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  1. Justine Hardy (born April 1966) is a British journalist, author, and integrated trauma therapist who has spent most of her adult life in India. She has been a journalist in South Asia, including Kashmir, where she established Healing Kashmir to help people overcome the trauma of the Insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir that began in 1989.

  2. As a journalist and writer, she is the author of seven books, ranging in subject from war to Hindi film. The Ochre Border, 1995, records the reopening of the Tibetan frontier-lands. Her second, Scoop-Wallah, 1999, is the story of her time as a journalist on an Indian newspaper in Delhi.

  3. 1 de sept. de 2022 · The final countdown to death: Justine Hardy. September 2022 View The Oldie Magazine. The final countdown. When Norah Vincent, a bestselling American writer, went to a Swiss clinic to end her life, her friend Justine Hardy travelled with her. Norah Vincent on 5th July 2022, the day before she died. ‘N. Walt Whitman. Green Light Day.

  4. Biografía de Justine Hardy. Ejerce desde hace muchos años el periodismo habiendo pasado gran parte de ellos en el conflicto entre Cachemira y el norte de la India. Trabaja para el Financial Times y colabora en The Times, Vanity Fair y Traveler entre otros periódicos y revistas. Es también realizadora de documentales y presentadora en la BBC.

  5. www.justinehardy.comJustine Hardy

    3 de jul. de 2021 · As a writer and journalist Justine has been writing on South Asia for twenty-five years. While doing this she simultaneously set up an organisation in Kashmir, North India, rehabilitating those suffering from the psychological fallout of conflict.

  6. Justine Hardy is a British journalist, author, and conflict trauma therapist specializing in South Asia, and the Kashmir region in particular. She is the author of six books, ranging from journeys through Tibet, Hindi film, her time working on an Indian newspaper, the realities of orthodox Islam, and war.

  7. Justine Hardy is the author of six books, both fiction and non-fiction, all of which draw on the thirty years that she has spent living and working in India, particularly in the tragic and beautiful Kashmir Valley. Three have been serialized on BBC Radio 4.