Pachauri Talks Ethics in Gender Justice Book
Invited to deliver a lecture in memory of a talented, successful, decidedly feminist judge, Pachauri didn’t think her half of humanity was worth mentioning.
Invited to deliver a lecture in memory of a talented, successful, decidedly feminist judge, Pachauri didn’t think her half of humanity was worth mentioning.
Why is a man accused of egregious sexual harassment still the chancellor of a university? Why is he still on a UNESCO panel when that entity says gender equality is a global priority?
Electronic messages cited in a Delhi police report tell the story of a spirited young woman who effectively lost her job because she wouldn't let her boss grope her.
In his home country, the former chairman of the IPCC is being loudly denounced.
A court has barred the former IPCC chairman from his workplace and forbidden travel abroad without permission. A conference at Harvard University has withdrawn his guest speaker invitation.
Is the former chairman of the IPCC genuinely ill - or is this a 'strategic move' on the part of his legal team to forestall his arrest?
The resignation letter of the IPCC chairman is a two-page love letter to himself.
Rajendra Pachauri's TERI institute appears to be a workplace in which female employees are continually groped, pestered, and invited to spend private time with the boss.
Additional women are stepping forward with tales of inappropriate behaviour on the part of Rajendra Pachauri, who has chaired the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) since 2002.
Texts and emails allegedly sent by IPCC chairman Rajendra Pachauri tell a disturbing tale. Months after a female subordinate objected repeatedly and strenuously to his sexual advances, the head of a UN body continued to physically and electronically stalk her.