Counterpoint

India’s Foreign Policy and the Game Theory of Power

India has made non-alignment and multi-lateralism the cornerstone of its foreign policy since independence. But now the time may be coming when it will have to choose a side.

Taking Greening Bangladesh Seriously

Without proper planning, scientific implementation, public engagement, and addressing the root causes of deforestation, the pledge to plant 250 million trees will not succeed

A Nation in Denial and the Dramatization of Politics

The sooner we embark on our mundane journey for democracy fraught with its own setbacks and disappointments, the more likely we will find the peace, stability, and economic justice we yearn

A Nation in Denial and the Dramatization of Politics

The sooner we embark on our mundane journey for democracy fraught with its own setbacks and disappointments, the more likely we will find the peace, stability, and economic justice we yearn

Why So Serious, NCP?

Politics is not a moral monastery. It’s a battlefield of imperfect allies and temporary truces. If the NCP keeps attacking everyone around it, soon it will have no one left to fight beside. Reform may begin with rebellion, but it survives through relationships. And without those, no revolution lasts long enough to write its own constitution.

When Reform Becomes Shortcut: NCP’s PR Gamble

Proportional representation sounds fair, but can lead to fragmentation and fracture of the polity. In the Bangladeshi context, it may deliver instability we don't need.

The Economic Outlook Facing the Next Government

The interim government has done a creditable job stabilizing the economy and fixing the mess it inherited. But the incoming government is still going to have its work cut out for it, and we will need very safe hands to ensure that Bangladesh gets back on track.

Governing by Announcement

A contract which commits Bangladesh to a 30 year arrangement with foreign operators involving sensitive and vital parts of our national infrastructure is a contract an interim government with no official opposition should feel neither empowered not entitled to sign.

The Limits of De-dollarization in Asia: Insights from Bangladesh

The vision of an Asia less dependent on the US dollar is not impossible, but it is certainly difficult. Bangladesh’s experience vividly demonstrates why.

We Need a National Artificial Intelligence Policy

We are already behind, but it is not too late and it need not continue to be that way. AI can help Bangladesh take a quantum leap into the future.

An Open Letter to WHO: You Knew Who Her Mother Was. Why Did You Wait?

The WHO placing Saima Wazed on "indefinite leave" is too little, too late. She should never have been given the post to begin with, and it should not have taken so long to remove her.

Of July and Revolutions

Contrary to confident public pronouncements by commentators, the Bangladesh-America relationship remains strong and is poised to reach new heights in the future

Subaltern Women and the Islamic Feminist Turn

It's time to rethink the representation and rights of women in Bangladesh. Should elite secular feminism neglect to recognize and engage with Islamic feminist frameworks, it risks irrelevance or worse.

The Road to Net-Zero

The important global choice is whether to focus first on the most efficient policies to tackle the world’s most urgent problems of disease, hunger, and poverty, or on the climate concerns of the world’s rich. The world’s poor need billions for health, nutrition and growth, not trillions for inefficient gestures.

Rethinking Bangladesh’s Rohingya Response

Bangladesh’s model of Rohingya containment is not a temporary holding pattern -- it is politically and economically rewarding for the state. International actors must stop sustaining it.

What Bangladesh Can Learn from Dr. Jane Goodall

Her warning that humanity has only a narrow window to reverse the degradation of Earth’s life-support systems, and that unless societies change their ways of living and their overall strategy for economic development, civilization will run out of time, is especially relevant to Bangladesh

Your Home in the Sky and the House in Disarray

It is long past due for Biman to start fulfilling its potential and becoming a cornerstone of the Bangladesh development story

August 3: The Gulshan Protest

A sit-in of professionals transforms to a spontaneous mass protest

Khaleda Zia and the Hardest Revolution of All

Not the overthrow of dictators, but the revolution of humility, compassion, and forgiveness. A lesson Bangladesh has never practiced, but one leader showed us how it is done.

Clutching at Straws: Who Should be Deemed Electable in the New Bangladesh?

At the very least, the people of Bangladesh should be able to keep the criminal, the corrupt, and the compromised from running in the upcoming elections

What the Innovision Poll Says and What It Doesn't

Everything you wanted to know about the PEPS survey. A closer reading of the survey's findings unearths a treasure trove of information for the political parties and the general public. Too many commentators have only looked at the surface, hence they are missing the true insights.

Tariff Relief or Strategic Trade-Off?

20% is better than 35, but there is still a lot of work that needs to be done if Bangladesh wishes to remain competitive in the global marketplace

Bangladesh Bank Is What Needs Reform

Without urgent steps to make Bangladesh Bank truly autonomous and accountable, meaningful economic reform will remain incomplete.

Productivity Is Almost Everything

Bangladesh's future prosperity depends in large part on enhancing our productivity, but we still lag behind when it comes to gathering the data needed to address the issue, let alone making it a policy priority

Soundtrack for the Apocalypse: A Dhaka Gridlock Playlist

You can't defeat Dhaka traffic. But these tunes can minimize your pain.

When Bangladesh’s Demographic Dividend Turns Into a Curse

The demographic dividend is not destiny -- it’s a choice. Bangladesh has 15 years to act, but  the window shrinks daily. Without a bold vision, this youth bulge could ignite unrest rather than prosperity, echoing the Arab Spring’s unfulfilled promise.  

In Defence of the Word Unspoken

Societies that silence dissent eventually silence innovation, justice, and even hope. The cemetery of nations is filled not with those who spoke too much, but with those who spoke too little.

Special

Culture

Videos

The J-Z Show।Ep. 6।Jon & Zafar talk with Nakibur Rahman on UNGA at New York, DUCSU & Innovision Poll

Jon and Zafar sit down with Nakibur Rahman to unpack Jamaat’s global positioning, the DUCSU upset, and what the Innovision Poll signals for Bangladesh’s next election.

The J-Z Show। Ep. 5। Gen Z Revolution in Nepal

Episode 5 of The J-Z Show compares Nepal’s Gen Z uprising to Bangladesh’s youth revolt, exploring common grievances, emerging political dynamics among students, and what these movements signal for the future.

Interview