The Limits of Organised Inclusion: Some Insights From Engaged Youth In Penang
by
Dr. Suresraj Therambarajoo
Previous Post
Separated Through Necessity? Gendered Segregation Amoung The Aged And Homeless
5 min read
Gender-segregated homes for Penang’s elderly poor reveal a quieter reality of ageing—where care is shaped by constraint, vulnerability and cultural unease. Beyond shelter and survival, they expose how loneliness, dignity and intimacy persist even at life’s margins, often unspoken but deeply present.
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Mount Miriam Cancer Hospital: A Legacy of Hope And Love
7 min read
Born of Bishop Francis Chan’s final wish, Mount Miriam Cancer Hospital grew from a modest charitable home into a pillar of compassionate care in Penang. Sustained by faith, community and quiet sacrifice, its legacy endures as a testament to dignity in life’s final chapter.
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Sustainability Is Good, But Not Enough; Let’s Aim For Satisfiability
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This article highlights the paradox of sustainable development: while necessary, unchecked global “development” risks ecological collapse. Ooi Kee Beng argues this calls for a deeper shift beyond sustainability towards “satisfiability,” focusing on sufficiency, ethics, and collective well-being.
MERAPOH: A Glimpse Into Malaysia's Ecotourism Future
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At the quiet edge of Pahang, Merapoh opens into one of the world’s oldest rainforests, where biodiversity, community and conservation converge. Here, ecotourism unfolds gently—less spectacle than possibility—offering Malaysia a rare blueprint for a more deliberate, living future.
Greening Penang’s Hotels: Wishful Thinking or Achievable Target?
6 min read
BY 2030, the Penang state government envisions an ambitious target of 80% of local hotels adopting green practices.[1] Tourism…
by
Assif Shamim &
Renuka Radakrishnan