: 1 Issue: 1 (January 2026)
| Sr No. | Article Information |
|---|
| 1 |
Author(s):
Sonakshi Singh.
Country:
India
Research Area:
Geography
Page No:
21-32 |
Please activate your license to get feature updates, premium support
Abstract
This paper conducts an analysis of gendered aspects of work and safety within slums of Delhi city paying attention to the field of unequal employment experiences of women in an informal labor market and the risk factors to their physical and psychological health. Drawing on qualitative research conducted in select slum settlements, the paper examines the socio-cultural and spatial constraints that shape women's employment opportunities, mobility, and daily experiences. The results show that women are involved in mostly low-paid, informal jobs which are insecure most of the time due to domestic duties and male-dominated culture. Safety emerges as a critical factor limiting women's access to public spaces and economic participation, with frequent incidents of harassment, inadequate infrastructure, and weak institutional support. The paper has made it clear that there are combinations of marginalization between gender, caste, class, and migration status that blight the women and limit their agency. It concludes with policy recommendations for enhancing women's safety, improving access to dignified work, and promoting inclusive urban development. This study forms part of the wider debate of gender issues, urban poverty and spatial justice in fast-urbanizing domains.
| 2 |
Author(s):
Komal Yadav.
Country:
India
Research Area:
Psychology
Page No:
33-40 |
Role of Artificial Intelligence in Transforming Modern Education Systems2
Abstract
Climate change is a highly publicized world problem of the 21 st century and its implications have become more apparent due to the increasing degrees of temperature rise, severe weather conditions, and environmental deterioration. Climate-related communication in both traditional and digital channels has caused the given crisis to be practically impossible to miss, at least, among the younger generations. The more people do learn about it the more there is a rush to do something about it.
As such, there has been an extreme increase in youth climate activism. Leaders like Greta Thunberg and groups like Fridays for Future have been able to mobilize millions of youth around the globe to petition government officials and make them take action now. Besides drawing the attention to the potential of young people to affect social change, these movements have helped to attract the awareness of the emotional burden that the climate crisis can impose on the minds of the young people.