The third Nordic Conference on South Asian Studies for Young Scholars was held 16–18 August 2011 at Falsterbo kursgård in Höllviken, 20 km south of Malmö.
Besides altogether 27 young scholars, the conference also included 15 senior scholars working with South Asia related research in different fields, giving lectures and acting as respondents in the four panel sessions. The keynote speaker, Professor Patricia Jeffery (photo) from the Dept. of Sociology, School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh, UK, was one of them. Her presentation was entitled ”Daughter Aversion, Dowry and Demographic Change”. Prof. Jeffery also participated as a champion in a challengers-champions session on Gender, as well as being a group leader in the thematic group on Gender.
Dr. Bidyut Mohanty, Head, Women’s Studies Department at the Institute of Social Sciences (ISS), New Delhi, India holds a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Monday 19 September 2011, 16.15–18.00. During the lecture, co-organised by the Department of History of Religion, she will talk about ”Nuances of Rice Culture, Goddess Lakshmi and the Status of Women in India”. The lecture is based on her forthcoming book entitled ”Rice Culture and Status of Women: A Comparative Study of Laksmi Puranas”. Read an article written by Dr. Mohanty on the same issue. Manoranjan Mohanty, Durgabai Deshmukh Professor of Social Development at the Council for Social Development in New Delhi, India holds a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Tuesday 20 September 2011, 15.15–17.00. During the seminar, co-organised by the departments of Sociology and Political Science, he will talk about ”India and China: Competing Hegemonies or Forces of Democratization”. Prof. Mohantry is a China scholar with many publications on theoretical and empirical dimensions of social movements, human rights, development experience and regional role of India and China. Currently he is also the Chairperson, Institute of Chinese Studies in Delhi, and President, Development Research Institute, Bhubaneshwar. Besides, he is a Visiting Professor in Global Studies at University of California, Santa Barbara since 2007 where he teaches every Spring. Professor Venkatesh Athreya from the Swaminathan Research Foundation in Chennai, India holds a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Tuesday 27 September 2011, 15.15–17.00. During the seminar, organised in collaboration with the Dept. of Sociology, he will talk about ”Political Economy of Indian Development since 1991”. During the academic year 2011/12, G K Karanth, Professor of Sociology at the Centre for Study of Social Change and Development, Institute for Social and Economic Change (ISEC) in Bangalore, will be the Visiting ICCR Professor at Lund University. He is supposed to arrive in mid-September 2011, and be will hosted by the Department of Sociology.
Past activities:Professor Mizanur Rahman from the Dept. of Accounting & Information Systems, Dhaka University, Bangladesh (and also the Treasurer of Dhaka University), held a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Thursday 26 May 2011. He spoke about ”Social Marketing: Lessons from Bangladesh”. The seminar was organized in collaboration with the Dept. of Sociology. Prof. Rahman has a research interest in Global payment imbalance and the current global economic crisis; and Infrastructure, trade and economic growth in Asia, Venue: Dept. of Sociology, conference room 1, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. More information.
Partha N. Mukherjee, Professor Emeritus, Institute of Social Sciences, New Delhi, came to Lund University in the first week of May 2011, to be a member of an international team to evaluate the university. The week-long evaluation was part of the EQ 11 project initiated at Lund University in 2009 in order to improve education quality. More information on EQ11.
SASNET successfully organised a full-day seminar on “Managing Diversity: The Indian Experience”, in collaboration with the Embassy of India in Stockholm on Thursday 14 April 2011, 09.30–17.00 and with a concluding cultural programme from 17.30–19.30. The events gathered an audience of more than 100 people, in the Pictura hall, inside the main Lund University Building for the day sessions, and then in The Old Bishop’s Palace.
The academic speakers included Professor Sushil Khanna, Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Kolkata (but currently ICCR guest Professor at the Asia Research Centre, Copenhagen Business School) – read his CV. He spoke about ”Regional and Social Diversity: The New Bourgeoisie in India”, how regional corporations now grow faster in India than the traditional large business groups. The reception at the Old Bishop’s Palace was hosted by the Embassy of India in Sweden. A mixed crowd consisting both by Lund University academicians and students, and members of the Indian/South Asian community in Malmö/Lund, enjoyed a marvellous performance by Anette Pooja (photo to the right), eminent classical Odissi dancer from Gothenburg. Ms. Sri Kripa from Malmö also sang two delicate classical Indian songs.
SASNET successfully organised a Rabindranath Tagore 150th birth anniversary celebration week in Lund 20–24 March 2011.
The seminar programme, prepared by SASNET’s deputy director Lars Eklund, also included lectures by Dr. Claes-Göran Holmberg, Comparative Literature, Centre for Languages and Literature, who talked about ”Tagore in Sweden and the Nobel Prize of 1913”, and Mag. Art Annemette Karpen from Copenhagen who talked about ”Tagore’s Drama Production, and Satyajit Ray’s films based on Tagore works”. Free-lance journalist Gabrielle Gunneberg talked about Tagore’s Nobel prize medal that were stolen from Santiniketan in 2004. Prof. Lipi Ghosh from Calcutta University, and currently ICCR guest professor at Lund University, recited poems by Rabindranath Tagore, and Bubu Munshi Eklund sang some of his songs. Ms. Madhumita Bhagat, First Secretary, Embassy of India, was the chief guest-of -honour. Other Tagore seminars in Sweden and Denmark will take place in September 2011 in collaboration with the Indian embassies in Scandinavia, and with support from the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR). Leading South Asian Tagore scholars have already been invited for these occasions. See above. Associate Professor Maria Lantz from the Dept. of Art & Architecture at Royal Institute of Art (KKH), Stockholm, held a SASNET/Lund University seminar on Thursday 31 March 2011, 09.15–12.00. Her lecture was entitled ”Informal Cities” and is based on a 2008 book about the Dharavi slums in Mumbai, India, produced by Dr. Lantz and colleagues at KKH in collaboration with local organisations. The name of the book was ”Dharavi: Documenting Informalities” (more information). The seminar was hosted by the Division of Housing Development and Management, Dept. of Architecture and Built Environment, Lund University. Venue for the seminar: Design Lilla Hörsalen (DC:Lhö), Ingvar Kamprad Design Centre, Sölvegatan 26, Lund. In January 2011, SASNET launched an Interdisciplinary South Asia Seminar series at Lund University, in the form of Brown bag lunch seminars. The aim is to present and disseminate the eminent South Asia related research that is carried out in so many departments at Lund University. The first seminar was held on Tuesday 18 January 2011, 12–13, with Associate Professor Catarina Kinnwall, Department of Political Science, who talked about ”Religion, Nationalism and Discourses on Terror in South Asia”. The seminars are open to the public, and they will all be held at the Centre for Theology and Religious Studies (CTR), conference room 438, 4th floor, Allhelgona Kyrkogata 8, Lund. More information.
• Prof Swaran Singh from the Center for International Politics, Organisation and Disarmament, School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in Delhi, gave a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Friday 17 December 2010, 10.15-12.00. The seminar was co-organised by the university’s Department of Political Science. The presentation was entitled ”India’s Disarmament Policy: Past, Present, Future”, and included discussions on India’s nuclear policy and India’s foreign policy in general.
For some time, Lund University Commissioned Education and the Department of Biology, Lund University have been in dialogue with DM Foundation/DM Corporation, a private business corporation based in Kolhapur, Maharashtra, India. The discussions refer to plans for establishing a new university campus in India and staff it with teachers from Lund University, and where students will be recruited from around the world. SASNET has been involved as a consultant to Lund University.
SASNET was partly involved when two Indian researchers cum film makers from the Centre for Media and Cultural Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) in Mumbai, Professor K.P. Jayasankar and Professor Anjali Monteiro, visited Lund University from 7–10 December 2010. They were invited to to participate in the second Focus Asia Documentary Film Festival, organised by Dr. Marina Svensson at the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE).
A SASNET/UPF seminar on ”Sri Lanka after the War was held in Lund on Wednesday 24 November 2010.
On 9 November 2010, Professor Lipi Ghosh from the Dept. of South and South East Asian Studies, Calcutta University in Kolkata, India took up the position as the first Visiting ICCR (Indian Council for Cultural Relations) Chair Professor at Lund University. Lipi Ghosh will stay in Sweden for the rest of the academic year 2010/11, and be hosted by the Faculty of Social Sciences. Her workplace is located at the university’s Centre for Gender Studies. On Monday 15 November 2010, SASNET organised her inaugural lecture as new ICCR Professor at Lund University. Her presentation was entitled ”Ethnicity, Religion and Nation Building: The Northeast Indian Profile”. It focused on the number of identity movements that have sprung up among the various ethnic groups in Northeast India where a large number of tribal group of people live. These movements are often perceived as a threat to or a reversal of the process of nation building being pursued in the country. The Indian Ambassador to Sweden, H.E. Mr. Ashok Sajjanhar (on photo along with Prof. Ghosh) was the guest of honour for the joyous occasion, and he gave an interetsing presentation on ”India-Sweden Bilateral Relations”. Lund University was represented by Professor Sven Strömquist, Assistant Vice-Chancellor; Dr. Ann-Katrin Bäcklund, Dean of the Faculty for Social Sciences; Dr. Kerstin Sandell, Head of department, Centre for Gender Studies; and Dr. Anna Lindberg, SASNET. They all gave speeches welcoming Prof. Ghosh to Lund University.
The new professorship is an outcome of a Memorandum of Understanding between the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) and Lund University, that was signed on 22 June 2010 by Mr. Balkrishna Shetty, former Indian Ambassador to Sweden, and Prof. Per Eriksson, Vice-Chancellor, Lund University. In a first phase, the agreement is valid for four years, with a new Indian Professor to be selected each year.
Professor Roger Jeffery and Dr. Margret Frenz, President and Vice-President respectively for the European Association of South Asian Studies (EASAS) visited SASNET and Lund University 8–10 November 2010. They came to discuss closer collaboration between EASAS and SASNET, as well as strenghtening links between Lund University and University of Edinburgh, UK in the field of South Asian studies. Prof. Jeffery is the Director for the Centre for South Asian Studies in Edinburgh, and Dr. Frenz is currently a Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Edinburgh’s Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities(but otherwise connected to the University of Leicester).
SASNET and LUCSUS jointly organised a seminar with Roger Jeffery on Tuesday 9 November. The theme for the lecture was ”Trust and the Regulation of Pharmaceuticals: South Asia in a Globalised World”, based on material from a recently-concluded research project comparing the trajectories of pharmaceuticals from producer to patient in South Asia. In his presentation, Prof. Jeffery focused on ongoing disputes over quality standards in Indian generic drug manufacturering, including allegations that they are responsible for a plague of counterfeit and spurious medicines, within India and globally. Venue: Java Hall, Scheelevägen 15 B, Lund. More information about the seminar. A SASNET seminar on ”Emancipation or Dependency: Microcredits in South Asia” was held in Lund on Wednesday 20 October 2010, 19.00–21.00. The seminar was co-organised by The Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University (UPF), and The Swallows India Bangladesh, an NGO based at Lund, and drew an audience of more than 100 people. SASNET’s director, Dr. Anna Lindberg, held an informal public lecture at Lund University on Tuesday 2 November 2010, 15.15-17.00. She talked about ”Gender, Dowry, and the Marriage of Children in South India”. The seminar was organized by the University’s Global Gender Matters Network, hosted by the Department of Gender Studies. On Monday 11 October 2010, the new Indian Ambassador to Sweden, H.E. Mr. Ashok Sajjanhar made a first visit to Lund University. The programme was planned for by SASNET, and included a lunch meeting with Ingalill Rahm Hallberg, Lund University Assistant Vice Chancellor (and Professor in Health Care Science); Ann-Katrin Bäcklund, Dean for the Faculty of Social Sciences; and Gunilla Carlecrantz, Acting Head, Division of International Relations. The Ambassador of Sri Lanka to Sweden, H.E. Mr. R.P. Jayasooriya also visited Lund University on Monday 11 October 2010. SASNET was involved in organising a meeting for the Ambassador, who came with a mission from the University Grants Commission of Sri Lanka to inform about the Srilankan government’s keen interest to promote strenghtened academic collaboration between universities in Sri Lanka and Sweden, and not the least with Lund University. A recent changed legislation that also opens up Sri Lanka for private university initiatives facilitates such efforts, according to Mr. Jayasooriya.
Professor Shahana Urooj Kazmi, Pro-Vice Chancellor at the University of Karachi, Pakistan gave an engaged presentation entitled ”Devastating Floods in Pakistan: A story of Pain, Grief and Suffering – Can We Help?” at Lund University on Wednesday 22 September 2010. Prof. Kazmi, on a short visit to Lund to participate in the consortium meeting of the Erasmus Mundus Asia Regional mobility programme (more information), gave an overview regarding the flood relief activities carried out by teachers and students at her university in the Northern part of Sindh province, through the Karachi University Disaster Management Volunteer Corps, a work carried out under the patronage of Chancellor Dr. Ishrat-ul Ibaad, Vice Chancellor Dr. Przada Qasim R. Siddiqui and Pro VC Dr. Shahana Urooj Kazmi. She was introduced by SASNET’s deputy director, Lars Eklund.
• Prof. Venkatesh B. Athreya, R.S.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation in Chennai, India, held a well-attended lecture on ”Food Security Challenge in India” at Lund University on Friday 17 September 2010, 10.15–12.00. The seminar was jointly organised by SASNET and the Research group Society, Development, Environment (Samhälle, utveckling och miljö) at the Department of Sociology.
On Wednesday 1 September 2010, a delegation of Indian government officials from the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, researchers and business people working in the field of Biogas production and utilization in India visited Lund University in order to meet Indian students, and representatives of the International Relations department in charge of the university’s ongoing and coming Indo-European and South Asian regional-European Erasmus Mundus mobility programmes. The delegation was accompanied by Mr. Mikael Kullman (photo), Counsellor and Special Attaché for Environment, Climate Control and Energy at the Swedish Embassy in New Delhi.
The official delegation was headed by Dr. Atma Ram Shukla from the Indian Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, and Mr. Eric Rönnols from Avfall Sverige, hosting the delegation’s week-long stay in Sweden.
The second SASNET conference on South Asian Studies for young Nordic scholars was held successfully in Höllviken, south of Malmö, on 18–20 August 2010. 23 masters students, PhD candidates and recent PhDs from Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Finland participated in the three-day conference focusing on three major issues: Interdisciplinary Research; Field Work and Ethics; and Academic Career (Publishing, Teaching, Networking). • Professor Sudipta Bhattacharya from the Dept. of Economics and Politics, Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, India, and currently Visiting Professor at the Asia Research Centre, Copenhagen Business School (CBS), held a SASNET lecture on ”Neo-liberalism, Weaking State and Peasant Differentiation in Indian Agriculture” at Lund University on Wednesday 26 May 2010. The seminar was organized in collaboration with the Department of Sociology, Lund University, and is based on Prof. Bhattacharya’s Survey Findings from Panel Data in West Bengal during the periods 1993-94, and 2004-05. He analyses the changing structure of investment and production over a period of neo-liberal policy regime in India that the Left Front government in West Bengal had to accept as a constitutional compulsion. The interventionist legacy of empowerment of rural poor through land reform and rural transformation through decentralized participatory governance in the state had been disturbed since 1991 when the Indian government adopted neo-liberal policies of cutting fertilizer, food and credit subsidies in agriculture, conversion of 8 millions hectares of land from food to export oriented crops, making PDS and nationalized/co-operative banks less effective for the poor. Venue: Department of Sociology, room 335, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. More information.
• A successful seminar on Arsenic in Drinking Water was held at Lund University on Wednesday 5 May 2010. The well-attended seminar drew a mixed audience of researchers, students and other interested people. The seminar was organized by SASNET in collaboration with Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies (LUCSUS); the Division of Water Resources Engineering, Lund University; KTH-International Groundwater Arsenic Research Group at the Dept. of Land and Water Resources Engineering, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm; and The Swallows India-Bangladesh section. H.E. Mr. Imtiaz Ahmed, Ambassador of Bangladesh to Sweden was the guest of honour during the day. • Nils Finn Munch-Petersen, Senior expert at the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS) in Copenhagen, Denmark, held an open SASNET lecture at Lund University on Tuesday 27 April 2010.
The seminar was co-organised by the Sweden India Business Council (SIBC), and held with kind support from the Embassy of India in Sweden.
• On Saturday 19 December 2009, Her Excellency Sheikh Hasina, Prime Minister of Bangladesh, visited Lund University to hold a public lecture on ”Climate Change in Bangladesh – Facing the Challenges”. Sheikh Hasina was invited to visit Lund by SASNET and the Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University (UPF), and was hosted by Lund University Vice Chancellor Per Eriksson. • On Thursday 22 October 2009, SASNET invited Lund University Masters students, Ph.D. candidates and senior researchers interested in studies and research related to South Asia (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, and Maldives) to an open meeting. Nearly 50 people turned up for the meeting that was intended to increase the interest in pursuing South Asia related education and research at Lund University. Eminent researchers involved in South Asia related projects, including Prof. Baboo Nair, Dept. of Applied Nutrition, Prof. Staffan Lindberg, Dept. of Sociology, Prof. Rajni Hatti Kaul, Dept. of Biotechnology, and Dr. Catarina Kinnvall, Dept. of Political Science, gave presentations on their work. Dr. Vipin Negi, Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies, and Dr. Gupinath Bhandari, Lund University Centre for Risk Assessment and Management (LUCRAM), also told about their experiences being scholarship holders through the Erasmus Mundus External Cooperation Window Programme. After the meeting, the participants stayed on for snacks and refreshments. Venue for the meeting: Kårhuset, Hörsalen, John Ericssons väg 3, Lund. Read a report from the meeting (with photos).
• Professor Priyankar Upadhyaya from Benaras Hindu University (BHU), Varanasi, India, held a lecture at Lund University on ”Religious Peace Building in India” on Thursday 24 September, 10.15–12.00. The seminar was jointly organised by the Dept.of History of Religions, Lund University, and SASNET. Prof. Upadhyaya is Director at the Malaviya Centre for Peace Research at BHU. He holds a PhD of Jawaharlal Nehru University, and Advance International Diploma(s) in Conflict Resolution from Uppsala University, Sweden. In Sweden, he has also served as a Visiting Professor at Karlstad University. During September 2009 he has been based at the International Peace Research Institute (PRIO) in Oslo. Venue: Room 438, Centre for Theology and Religious Studies (CTR), Allhelgona Kyrkogata 8, Lund. More information. • The joint SASNET/UPF (Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University) seminar on ”Contemporary Pakistan: Islamism, Human Rights and Terrorism”, held in Lund on Wednesday 16 September 2009, drew an audience of more than 100 people. The speakers were Prof. Ishtiaq Ahmed, working as Visiting Research Professor at the Institute of South Asian Studies(ISAS), National University of Singapore; and Dr. Rubya Mehdi, University of Copenhagen. • Dr. Ruby Sain from the Dept. of Sociology, Jadavpur University, India, held an open lecture at Lund University on Wednesday 16 September 2009, 14.15 – 17.00. The seminar was jointly organised by the School of Social Work at Lund university, Vårdalinstitutet and SASNET. Dr. Sain, who mostly works on health, illness, ageing, religion and research methodology issues, will talk about “Depression – a social problem of the elderly population in India”. She is the founding editor of the Jadavpur University Journal of Sociology, and her forthcoming books are titled ”Contemporary Social Problems in India-Vol I” (ed.) and ”Folk Religion in Bengal”. Besides, Dr Sain is secretary of the International Forum for the Study of Society and Religion (IFFSR), a forum that links researchers and scholars from Jadavpur University, University of Gothenburg and the Oxford Center for Hindu Studies. She came to Sweden on a SASNET guest lecture programme grant, invited by the Department of Literature, History of Ideas, and Religion, Gothenburg University. Venue for the Lund seminar: Edebalksalen, School of Social Work, Bredgatan 26, Lund. More information. • The Mahatma Gandhi Book Collection (part of the Karl Reinhold Haellquist Memorial Collection) was formally inaugurated by the Indian Ambassador to Sweden, Mr. Balkrishna Shetty, on Thursday 10 September 2009. On behalf of the Indian government, the Ambassador also took the opportunity to donate to Lund University and SASNET another 120 volumes of Mahatma Gandhi literature, either works written by Gandhi himself or books focusing on him. Ms. Inger Sondén Haellquist (photo to the left) was the guest of honour since she is the person who in 2004 donated the extensive private book collection of her late husband, Karl Reinhold Haellquist, to Lund University. This collection, consisting of nearly 7 000 volumes of South Asia related literature, was selected by Lund University researchers Neelambar Hatti and Jan Magnusson, and has since been catalogued by SASNET. A small part of the collection, primarily the Mahatma Gandhi collection, is exhibited in the Asia Library. More information about the Karl Reinhold Haellquist Memorial Collection.
• SASNET’s seminar on the Role of Mahatma Gandhi in Today’s Society became a major success. More than 120 people, Lund University professors, researchers and students but also many interested persons from outside the academic world, gathered for the seminar featuring David Arnold, Professor of Asian and Global History at the University of Warwick, UK, and the Indian Ambassador to Sweden, Mr. Balkrishna Shetty. The two-hour seminar was held on Thursday 10 September 2009, 19–21, at Lund University’s Centre for Languages and Literature (SOL-Centrum) and was moderated by SASNET’s Director, Dr. Anna Lindberg. • SASNET successfully organised a Nordic conference on South Asian Studies for young scholars at Falsterbo Kursgård in Höllviken (south of Malmö) 17-19 August 2009.Read the conference report.
Prof. Vinayak Chaturvedi, University of California Irvine, had been invited to be the keynote speaker. He lectured about ”Dialogues with M.K. Gandhi on History and Violence in India”. Finally three plenary interdisciplinary sessions were organised on important issues. They were prepared by selected student participants, who raised questions on three given topics, namely ”Career Planning, Funding, and Passion for South Asian Studies”, ”Publication, Conference,Teaching and Other Activities”; and ”Networking and Future Research”, to a number of ”champions”, senior Nordic researchers from the SASNET network. (photo from one of the sessions). • SASNET sponsored a photographic project set up by second-year students from Lund University’s Masters programme in Development and Management (LUMID) 2007–09 batch. During the period 25 May – 4 June 2009, they exhibited photos from their fieldworks in Asian and African countries. The exhibition was part of the LFA (LUMID Fotographic Art) Project, as it is called. A festive vernissage that was held on Friday 29 May 2009. Anna Lindberg, Lars Eklund and Stig Toft Madsen from SASNET participated in the event. Venue: Wickmanska gården, Bredgatan 2 in central Lund (close to the City Library). More information. • The Tabla player Subrata Manna, the classical singer Sudokshina Chatterjee Manna, and the Kathak dancer Sohini Debnath (photo), all from Kolkata, India, participated in an well-attended academic seminar on intercultural education research in Malmö on Tuesday 26 May 2009, 13.30–16.00.
• Professor G.N. Tiwari from the Centre for Energy Studies at Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi visited SASNET’s root node office in Lund on Tuesday 19 May 2009. He was accompanied by Professor Krister Håkansson, Dept. of Psychology, Växjö University, with whom Prof. Tiwari is involved in a collaboration project to organise research and a conference on hybrid photovoltaic-thermal technology (H-PV/T), to be held in New Delhi. The conference, entitled ”Implementation strategies for the transfer of hybrid photovoltaic-thermal technology (H-PV/T) from research to lab to field” should have been held already in March 2009, but due to the Indian elections it was postponed, and new dates will be in the end of August. Prof. Tiwari is a leading expert in the research on how solar energy can be introduced in Indian villages without electricity. In 2007 he organised the 3rd International Conference on Solar Radiation and Day Lighting, ”SOLARIS 2007” at IIT Delhi. Then he established contact with Dr. Om Prakash at the School of Technology and Design, Växjö University, and originally they were supposed to plan for the new conference. But due to illness, Dr. Prakash had to give up the project, and he gave it over to Christer Håkansson. Being a psychologist, Håkansson is interested to launch a broader interdisciplinary research project on issues widely connected to village development and the introduction of solar energy in India. More information.
• Dr. Tabish Khair from the Dept. of English, University of Aarhus, Denmark, held a SASNET lecture in Lund on ”The Gothic and Postcolonialism: Alterity, Difference and Narration” on Monday 18 May 2009, 13.15–15.00. The seminar was co-organised by Prof. Claes-Göran Holmberg, Dept. of Comparative Literature, Lund University. Born and educated mostly in Gaya, India, Tabish Khair is the author of various books. His honours and prizes include the All India Poetry Prize (awarded by the Poetry Society and the British Council). Academic papers, reviews, essays, fiction and poems by Khair have appeared in Indian, British, Danish, American, German, Italian, South African, Chinese and other publications. Khair has just finished a study, entitled ”The Gothic, Postcolonialism and Otherness”, which will be published in USA and UK by Palgrave (Macmillan) in August 2009. Venue for the Lund seminar: Room L 201, Lund University’s Centre for Languages and Literature (SOL-Centrum), Helgonabacken 14, Lund. • On Thursday 14 May 2009, SASNET organised the visit to Lund and Malmö by thenew Ambassador of India to Sweden, H.E. Mr. Balkrishna Shetty.During his stay in Lund he had discussions with SASNET’s director Anna Lindberg and deputy director Lars Eklund. He also met with the University Director Dr. Marianne Granfelt and participated in a seminar with researchers, teachers, students, and international coordinators involved in India related projects at Lund University. Mr. Shetty was accompanied by Mrs. Madhumita Hazarika Bhagat, First Secretary (Commercial, Consular, Culture), Embassy of India. The Ambassador listened to a few selected presentations: Dr. Sidsel Hansson presented the Erasmus Mundus External Cooperation Window lot 15 programme, coordinated by Lund University; Prof. Baboo Nair, Dept. of Applied Nutrition and Food Chemistry, informed about the SASNET Fermented Foods project; and Prof. Olle Qvarnström presented the Division of Indic Religions at the Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Lund University. More information about the seminar.
• Prof. Dipak Malik, Director of the Gandhian Institute in Varanasi, India, held an open SASNET lecture at Lund University on ”Riots and Elections in India” on Monday 11 May 2009. Prof. Malik, also working at the Dept. of Commerce, Banaras Hindu University (BHU) in Varanasi, discussed the multi-faceted factors deciding the outcome of the ongoing elections for the Indian parliament, Lok Sabha (results to be announced on May 16th), and the profile of Indian communal riots, now and in the past. The seminar was organised in collaboration with the Research group on Development and Environment at the Dept. of Sociology, Lund University, being part of a Swedish guest lecture tour that also brought him to the universities of Gothenburg and Karlstad (funded by a SASNET grant). Venue: Conference room 1 (335), Dept.of Sociology, Lund University, Paradisgatan 5 (house G).
• The Vice Chancellor from Jahangirnagar University in Bangladesh, Prof. Shariff Enamur Kabir, visited SASNET’s root node office in Lund on Wednesday 25 March 2009. He was accompanied by Professor Pradeep Mathur from the Dept. of Chemistry at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Mumbai, and Dr. Ebbe Nordlander, Dept. of Chemical Physics, Lund University. The three researchers are involved in a joint reserach project on ”Modelling of hydrodesulfurization reactions and development of new molecular hydrodesulfurization catalyst” that received a SASNET planning grant in 2008, the planning of which was carried out during the stay in Lund. The purpose behind the project is to establish a network where the reaction mechanisms of the industrially and environmentally important hydrodesulfurization process (the removal of sulfur from fossil fuels, e.g. oil) will be studied on metal complexes that function as models for industrial hydrodesulfurization catalysts. In addition, attempts will be made to develop new clean and effective hydrodesulfurization catalysts. More information. • Dr. Walter Andersen, Associate Director of the South Asia Studies Program at Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, D.C., USA held a joint SASNET/UPF (Lund University Association of Foreign Affairs) lecture in Lund on Monday 16 March 2009, at 19.30. Dr. Andersen, who has a PhD in Political Science from the University of Chicago, lectured on ”Islamic militancy in India: A domestic issue with significant foreign policy implications” He has recently retired as chief of the U.S. State Department’s South Asia Division in the Office of Analysis for the Near East and South Asia. Venue for the seminar: Café Athen, Sandgatan 2, Lund. More information about Dr. Andersen.
• Professor Ravinder Kaur from the Dept. of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi held a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Wednesday 11 March 2009, 14.15–16. Prof. Kaur talked about ”Strangers as Spouses: Marriage Implications of India’s Skewed sex Ratio”, focusing on the continuing gender imbalance and the recent steep declines in the child sex ratio in India. The presentation was based on extensive fieldwork consisting of interviews with cross-region couples in the state of Haryana with additional evidence from Uttar Pradesh. Some fieldwork-based evidence has also been obtained from the bride-sending states of West Bengal and Kerala. An interesting finding and a hopeful sign is the positive sex ratio of the offspring of such marriages. The lecture was organised in collaboration with Lund University’s Dept. of Economic History, and Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE). Venue: Conference room, Dept. of Economic History, Scheelevägen 15 B, 1st floor, Lund. More information. • Dr. Daya Kishan Thussu from the University of Westminster, UK, was invited by SASNET to lecture at a Focus Asia conference on ”Media Cultures and Politics in Asia and Beyond” that was held at Lund University26–27 February 2009. Focus Asia is a yearly event organised by the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE) at Lund University, and this 10th Focus Asia event brings together leading media scholars who discussed media in Asia and beyond. Several of the lectures at the Focus Asia conference addressed the relationship between media, democracy and the public sphere in different national and regional contexts. Dr. Thussu talked about ”Infotainment – Indian Style: Changing Contours of TV News in the World’s Largest Democracy” on Thursday 26 February, 16.00–17.30. Read the full programme for the Focus Asia February 2009. • Two smart quizz winning Indian students from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Mumbai, Rahul Singh (from Jamshedpur) and Haripriya Mukundarajan (from Bangalore), visited SASNET and Lund University on Monday 23 February 2009. They were the winners of a Nobel prize quizz competition organised by the Embassy of Sweden in India in October 2008. The winners’ prize was an all-expenses paid, weeklong trip to Sweden where they would get an opportunity to visit Swedish universities and major technology companies in Lund, Göteborg, Linköping, Sandviken and Stockholm. SASNET’s deputy director Lars Eklund organised their visit to Lund University, that included visiting the Nanoscience laboratory at the Dept. of Physics (photo above). More information.
• A joint SASNET/UPF (Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University) seminar on the political development in Nepal was held on Thursday 23 October 2008, 19.30–21.00. David Ludden (photo to the right), Professor of Political Economy and Globalization in the Department of History at New York University, USA was the main speaker with a presentation titled ”Where is the revolution? Towards a Post-National Politics of Social Justice”. Prof. Ludden received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania in 1978 and was Professor of History there from 1999-2008. His research concentrates on South Asia and on histories of development in very long-term perspective, focusing on economic development, agrarian conditions, health environments, empire, inequality, and social conflict. In August 2008, he was invited by the Social Science Baha to hold the 2008 Mahesh Chandra Regmi Lecture in Kathmandu. Other participants to the Lund seminar were Dr. Katak Malla from the Dept. of Law, Stockholm University, who talked about ”Nepal from monarchy to republic: the ongoing political process”; and HE the Ambassador of Nepal to Denmark (with a side accreditation to Sweden), Mr. Vijaykant Lal Karna, who is also a political scientist by profession, having worked at Tribhuvan University for 20 years. • Prof. Rana P.B. Singh gave a SASNET lecture on ”Indian village: tradition, modernity and change” in Lund on Tuesday 28 October 2008. The seminar focusing on the developments in a village in Uttar Pradesh not far from Varanasi, was organised in collaboration with the Dept. of History and Anthropology of Religions, Lund University. Photo from the seminar to the right.
• SASNET participated in a half-day seminar on Indo-Swedish research and educational collaboration organised by the Faculty of Engineering (LTH), Lund University on Tuesday 21 October 2008. A large number of researchers gathered to listen to presentations by Tomas Aronsson from the Swedish Governmental Agency for Innovation Systems, VINNOVA, who talked about the formalised India-Sweden collaboration within the field of Science & Technology; and Prof. Ramon Wyss, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm, who presented INSTEC, the national network for India-Swedish Cooperation on Technical Research and Education (more information about INSTEC). • Prof. James Heitzman should have given a SASNET lecture on ”The City in South Asia: Historical Templates and Contemporary Challenges” in Lund on Tuesday 11 November 2008, in collaboration with the Division of Housing Development and Management, Lund Institute of Technology, Lund University. However, due to health problems Prof. Heitzman was forced to cancel his tour to Scandinavia and the seminar in Lund. On 15 November 2008, Prof. Heizman passed away (more information). • Dr. Durre S. Ahmed, Head of Communication & Cultural Studies, National College of Arts, Lahore, Pakistan, gave a seminar in Lund, titled ”Human Rights and Women’s Activism in Contemporary Pakistan”on Tuesday 7 October 2008. Chapters from the book ”Gendering the Spirit: Women and Religion and the Post-Colonial Response” [2002], edited by prof Durre Ahmed, and an Article by Kishore Mahbubani, were recommended reading before the seminar. The seminar is jointly organised by SASNET, the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies (CME), and Lund University’s Human Rights programme (based at the Centre for Theology and Religious Studies). Dr. Ahmed has a doctorate in Communications from Columbia University in New York, but is also a practicing psychotherapist. From her South Asian vantage point she delivers a civilisatory critique of modernisms and the Cartesian derived ethos of ‘The West’. Being also a protagonist of dialogue between adherents of the different world religions, Dr Ahmed currently includes in her analysis also different forms of Islam, criticizing “hegemonic notions of masculinity” found within Islam. Venue: Room 218, Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Allhelgona Kyrkogata 8, Lund. More information.
• A seminar/panel discussion on Afghanistan was held in Lund on Wednesday 24 September 2008. The seminar was titled ”Upptrappning Afghanistan. Vilken roll spelar de svenska soldaterna?” (Escalation in Afghanistan. Which role do the Swedish soldiers play?), and was jointly organised by SASNET, the Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University (UPF), the Swedish Committe for Afghanistan (SCA) in Lund, and the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies (MES). The participants were Mr. Bengt Kristiansson, former general secretary for SCA Sweden; and Mr. Allan Widman, MP representing Folkpartiet, specialised on defence policy issues. Dr. Catarina Kinnvall, Dept. of Political Science, Lund University, was the moderator for the discussion. Dr. Stig Toft Madsen, senior researcher at the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS) in Copenhagen was also supposed to participate, but he fell ill and could not come. Venue: Auditorium (Hörsalen) at Lund University’s Centre for Languages and Literature (SOL-Centrum), Helgonabacken 14, Lund. More information. • Prof. Radhika Desai, Dept of Political Studies, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada, held a SASNET lecture on ”The Dynamics of Caste, Class and Hindu Nationalism in India” in Lund on Friday 19 September 2008. The seminar was organised in collaboration with the Dept. of Political Science, Lund University. Prof. Desai discussed the fact that the politics of Hindutva and those of caste are generally assumed to be opposed in India. In her paper, she contests this view on the basis of an original account of caste and its modern dynamics and their interaction with class, especially in the context of liberalizing economic policy since the late 1960s. On the basis of these, the paper goes on to provide a novel interpretation of the political evolution of India in recent decades. In this account, the rise of Hindutva is the result of the rise of the middle castes and their political assertion. The different form it takes in different states, and the variety of different relationships between this middle caste political assertion and Hindutva, are also outlined. • Parul Sharma, CSR Advisor, Group Assurance, Sandvik AB, held a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Wednesday 10 September 2008, 13.15–15.00. The lecture was titled ”A Globalised South Asia and Human Rights”, and drew an audience of more than 40 people (mostly students from the Masters programme in Asian studies at Lund University’s Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE), and Raoul Wallenberg Institute for Humanitarian Rights (RWI). Ms. Sharma is to some extent connected to the Dept. of Law, Stockholm University, and the National Law School of India University in Bangalore, India, but has also worked for the Amnesty Business Group. Since August 2008, she works for the Swedish company Sandvik AB. Her lecture focused about the current increased interest in how the role of business operations in society has been promoted by heightened business debates about human rights conditions in the South Asian region. Venue: Java Hall, Scheelevägen 15 C (next to the Asia Library). More information about the seminar.
• SASNET was very much involved when Baul Shilpi, a group of baul singers from Bangladesh, visited Lund in the end of August 2008. The group that made a great success during their Sweden tour in 2003, now again visited Sweden invited by Dr. Christina Nygren from the Dept. of Musicology and Theatre Studies, Stockholm University. The group consisted of four professional baul singers – Kajal Dewan, Akkas Dewan, Aklima Begam and Nasima Dewan – and two other musicians (playing drums and flute), plus the tour leader Sirajul Islam, coming from villages near to Dhaka. On Tuesday 26 August, a Baul Shilpi performance was successfully given at the theatre Sagohuset in Lund. Earlier the same day, SASNET organised a seminar on baul music and other forms of Bengali folk culture with Dr. Nygren (who wrote a wonderful book, ”Brokiga Bengalen” on this topic in 2006). The seminar was also held at Sagohuset. While in Sweden, Baul Shilpi also performed in Södertälje on Saturday 23 August, during the Kulturfestival/Kringelfestivalen, at Stockholm University (Dept. of Oriental Languages, Kräftriket) on Wednesday 27 August, and at Kulturhuset in Ytterjärna on Saturday 30 August. • Professor Venkatesh B. Athreya, MS Swaminathan Foundation, Chennai, India, held a well-attended SASNET/UPF lecture at Lund University, on Monday 12 May 2008, 19.00–21.00. The lecture, jointly organised by SASNET and the Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University (UPF), was titled ”Wealth and Poverty in Rapidly Globalising India”. Currently, Prof. Athreya is co-operating with the Swedish sociologists Göran Djurfeldt and Staffan Lindberg, Dept. of Sociology, Lund University; and the two Indian researchers Dr. R. Vidyasagar from the Madras Institute of Development Studies in Chennai, India, and Dr. A. Rajagopal from SaciWATERs in Hyderabad, in a restudy of 300 agricultural households in Tiruchirapalli District, Tamil Nadu, people who were originally interviewed in 1979/80. The reason for coming to Lund was actually to participate in a concluding workshop regarding this project. Venue: Athen, AF-Borgen, Sandgatan 2, Lund. More information, with fact sheets from the lecture. • On Thursday 10 April 2008, 12.00–17.00, SASNET and SIBC (Sweden-India Business Council) organised a business seminar in Lund in collaboration with the Ideon Science Park. The seminar was titled ”Operating in India” (Verksam i Indien), and included presentations focusing on challenges that Swedish companies face when they establish businesses in India. SASNET’s former Director, Prof. Staffan Lindberg, was the moderator, and deputy Director Lars Eklund made an introduction to the seminar (See the full programme). The issue of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) was a key concept, and representatives of IKEA, Indiska magasinet, Lufthansa, and the Swedish Export Council discussed their experiences of CSR. Read a report from the business seminar. • Dr. Anirudh Krishna, Associate Professor of Public Policy and Political Science at the Sanford Institute of Public Policy, Duke University, Durham, N.C., USA held a lecture in Lund on Tuesday 1 April 2008, 19.00. The lecture, jointly organised by SASNET and the Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University (UPF), was titled ”Active Social Capital: Tracing the Roots of Development and Democracy in India”, which is also the title of Dr. Krishna’s recently published book. During the academic year 2007/08, Dr. Krishna is on sabbatical leave from Duke University, instead being Olof Palme Visiting Professor at Uppsala University (more information about Dr. Krishna). Venue: Edens hörsal, Dept. of Political Science, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. More information (as a pdf-file)
• Dr. Hans Blomkvist and Dr. Katrin Uba from the Dept. of Government, Uppsala University, held a joint SASNET seminar in Lund on Thursday 13 March 2008. Dr. Blomkvist, currently doing research on institutions and political decision making in India on energy and bioenergy in particular, talked about ”Energy Challenges in India’s Rapidly Growing Economy”. Dr. Uba, who defended her PhD thesis in 2007 on political activism in developing countries, talked about ”Protests against privatisation and their outcomes in India”. Her presentation provided an overview of the privatisation process in India from 1991 till 2003, actors opposing the process, and the eventual impact of protest mobilisation. Venue: Java Hall, Ideon Alfa 1 building, Scheelevägen 15 B, ground floor (next to the Asia Library), Lund. More information. • Dr. Soumyajit Samantha from North Bengal University in Siliguri, India, held a SASNET lecture in Lund on Monday 10 March 2008, 18.30–20.00. He lectured on ”From Salman Rushdie to Arundhati Roy – Modern Indian Novels as Analysis of Changing India and as World Literature”. The seminar was organised by SASNET in collaboration with the Association of Foreign Affairs (UPF) and the Dept. of Comparative Literature, Lund University. Dr. Samantha was invited to Sweden with the help of a SASNET guest lecture tour grant, to hold lectures at Lund University and Växjö University. He was accommodated by Prof. Staffan Lindberg, SASNET’s former Director. Venue: Atriumgården, Stadsbiblioteket, Lund. More information. • The documentary film ”Killing Time”, focusing on the Bhutanese refugees now living in camps in Nepal, was shown at an open SASNET seminar in Lund on Wednesday 6 February 2008. The film is made by the Swedish-Canadian Director Annika Gustafson, and follows the people who were forced to leave Bhutan after the the Buddhist King of Bhutan in the late 1980s implemented strict cultural laws directly affecting the life and religious freedom of the Hindu population in the south. It includes interviews with Nisha Varia, Asia Specialist, Human Rights Watch, New York; Eve Lester, Refugee Coordinator, Amnesty International, London; Abraham Abraham, Country Director, UNHCR, Nepal; Donna Galwa, Security Officer, UNHCR, Nepal; and Daw Penjo, Bhutanese Ambassador to the UN, New York. The screening of the film, organised in collaboration with the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies, Lund University, was followed by an open discussion with the Director herself, about refugees, religion, development aid, exile, war, education, and the Gross National Happiness concept. Annika Gustafson was interviewed in Sydsvenskan the same day, read the article titled ”Filmare hittade bortglömd flyktingkatastrof” (as a pdf-file, in Swedish) • Professor Arild Engelsen Ruud from the Dept. of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages (IKOS), University of Oslo, helda well-attended lecture in Lund on Wednesday 12 December 2007, 19.30–21.00. The seminar was jointly organised by SASNET and the Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University (UPF). Prof. Ruud, who has a PhD in in History, Anthropology, and Development Studies from London School of Economics (LSE), talked about ‘Democracy in a poor country: Bangladesh at the crossroads?‘. Venue: Athen, AF-borgen, Sandgatan 10, Lund. • Mr. Sunandan Roy Chowdhury, Editor-Publisher of the Sampark Journal of Global Understanding in Kolkata, India, gave a SASNET lecture on ”Ideology of Nation State and Educational Policy”, focusing on Indian Higher education since 1947, at Lund University on Tuesday 23 October 2007, 15.15–17.00. Mr. Roy Chowdhury, who is also a researcher in didactics and participated as a key speaker at SASNET’s workshop on ”The Role of South Asia in the Internationalisation of Higher Education in Sweden” (held at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, November 2006, more information) critiques the skewed elitist development of higher education and shows how various policy options that could have created a more equitable and just society fell by the wayside as India rushed towards modernity. He argues that the nation needs to rethink its higher education policies if majority of Indians are to be brought into the fold of higher education and the country can go ahead in terms of progress with equity. Venue: Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies, Java Hall, Alfa 1 building (ground floor), Scheelevägen 15 A, Lund. See the poster for the event. • A well-attended seminar on ”Global Terrorism: Myth or Reality” was held in Lund on Wednesday 10 October 2007, 19.30–21.15. The seminar was organised by SASNET in collaboration with the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies and the Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University.
Other speakers at the seminar were Prof. Bo Huldt from the Swedish National Defence College in Stockholm, who talked about ”Is Terrorism the Model for Warfare in the New Millennium?”, Dr. Maria Bjernevi, former Senior Analyst at the Swedish Security Service (Säpo), who talked about ”Global Jihad, Local Terrorism”, and Iram Asif from Copenhagen University, who talked about ”Behind the Screen: Young Women of Jamia Hafsa”. Her speech was based on material from fieldwork carried out in Pakistan. The seminar, attended by more than 150 people, was held at SOL-Centrum, Lund University’s Centre for Languages and Literature. More information. • Professor Priyankar Upadyaya, Director at the Malaviya Centre for Peace Research at Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India, held a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Tuesday 25 September 2007, 13.15–15.00, about ”Naxal Violence in India. Security Threat or Failure of Governance?”. The lecture was organised in collaboration with Lund University’s Dept. of Economic History. Prof. Upadhyaya’s presentation unravels the dynamic of the maost/naxalite rebellion in India’s ‘Red Corridor’, stretching from Nepal to Andhra Pradesh, and whether its exclusive treatment as a security threat tends to obfuscate the generic issues of skewed democracy and development. Venue: Conference room, Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE), Scheelevägen 15 D, 1st floor. Professor Upadhyaya, who has old Swedish connections to the Dept. of Peace and Conflict Research, Uppsala University, and the Dept. of Religious Studies, Karlstad University, also made a visit to the SASNET root node office for a meeting withe Anna Lindberg and Lars Eklund, SASNET, and Neelambar Hatti, Dept. of Economic History. More information about Prof. Upadhyaya. • On Wednesday 23 May 2007, the Sweden-India Business Council (SIBC) organised a successful afternoon seminar in Lund titled ”The New India” (Det nya Indien) in collaboration with SASNET and Ideon Science Park. It attracted around 50 people from companies in South Sweden and from Lund University. SASNET’s Director, Prof. Staffan Lindberg, was the moderator for the day, and he also lectured about ”Vad är nytt med Indien – förändringar de senaste 25 åren”. Other participants included Susanna Bill, Innovations Manager at Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications AB in Lund. She talked about ”How to Unleash the Power of Emerging Markets”, based on Sony Ericsson’s experiences. Anne-Charlotte Sukhia from ACS Interkulturell Utbildning discussed cultural differences in business life, and Ingemar Ljungdahl from CTO Telelogic AB presented the development of Telelogic AB in the Indian market. Read a report from the business seminar in Lund. • SASNET organises a combined seminar/film show titled ”One year after Nepal‘s Rhododendron Revolution” on Thursday 26 April 2007, 19.00. A film showing the dramatic events of April 2006 that paved the way for a political settlement in Nepal has been produced by the General Federation of Nepalese Trade Unions (Gefont). It was presented by Leif Bjellin, researcher at the Dept. of Cell and Organism Biology, Lund University, with strong links to Nepal. After the film he talked about the changes that have taken place since the so-called Rhododendron Revolution. The seminar was organised in collaboration with the Swedish Organisation for Individual Relief (IM) and the Swallows India-Bangladesh section (Svalorna), both organisations based in Lund. Venue: Conference room, IM, Spolegatan 12 B, Lund. More information. In collaboration with the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE), SASNET organised a series a public lectures and seminars during the Spring 2007. The lectures were attended by the Lund University Masters students in Asian Studies, as part of their training. See the poster for the public lectures/seminars series. • Dr. Kazi Ali Toufique from Bangladesh and Prof. R. Parthasarathy from India participated in a SASNET seminar about fish production and aquaculture in India and Bangladesh in Lund on Thursday 15 March 2007. Dr. Kazi Ali Toufique is affiliated to Bangladesh Institute for Development Studies, BIDS, in Dhaka, and he talked about ”Floodplain Aquaculture in Bangladesh: A case of Enchantment or Disenchantment?“. Prof. R. Parthasarathyfrom the Gujarat Institute of Development Research in Gota, Ahmedabad, India, talked about ”Governance Issues in Natural Resources Management: The case of Fisheries in India”. Prof. Both Dr. Toufique and Prof. Parthasarathy visited Sweden to participate in a three-days workshop on ”Community Management of Openwater Inland Fisheries in Bangladesh and India” held in Lund 14–17 March. The seminar was organised in collaboration with the Dept. of Economics. Some of the seminar participants seen on the photo above. • The Danish journalist Eva Arnvig held a SASNET lecture about ”Afghanistan: Warlords, Taliban or who will rule in the future?” in Lund on Wednesday 29 November 2006, 19.30. The event was organised in collaboration with the the Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University and the Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA) in Lund. Eva Arnvig is not only an experienced journalist but also a clinical psychologist. She has worked for 18 years for UN organisationsa such as UNDP (United Nations Development Programme), and has travelled extensively in Asia, not the least in Afghanistan. Ms. Arnvig is presently working with training senior journalists in Asia, but is also engaged in documentary film productions about the problems in Iraq and Afghanistan. • Prof. K. C. Suri from Nagarjuna University in Andhra Pradesh, India, held a SASNET lecture in Lund on Wednesday 6 December 2006. He talked about ”The Emergence of coalitional politics in South Asia, with special reference to India”. Prof. K.C. Suri is a specialist on Indian and South Asian politics and also on agrarian economic and political issues. The lecture was organised by SASNET in collaboration with the Development Studies Seminar at the Dept. of Sociology. Before coming to Lund, Prof. Suri participated in a conference on leadership in South Asia at the University of Oslo. He also visited Stockholm where he met research partners at the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA), involved in a research project on ”State of Democracy in South Asia”, a regional assessment to reflect citizens’ perceptions and experiences of democracy in the region. A report combining quantitative data (surveys) along with qualitative data (from case studies, dialogues and expert assessments) will soon be published. More information about the SASNET lecture (as a pdf-file). • The physician Ingrid Eckerman from Stockholm held a SASNET lecture about the 1984 toxic disaster in Bhopal, in Lund on Wednesday 15 November 2006. The lecture, organised in collaboration with the Association of Foreign Affairs in Lund, was titled ”The Bhopal Saga – causes and consequences of the world’s largest industrial disaster”. This is also the title of a book she published on Universities Press (India) in Hyderabad in 2005. In 1994, Dr. Eckerman was a member of the International Medical Commission on Bhopal, that studied the effects after the disaster that took place at the Union Carbide factory in Bhopal in December 1984, the world’s worst industrial accident. On the night of December 2 1984, while Bhopal slept, 43 tons of methylisocyanate and other substances leaked from the Union Carbide factory located in the city. By next morning the place was a graveyard of dead humans and animals. Of the 520,000 people who were exposed to the gases 8,000 died during the first week and 8,000 later. The impact on the survivors is visible even today. The pesticide plant from which the gas leaked was majority owned and controlled by the multinational Union Carbide. Dr. Eckerman also reviews of most of what has been written about the incident since 1984, discussing the conflicting stance of the Union Carbide Corporation and the Governments of India on the moral responsibility for the tragedy. The lecture was held at Eden, Paradisgatan 5, and drew an audience of around 30 people, mostly students from different facultues at Lund University. More information about Dr. Eckerman’s book. • Sri Lankan poet Pireeni Sundaralingam and Irish composer/violinist Colm O’Riain (photo to the right), residing in San Fransisco, USA, visited Swedenin the end of September to perform with a program called ”Word and Violin”. SASNET invited them to Lund to give a well-attended performance on Wednesday 27 September 2006, 19.00. From Lund they proceeded to Uppsala University where they gave a performance for the Uppsala University English Society on Thursday 28 September. In the program Sundaralingam and O’Riain weave together music and word in a series of duets exploring the nature of exile and immigration. More information (as a pdf-file) • Prof. Sucha Singh Gill from the Punjabi University, Patiala, India, held a SASNET lecture at the Dept. of Sociology, Lund University on Wednesday 7 June 2006. He lectured about ”Marginalised Peasantry Seeking Safe Exit in India in the Era of Globalisation”. Prof. Sucha Singh Gill is professor of Economics at the Punjabi University and is a leading expert on agriculture and rural development. He has written extensively on agricultural economics and change, land reforms, resources mobilisation and farmers movements. In 2001 he authored ”Land Reforms in India, Vol. 6: Intervention for Capitalist Transformation in Punjab and Haryana”. During June 2006 he was a guest researcher at NIAS in Copenhagen and the Department of Sociology, Lund University. More information.
• SASNET arranged a guest lecture with Prof. Sirimevan S. Colombage and Dr. Chandrabose from the Faculty of Social Sciences, Sri Lanka Open University, on Tuesday 18 April 2006. They lectured about ”The role of microfinance in fighting rural poverty in Sri Lanka”. Prof. Colombage is an eminent economist specialised in macro-economic processes in Sri Lanka, and Dr. Chandrabose is regional economist specialised in the tea plantation economy. Since 2003 they have been engaged in a study of microfinance and rural poverty in Sri Lanka, a research project financed by a Swedish Research Links grant. The project has been carried out in collaboration with Associate Professor Alia Ahmad, Dept. of Economics, Lund University. Venue: Conference Room, Centre for East- and South-East Asian Studies, Scheelevägen 15 D, Alfa 1, Lund.
• Dr. Gunilla Blomqvist from the Dept. of Peace and Development Studies (PADRIGU), Göteborg University, Prof. Staffan Lindberg, SASNET, and the freelance journalist Petter Larsson, Malmö, participated in a seminar called ”Women in the export industry in South Asia – Exploitation or Emancipation?” held on Wednesday 29 March 2006. • Professor Tulsi Patel from the Department of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi, held a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Tuesday 31 January 2006. She lectured on ”Health Professionals, New Reproductive Technologies and Sex ratio in India”, and the lecture was very well attended. Nearly 30 persons, senior researchers at Lund University as well as Masters students at the Programme for Asian Studies, participated in the meeting held in the conference room of ACE, Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies. • Professor Frank J. Korom from the Dept. of Religion, Boston University, USA, held a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Monday 19 December 2005. Korom talked about ”Singing Modernity: Bengali Scroll Painters Confront Globalization”, based on four years of field work among Patuas, a community of itinerant scroll painters/singers residing in Medinipur District, West Bengal, India. here impoverished artists adapt to modernity, and expand their repertoires to contemporary social and political issues (such as communal violence in India, religious identity, HIV prevention, and even 9/11 and the recent tsunami). Venue: Room 438, Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Lund. More information. • Professor Saraswati Raju from the Centre for the Study of Regional Development, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India, gave a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Tuesday 8 November 2005. Prof. Raju who is a geographer (photo to the right) lectured on ”Gender, Poverty and Labour Market in Rural India in the context of Globalization”, focusing on the very low number of officially reported working women in North India compared to South India, irrespectively of poverty rates and ecological factors. She argues that this has to do with a ruling preference within the patriarchal social structure of the Gangetic plains, that women if possible should not work. It explains why the ratio of working women is equally low in the poor state of Bihar and the rich state of Haryana, and in wheat-growing Punjab and rice-growing West Bengal. Saraswati Raju had come to Sweden to participate in the GADNET Workshop, held in Uppsala 10–11 November (more information on the workshop). Venue for the SASNET lecture: Conference room, Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies, Scheelevägen 15 D. More information (as a pdf-file). • ØRNAST, the Øresund Network of Asian Studies, invited students and scholars from both sides of Öresund for a social gathering in Lund, on Wednesday 26 October 2005, 18–21. The programme included a lecture by Professor Olle Qvarnström (photo to the left) on ”From Hampton Roads to Lundagård. Lund University Research on Indic religions”, and a musical performance by Bubu Munshi Eklund, singing Rabindrasangeet, the musical treasure of the Indian/Bengali Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore. More information. • Dr. Rukhsana Chowdhury (photo to the right), Assistant Director of the Indian Institute of Chemical Biology in Kolkata, India, visited the SASNET root node office in Lund on Tuesday 13 September 2005. Dr. Chowdhury is specialised on vibriocholera bacteria and their adaptation to environmental stress. She is member of a new collaborative research project with the Division of Bacteriology at Lund University, a project that was given a SASNET planning grant in February 2005. More information. • The Indian Ambassador to Sweden, Ms. Deepa Gopalan Wadhwa (photo to the left), along with the First Secretary of the Embassy, Ms. Vani Rao, visited Lund University on Monday 13 June 2005. The programme for the day, prepared by SASNET, included visits to the Dept. of Biotechnology, and the Section for Indic Religions at the Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, where meetings were held with a large number of South Asia related reserachers at Lund University. The Ambassador also had meetings with the Vice-Chancellor Prof. Göran Bexell, and with the SASNET root node staff. More information on the visit. • Professor Manoj Kumar Sinha from the Indian Society of International Law, New Delhi held a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Wednesday 25 May 2005, 13.15–15.00. Sinha (photo to the right) is currently a Visiting Professor at the Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law in Lund, and he will lecture on ”Protection of Human Rights in India through Courts and Human Rights Commission”. The lecture was arranged together with the Development Studies Seminar at the Dept. of Sociology and the Dept. of Sociology of Law. More information (as a pdf-file) • Professor Venkatesh B. Athreya, Economics Department at Bharathidasan University, Tiruchirapalli, India, held a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Wednesday 11 May 2005. Athreya, who is specialised in the political economy of development, agricultural and social development, lectured on ”Indian Development under the Neoliberal Reforms, 1991-2005”. Among his most well-known publications are ”Literacy and Empowerment” (with Sheela Rani Chunk, Sage Publications, 1996) and ”Barriers Broken” (with G. Djurfeldt and S. Lindberg, Sage Publications, 1990). Currently he is co-operating with the sociologists Göran Djurfeldt and Staffan Lindberg at Lund University in a restudy of 300 agricultural households in Tiruchirapalli District, Tamil Nadu, which originally were interviewed in 1979/80. Venue: Conference Room 1, Department of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. Professors Athreya and Djurfeldt on the photo to the right. More information on the lecture (that was also given at DIIS in Copenhagen the day before) • Geshe Pema Dorje, Director of Sarah College for Higher Tibetan Studies in Dharamsala, India, held a SASNET lecture on ”Tibetan Education in Exil” at Lund University on Tuesday 10 May 2005. Dorje who is a Buddhist monk lectured on the organization and development of educational institutions in the Tibetan refugee community in India and Nepal. With a Geshe degree from the Tibetan monastic educational system, Pema Dorje has been Principal of Tibetan Children’s Village School as well as School of Buddhist Dialectics in Dharamsala. He has been a driving force in the establishment of schools for teacher training and higher education in the refugee community, travelling extensively and co-operating with schools and universities all over the world. In Sweden he has a long-standing relationship with Karlstad University, and from Lund he proceeded there, to be a guest lecturer for a few weeks. Venue: Conference Room, Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE). Geshe Pema Dorje on the photo to the left together with Dr. Jan Magnusson, ACE and SASNET. • In collaboration with Lund University’s Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE), and AGESI (a Lund University network dealing with global equity and sustainability issues) SASNET organised a public seminar on ”Beyond Control – Risk and Learning after the Tsunami” on Monday 11 April 2005. It consisted of lectures focusing on different aspects of risk and disaster management, and a panel discussion. Among the lecturers were Dr. Simron Jit Singh from the University of Vienna and Dr Camilla Orjuela, Dept. of Peace and Development Research, Göteborg University. Read a summary of the post-Tsunami seminar, written by Sabina Andrén, AGESI.
• The Professor of Economics at Dhaka University Abul Barkat gave a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Tuesday 15 March 2005. Abul Barkat, respected researcher and much engaged in development issues and the public debate on human rights and politics in Bangladesh, lectured on the ”Criminalization of Politics in Bangladesh”. Barkat was coming to Sweden to participate in a workshop on ”Globalization and Health” organised by Health Economics Division at the Dept. of Community Medicine, Lund University (in Malmö) 16–17 March 2005. Besides being a professor at Dhaka University Barkat is the general secretary for the Bangladesh Economic Association, an association of 2 500 economists, and an advisor to the Human Development Research Centre. Venue for the SASNET lecture: Conference room 1, Dept. of Sociology, Paradisgatan, Lund. More information (as a pdf-file) • Doris Jakobsh, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, gave a SASNET lecture on ”Innovation or Invention? The Sikhs, Colonization, Gender and the Feminization of Ritual” at Lund University, on Wednesday 8 December 2004. Venue: Centre for Theology and Religious Studies (CTR), Allhelgona Kyrkogata 8, Lund. Doris Jakobsh (photo to the left) is a researcher specialized on Gender in Sikh Studies and visited Sweden in connection with the Nordic conference on ”Ritual Practices in Indian Religions and Contexts” held at Lund University 9–11 December 2004. More information on the lecture (as a pdf-file). • The two practicing Indian lawyers Vasudha Nagaraj and Anuroopa Giliyal (photo to the right) visited SASNET on Wednesday 24 November 2004, along with Oscar Hemer from the School of Arts and Communication, Malmö University. Nagaraj is working for the Anveshi Research Centre for Women’s Studies in Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh; and Giliyal is a member of the Alternative Law Forum, based in Bangalore. They have have been invited to Sweden in order to lead a workshop at the Third Space Seminar, arranged in Malmö and Lund 26–28 November 2004. More information. • Dr. Suruchi Thapar-Björkert from Dept. of Sociology at the University of Bristol gave a SASNET lecture on Tuesday 23 November 2004, 13.15–15.00. She lectured on ”Gendered Caste Conflicts in rural North India”. Dr. Thapar-Björkert (photo to the left), has been a visiting research fellow with the Dept. of Ethnic Studies at Linköping University, Campus Norrköping during the Fall 2004. The guest lecture in Lund was arranged in cooperation with the Development Study Group at the Dept. of Political Science and the Development Studies Seminar at the Dept. of Sociology. Venue: Conference Room 1, Dept. of Sociology, Lund University, Paradisgatan 5. • Prof. Naila Kabeer, Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, UK, held a SASNET guest lecture on Monday 8 November 2004, 14.15–16.00. She lectured on ”Citizenship and Empowerment”. Kabeer, during 2004 guest professor at PADRIGU, Göteborg University, is an economist with specialisation on such areas as gender dimensions of poverty, population and health, and poverty and food security. The lecture was jointly organised by SASNET; the Development Study Group at the Dept. of Political Science; and the Development Studies Seminar at the Dept. of Sociology, Lund University. • SASNET successfully arranged the 18th European Conference on Modern South Asian Studies in Lund 6–9 July 2004. With 360 participants from all over the World actually turning up (including a large number of PhD candidates and participants from from South Asia itself) it was the largest ECMSAS conference so far, and certainly the largest gathering ever on Swedish soil of South Asia oriented researchers, covering all fields from the humanities and social sciences to technology, natural sciences and medicine. More information on the Lund conference. The last of three SASNET lectures during the Spring 2004 was organized with Dr. Martin Gansten, Centre for Theology and Religion, Lund University, on Tuesday 11 May 2004. Gansten, a Sanskritist and historian of religion specializing in classical Hinduism, lectured on ”Astrology in Ancient and Modern India” His research interests include Indian philosophical traditions as well as astrology and other divinatory arts. Venue: Centre for Theology and Religion, Allhelgona Kyrkogata, Lund. More information on Martin Gansten. • Dr. Kumudu Wijewardena (photo to the left) from the University of Sri Jayewardenepura (SJP), Sri Lanka, visited SASNET on Thursday 6 May 2004. Dr. Wijewardena, who regularly visits Uppsala University where she is involved in research collaboration with the Dept. of Women’s and Children’s Health, is a member of SASNET’s South Asian reference group, overlooking our work from a South Asian perspective. More information on this collaboration. • Eva-Maria Hardtmann, Dept. of Social Anthropology, Stockholm University held a SASNET guest lecture at Lund University on Tuesday 13 April 2004. She lectured on ”Indian Dalits in a globalisng world”, discussing their networks, messages and strategies. Besides she talked about their participation in the World Social Forum in Mumbai in January 2004. Eva-Maria Hardtmann defended her PhD thesis ‘Our Fury is Burning’: Local Practice and Global Connections in the Dalit Movement‘ in November 2003. Venue: Hanlin hall, ACE, House Alfa 1, Ideon Research Park. The lecture was organized jointly with the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies at Lund University. • Dr. Sidsel Hansson from the Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, and the Centre for East och South East Asian Studies held a SASNET lecture on ”Reinventing a sacred landscape? The Ganges river as a contested domain” on Tuesday 2 March 2004. The lecture was based on material from her 2001 doctoral thesis entitled ‘Not just any water? Hinduism, ecology and the Ganges water controversy’. This was the first SASNET lecture to be held at its new location in connection with the Centre for East och South East Asian Studies at Ideon Research Park, Alfa 1 building. • Professor. Dipak Malik from the Dept. of Commerce, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India, lectures at Lund University on “IT, Hindu Fundamentialism and Class Struggles in India”, Tuesday 19 November 2003. Professor Malik’s research has mainly focused on labour market and trade unions. He has extensive experience of international cooperation and has been guest professor at University of West Indies St. Augustine, Trindidad & Tobago; and University of York, Ontario, Canada. In this connection he has developed courses in for example ”Politics and Sociology of Communalism”. Professor Malik has previously been chairman of the Teachers Association at Banaras Hindu University and adviser to the government in India. Presently Malik is engaged in SASNET (Swedish South Asian Studies Network) as adviser. The lecture is organized by the General Seminar, Dept. of Sociology, Lund University, in collaboration with SASNET. Venue: Dept. of Sociology, room 3, Paradisgatan 3, Lund. • Bidyut Mohanty, Head of the Women’s Studies Dept, Institute of Social Sciences, JNU, New Delhi, gave a SASNET lecture at Lund University on Thursday 5 June 2003. Mohanty was on her way to the conference on ”Women and Politics in Asia” in Halmstad, and she lectured on ”Seat Reservation in Local Politics – Impact on the Lives of Women in India”. Venue: Dept of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. • Professor R S Deshpande from the Institute for Social and Economic Change (ISEC), Bangalore, India, visited Lund University during the later part of May 2003. R S Deshpande (photo to the right) held a SASNET lecture on ”Consequences of the Green Revolution in India”, on Monday 26 May 2003, at the Dept of Economic History, Ekonomicentrum, Tycho Brahes väg 1, Lund. • SASNET arranged a concert with Amit Chatterjee and Suman Laha, two young Indian classical musicians from Kolkata, in Lund on Sunday 25 May 2003. Amit Chatterjee is a talented tabla player who has frequently toured Europe and the USA, whereas Suman Laha (photo to the right) played the guitar in a rather unusual mode, like an Indian veena. The concert was arranged in collaboration with the Zimba Marimba World Music Studio in Lund, which also provided for the concert hall at the crossing Kobjersvägen/Qvantenborgsvägen in the northwestern part of Lund. • SASNET in cooperation with the General Seminar at the Department of Sociology, Lund University, arranged a Guest Lecture by Prof. em. Jan Breman (photo to the right), Dept. of Sociology, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, the Netherlands, on Tuesday 6 May 2003. • Dr. Rajesh Kharat, political scientist from the Department of Civics & Politics, University of Mumbai, held a SASNET Guest Lecture on ”The Bhutan Refugee Problem”, Thursday 13 February 2003, at the International Office, Lund University. Dr. Kharat is a leading expert on Bhutan, the refugee situation in the region, and more generally about the political and economic cooperation in South Asia. In 1999 he published the book ”Bhutan in SAARC: Role of a Small State in a Regional Alliance”. • SASNET lecture on South Asian regional stability. Professor Bhupinder Brar from Dept of Political Science, University of Punjab, Chandigarh, India, was invited by SASNET to lecture at the Dept of Sociology, Lund University, on ”Stability and Security in South Asia: Towards a Post-Nationalist Perspective”, on Wednesday 9 October, 2002. To the right: Prof Brar together with the SASNET Director, Prof Staffan Lindberg. • Dr Prakash Nelliyat, environmental economist from Madras School of Economics, Chennai, India, held a SASNET lecture at Lund University, on ”Environmental cost of T-shirts. The case of Tirupur, India”, on Wednesday 2 October, 2002, at the Dept of Human Ecology. Prakash Nelliyat is working on a thesis on ”Economic Assessment of Industrial Water Pollution – A Case Study of Textile Processiong Units in Tiruppur”, and has been invited to Linköping University for two months during the Fall of 2002, on a World Bank Scholarship. Photo to the left. • Professor Dipak Malik from the Faculty of Commerce, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India, was invited by SASNET to lecture on ”Hindutva then and now: A profile of Pundit Madan Mohan Malaviya”, at Lund University, on Friday 20 September 2002. The lecture was held at the Dept of History of Religions. (Photo to the right). • Dr Tilak R Kem, Additional Secretary at the University Grants Commission of India, visited SASNET and Lund University on Tuesday 4 June, 2002. Dr Kem, previously connected to the Indira Gandhi National Open University, New Delhi, had come to Sweden as an invited guest to Högskolan Kristianstad, in his capacity of being an expert on distance education. SASNET arranged for a fruitful meeting with Lennart Badersten, Head of the Office for Continuing and Distance Education at Lund University, and discussions took place on possible Indo-Swedish cooperation in this field. A proposal was made to arrange a workshop in India later this year. • SASNET hosted the Indian ambassador Ms Chitra Narayanan and the Counsellor Mr Sachdeva when they visited Lund University on 21 May, 2002. (Photo to the left). Read the report from the visit. • The SASNET director Professor Staffan Lindberg, and deputy director/webmaster Lars Eklund, made a contact journey to South Asia the Spring, 2002, in order to link up the SASNET activities with universities and research institutions in different countries of the region. They visited the Maldives (Male) 26–27 February, Sri Lanka 28 February–5 March, India (New Delhi, Varanasi, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Shantiniketan) 6–19 March; and finally Bangladesh 20–22 March. (Photo from Kolkata street to the right). Read their reports from the journey. • Sutapa Chattopadhyay, research fellow at the Institute of Social and Economic Change (ISEC), Bangalore, India, held a lecture and seminar on ”Development Projects and Resettlement: A Study of Health and Living Conditions of the Displaced Population”, at Lund University on Thursday 18 April 2002. It was organised by the Development Studies Seminar at the Dept of Sociology. The paper Ms Chattopadhyay presented is available as a pdf-file. • A lecture and seminar with Dr. A. Rajagopal, Research Coordinator, South Asia Consortium for Interdisciplinary Water Resources Studies (SaciWaters) at Hyderabad, India, was arranged at Dept. of Sociology, Lund University, on Friday 8 February 2002, jointly by SASNET and the Development Studies Seminar. The title of the lecture was ”Water Rights and Rural Development in India”.
• The second SASNET Open House seminar was held at Lund University on Monday 4 February 2002, 14.00–16.00, with Mr Shahid A Kamal, Pakistan ambassador to Sweden, as invited guest. Mr Kamal led a seminar on ”Possible themes for Pakistan–Sweden co-operation in the fields of research and education”, at the Dept of Sociology. An introduction about higher education and research in Sweden that might be of relevance to future research co-operation, was given by SASNET director Staffan Lindberg. • The first in a series of Open House seminars was arranged on Friday 9 November, 2001. SASNET co-ordinator Staffan Lindberg, who recently returned from sociological field work in Zanzibar, reported about how the war on terrorism in Afghanistan was interpreted in Tanzania, and also gave his assessment of the political implications for South Asia. • On Monday 29 October, 2001, SASNET arranged a concert with classical North Indian music, at Magasinet (above the bookshop Arken), Kungsgatan, Lund. The renowned vocalist Sandipan Samajpati from Kolkata, who was on a European tour (Germany, Switzerland, Denmark and England) presented a programme along with the accompanying tablaist Amit Chatterjee. The concert was co-arranged by the local singing choir Svart på Vitt and was a part of the Lund Music Festival 2001. • Dr Suman Khanna Aggarwal, Peace Researcher, expert on the Theories of Mahatma Gandhi, and professor of philosophy at Delhi University, held a SASNET lecture on Wednesday 24 October 2001, on the subject ”Terrorism – a Gandhian Perspective”. Venue: Conference room, International Secretariat, Gamla Kirurgen. Dr Aggarwal has worked with Gandhian philosophy and theories for a long time. She was on a Swedish tour, where she also conducted a workshop at Padrigu, Göteborg University. • Dr J B Prajapati, Associate Professor in Dairy Microbiology at Anand Agricultural University, Gujarat, India, gave a SASNET seminar on 27 September 2001 at Lund University, on ”Probiotics, Fermented Foods and their Beneficial Role”, dealing with dahi, idlis and dosas. The seminar took place at the Center for Chemistry & Chemical Engineering in Lund. • Dr Sudhir Kakar, internationally renowned psychoanalyst and writer, based in Delhi, India (Center for the Study of Developing Societies), but presently visiting scholar at the Center for the Study of World Religions (CSWR) at Harvard Divinity school, USA, (where he studies the mythology of spiritual healing in the Christian, Sufi, and Hindu traditions) visited Lund 1–5 October 2001, for a Symposium on ”Mysticism and Psychology”, at the Divison of Psychology of Religion. On 1 October he gave a public lecture on ”Globalisation and Hindu Nationalism”, at the Dept of Theology. • SASNET was partly involved in the Symposium and workshop on: ”Managing Common Resources – What is the solution?”, which took place 10-11 September, 2001, at Lund University. The symposium was jointly organised by the Programme on Population and Development (PROP), Department of Sociology, and Department of Economics. Key speakers were Prof. Elinor Ostrom (photo to the left), Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Government, Indiana University, Bloomington, USA, and Prof. Jean-Philippe Platteau, Department of Economics, University of Namur, Belgium. Read the research papers from the symposium. • SASNET arranged a Workshop on Global Networking 27–28 August, 2001, with a lot of prominent guests discussing the future for SASNET. About 40 persons attended the workshop and gave a good start for SASNET’s global networking. Full report with all the papers read at the workshop. • In connection with a planning conference between representatives of Lund, Copenhagen and Roskilde Universities, concerning the development process of Ørsa – Øresund Network of South Asian Studies, on Wednesday 25 April 2001, SASNET organised a Cultural programme with Indian cooking and a classical vocal concert with Prof Laksmisree Banerjee from Jamshedpur, India (but during the Spring 2001 guest professor at the Faculty of Humanities, department of literature, Växjö University). Her well-attended musical programme was named: ”Melodies of Soul & Sense”. SASNET – Swedish South Asian Studies Network/Lund University
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