India is not short of news. It is short of argument — the patient, evidenced, unhurried kind that treats readers as citizens rather than clicks. The Bharat Review exists to fill that gap: long-form reporting and essays that take a position, show their working, and trust you to draw your own conclusions.
We cover the republic as it actually is — plural, contradictory, ancient and unfinished. We publish historians alongside economists, jurists alongside novelists, and dissenters alongside all of them. We do not have a party line. We have standards.
Because we take no corporate or political funding, our only obligation is to the reader. That is the whole model, and it is deliberately hard to corrupt.