Reflections at 37.

Quiet Birthday Eve.

Happy to have survived the year. Wiser with the bruises and the punches, that life has offered. Grateful for the kindness of people who have held the sail in the middle of a tornado.

Nothing more valuable than clarity of purpose and resolve for bending the world towards slightly towards the moral arc of justice through ESG and impact entrepreneurship.

Be Kind, the world has too many who need the hospital bill to be paid for a loved one while we are fretting over minor conundrums over latte.

The Partition Lingers.

Azadi Mubarak, Midnights Children from Peshawar to Delhi to Kolkata to Dhaka to Sittwe. The embers of the Partition linger as transgenerational trauma as a member of family whose cuisine reflects in the quotidian and its conflicts rage on as an uncompleted project.

The unpartitioned South Asia has glimpses in Karama and Bur Dubai in Dubai as the Little Dhaka neighborhood in the Little India district in Singapore. The sounds of the Bengali dialects from current day Bangladesh in the diaspora in Muscat, in the Hamriya or Ghala gave a sense of the similarities as well as the difference which a bloody partition instituted. The political trajectories have clearly differed, and the partition impacted the Panjabis, Sindhis, Bengalis and large parts of Mumbai, my home where Sukkur and other Sindhi names are prominent building names here. The best Sindhi fare can be found in the historic Meena Bazar/ Al Fahidi/Bastakiyah neighborhood in Bur Dubai.

The south was impacted as well, as Hyderabad is felt in Karachi and vice versa. The partition traumas are felt in the everyday politics of South Asia, one just needs to watch prime time news to realize, that the bloody chapter lives on.

Labor via ESG

Labor in HBR

Even the latest HBR edition acknowledges that engaging labour issues for businesses is a material ESG issue, given that support for unions is at an all time high including Starbucks where I am sitting and reflecting on the article in a touch of rich irony.

The woke era, is bringing labour front and centre to the boardroom via the ESG lens.

Sustainability for Resilience

ESG or sustainability is the social license of operate for a business, the degrees of intensity might vary, tick box to innovation spectrum but ESG will persist as it instils the value to do business the right way, caring for your employees, not pollute deliberately. The social or the human rights element within the ‘S’ element is not a derivative of old school trade unionism, although formal labor organizing is making a comeback in the woke era. Human rights with the small ‘r’ are about care, nurturing the communities of practice with solid safety record.

The social element is integral to business value creation, investing in your employees and communities that they are motivated. In a post pandemic era, investing in talent is the easiest route to resilience. Thinking about resilience has a clear ROI, lessons from the pandemic are there for us to internalize.

ESG is reporting, resilience is long term value creation.

NDP 2023

Happy National Day Singapore 🇸🇬

As a Singapore-phile, having lived in the global city for a better part of decade in various parts working, researching and studying on tax payer money (NRF and SSHRC Scholarships) at NUS and NTU, I am grateful and the Tiny Red Dot is home, truly with wonderful local family and friends. A city with its eye on the future and great leadership to implement the visionary policies.

Always happy to give back where I have learned so much and have precious memories. One does not need to have PR to feel one is back home when one lands at T3 Changi Airport or have the CKT at Zion Road Food Centre.

I was recently there and the photo is from Farrer Park MRT and was fortunate to view the NDP rehearsals at Marina Bay Sands on a Saturday evening.

I look forward to writing a PhD on a Singapore based topic hopefully soon, and will visit again to learn from the best thinkers in the region.

Majulah Singapura !

The Clementi Boy

The Sustainability Soup.

There are several terms in the sustainability space, which are utilized interchangeably- ESG, Impact, Sustainability, Climate Adaptation etc. in a commonplace quotidian manner. These terms have a studied history and are rooted in a legacy of justice and thought. The big picture is responsible capitalism, which has the climate emergency at the heart of the change in thinking. Impact is about additionality, which is beyond CSR and compliance. Sustainability has different valency across scales and is more of an omnibus term. ESG is a datafication play of the sustainability umbrella. We need to think with resilience and crisis, and the climate emergency is an all-encompassing lens, but not the only one, we have forgotten the pandemic too soon in a reactive amnesia to redeem ourselves of pain. Digital is a slow, sleeping crisis and of opportunity. A cultural shift as the climate emergency.

There is so much unthought while we are drowning in jargon.

Climate Education Reading List

The Future of Work is a Climate Change Issue, as the weather changes our capacity to work also evolves, especially for employers in the physical workspace such as construction, delivery work or mining. Time to think through green in a complexity thinking approach. Thinking about the climate transition in a single-issue fashion is deleterious as mere reports will not roll back the ‘global boiling’ moment There needs to be genuine skills in cross disciplinary manner as climate modelers need to be conversant in STS and econometrics. Or doctors apt in the language of heat induced stress. Too many of our academic programs in science and engineering are simply inept as a superior design is not as effective with the lack of stakeholder engagement skills. In the era of climate litigation, we need biologists who have a law degree or finance major with decent skills in conservation science for Nature based Climate Solutions.

We need a new script for climate education, for the global boiling era.

The Clementi Boy.

At Mr. Prata
Old home
Block 107 A Kopitiam
Familiar Haunt
The epic bakery

A decade in Clementi seems just like yesterday as today I was back to my neighbourhood after a year, and the guys at the Prata shop and the Uncle at the Kopitiam recognised me with nods and the where have you been question.

Home is a familiar space, even when it is lost. I often dream about the space. I am used to losing spaces of care, with Muscat being the first at the age of 30.

The Clementi Boy will be back again for Kopi.

Kino at Takashimaya

The Singapore section

Sitting in between the narrow shelf ways of Kino at Takashimaya in Singapore, has been a personal favourite over the years, and I am back here after almost a decade. It is a near spiritual experience to breathe in the breathe of physical books in the era of Amazon, where people hardly read.

The Singapore section is a delight as a window into work on the global city.

As one of the few writers who have written on Singapore in the Indian Media, the coverage of the global city among South Asian Academia is rather limited. There are plenty of thesis on India written at NUS/NTU each year, however vice versa cannot be said.