Home » Search results for 'node'

Search Results for: node

April 2024
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930  

SASNET root node activities 2001-2011

Falsterbo 2011The 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.
As usual, it was organised by SASNET but from this year in collaboration with the Copenhagen based Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS). Julia Velkova from SASNET was the main coordinator.
The conference became a grand success, gathering graduate students and postdocs, along with other junior scholars affiliated with universities in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, who are focusing on South Asia in their work. This year a few students from other European countries (Scotland and Germany) were also invited.

Patricia Pireeni Salma Bava
Patricia Jeffery, Pireeni Sundaralingam and Ummu Salma Bava.

Falsterbo 2011Besides 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.
FalsterboThe conference was interdisciplinary and had separate panels on – Gender Issues; – Climate Change/Water Issues; – Mapping the Mental Landscape of Eurasia; and – Alternative Career Paths beyond the Academia. Invited speakers included Professor Ummu Salma Bava, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India; Professor Jussi Kauhanen, Director for Nordic Centre in India(NCI); Professor Abul Mandal, Skövde University; Mr. Kyrre Lind, President, Doctors Without Borders Norway; and Ms. Christina Nilsson, International Workgroup for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA), Copenhagen.
The conference also included an appreciated cultural programme, consisting of a poetic reading by Pireeni Sundaralingam. She read out excerpts from the recently published volume Indivisible: An Anthology of Contemporary South Asian American Poetry, co-edited by Pireeni. Born in Sri Lanka and raised both there and in the UK, Sundaralingam currently lives in San Francisco, California, USA.
More information about the 2011 conference.
See the conference folder
(as a pdf-file)
See a photo gallery from the conference. new


BrownbagOn Thursday 15 September 2011, SASNET holds its first Brown bag lunch seminar during the fall semester 2011.
The aim of SASNET’s Brown Bag seminars, introduced in January 2011, is to present and disseminate the eminent South Asia related research that is carried out in so many departments at Lund University. The seminars are open to the public, and during the fall 2011 they will be held once a month at Thursdays at Murbeckssalen, Gula Villan (inside the Botanical Gardens), Östra Vallgatan 14, Lund.
More information about the seminar series.        Seminar series poster. new
Malin Gregersen– The first SASNET Brown Bag 2011 Fall seminar will be held on 15th September 2011, 12.00–13.00. Dr. Malin Gregersen (photo) from the Department of History will give a presentation entitled ”Fostering Obligations: Swedish Medical Missionary Narratives from South India”. Even though Sweden was not participating in the run for colonies during the era of the new imperialism in late 19th and early 20th century, Swedes often took a close interest in African and Asian countries through the work of Christian missionaries. Thus, Christian missionaries played an important role in forming early 20th century Swedish world views. But their depictions of everyday life in foreign countries were formulated on the basis of an aspiration not only to convert people to Christianity, but also to educate, shape and change people according to Swedish and Christian
ideals. Such missionary narratives, originating from a South Indian hospital, will be the focus of her lecture. Malin defended her doctoral dissertation on this issue as recently as a year ago. Read an abstract. new
– The second Brown Bag seminar will be held on Thursday 13 October, with Associate Professor Åsa Ljungh from the Section of Medical Microbiology, Department of Laboratory Medicine.
– The third Brown Bag seminar will be held on Thursday 10 November, with Dr. Olle Frödin from the Department of Sociology.
More information will follow about these seminars.


TagoreSASNET again organises a Rabindranath Tagore 150th birth anniversary celebration week in Sweden and Denmark 19–23 September 2011. The celebration includes academic seminars in Copenhagen (19th), Lund (21st), Stockholm (22nd) and Uppsala (23rd).
They will be organised in collaboration with the Indian embassies in Copenhagen and Stockholm, and with support from the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR).
Invited scholars include Professor William Radice, SOAS, University of London; Dr. Reba Som, Director, ICCR Rabindranath Tagore Centre in Kolkata; and Professor Asoke Bhattacharya, Jadavpur University, Kolkata. The seminar at Lund University will be held on Wednesday 21 September, 09.00–13.00, at Stadshallen in central Lund. See the full Lund University seminar programme. new
On the night before, Tuesday 20 September at 19.00, a cultural evening will also be organised at Teater Sagohuset. The programme includes William Radice reading out his brand new English translations of poems from the Gitanjali volume. Reba Som and Bubu Munshi Eklund will sing Rabindrasangheet songs. The event will be attended by the Ambassadors from both Bangladesh and India, Mr. Gousal Azam Sarker and Mr. Ashok Sajjanhar respectively.See the poster for the Cultural Evening at Sagohuset. new

LakshmiDr. 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. new
BidyutBidyut Mohanty has been a Visiting Professor in the Global and International Studies program at the University of California, Santa Barbara and is the coordinator of an ISS and UNDP project on capacity building of elected women leaders in local government in India, and as well as of a project sponsored by the National Commission on the protection of child rights.
She has also coordinated several UNIFEM funded projects on HIV and AIDS and role of panchayats, trafficking and local government’s new role. Besides, Dr. Mohanty is also a specialist on famine, agrarian history and decentralization. She combines grassroots activism with participatory research. Her publications include several research papers and edited books, among them: Urbanization in Developing Countries: Access to Basic Services and Community Participation(1993) Women and Political Empowerment (annual volumes from 1995 till 2006) and Local Governance in Search for New Path (2011).
Venue for the seminar: Centre for Theology and Religious Studies (CTR), room 438, Allhelgona Kyrkogata 8, Lund. More information.

ManoranjanManoranjan 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.
Prof. Mohanty retired in 2004 as the Director, Developing Countries Research Centre and Professor of Political Science at the University of Delhi, where he taught since 1969. He is a former Director of ICS and a former Editor of China Report. His earlier academic assignments abroad included Institute of Far Eastern Studies, Moscow (1973), UC, Berkeley (1974), Peking University (1979), Oxford (1987) and Copenhagen (1990) and Lagos (2005). He is also active in the human rights and peace movement. His recent publications include Contemporary Indian Political Theory (2000), Class, Caste, Gender (Ed.2004) and Grass-roots Democracy in India and China (Co-ed. 2007), India: Social Development Report 2010 (Ed. 2010), Weapon of the oppressed: An Inventory of People’s Rights in India ( Co-author, 2011) and China’s Success Trap: Lessons for World Development ( Forthcoming).
Venue for the seminar: Conference room 1, Dept. of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. More information. new

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”.
Professor Athreya has been co-operating for many years with Prof. Göran Djurfeldt and Prof. Emeritus Staffan Lindberg at Lund University. Among his most well-known publications are“Literacy and Empowerment” (Sage 1996) and “Barriers Broken” (with Djurfeldt and Lindberg, Sage 1990). Currently he is co-operating with Djurfeldt and Lindberg at Lund University in a restudy after 25 years of 213 agricultural households in the Cauvery delta in Tamilnadu. Venue for the seminar: Conference room 1, Dept. of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. More information. new

KaranthDuring 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. new
Prof. Karanth has a PhD from Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in Delhi, and his main research fields are Peasant Economy and Society; Caste and Social Stratification; Rural-Urban Linkages; and Sociology of Development. He will be second Visiting ICCR Professor at Lund University, after Prof. Lipi Ghosh who spent five months in Lund till March 2011.
The ICCR professorships at Lund University are 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. The agreement is valid for four years, with a new Indian Professor to be selected each year. SASNET was actively involved in finalizing the ICCR professorship at Lund University, with strong support from the Embassy of India in Stockholm.
An inaugural seminar with Professor Karanth will be held on Thuursday 6th October 2011, at 15.00. The theme for his lecture wil be ”Changing Rural India: Caste and Social Mobility”. After the lecture, a cultural programme will be organised with the Tabla player Subrata Manna, singer Sudokshina Manna, and Kathak dancer Sohini Debnath, all from Kolkata.
Venue for the seminar: Edens hörsal (auditorium), Lund University’s Department of Political Science, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. All are most welcome to the event that includes free Indian food and continues up to 7 P.M.

 

MizanurPast 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. new


RajniOn Thursday 19 May 2011, SASNET held its second Brown bag lunch seminar.
The aim of which is to present and disseminate the eminent South Asia related research that is carried out in so many departments at Lund University.
Professor Rajni Hatti-Kaul from the Department of Biotechnology, talked about ”Biotechnology and sustainable development”. She informed about the eminent environmental research that is carried out at Lund University. A major part of is has been directed towards the use of biotechnology for environmental bioremediation and for producing bioenergy and biodegradable chemicals and materials from renewable resources. Several projects have focussed on India, including a project on treatment of textile dyes using biological and physiochemical techniques in the city of Tirupur in Tamil Nadu (more information). Venue: Centre for Theology and Religious Studies (CTR), conference room 438, 4th floor, Allhelgona Kyrkogata 8, Lund.
More information about the seminar
.

ParthaPartha 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. new
Partha Mukherji has been the holder of a Ford Professorship at the Institute of Social Sciences (ISS), New Delhi. He was formerly Vice Chancellor of the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai, and President of the Indian Sociological Society.
While in Lund, Prof. Mukherjee held a SASNET Guest Lecture, organised in collaboration with the Departments of Sociology and Political Science, Lund University, on ”Land Acquisition for Industrialisation in West Bengal: the Case of Nano and Tata Motors” on Wednesday 11 May 2011, 10.15–12.00.
The well-attended seminar drew an audience consisting of students, teachers and researchers also from other departments such as Human Ecology, Development Studies, Sociology of Law, and from Albins Folkhögskola in Malmö.
Lecture 11 MayThe lecture focused on the social transformation necessary in order to develop rural areas and agriculture so that unemployed and underemployed people can find work in a growing industrial and service economy. A tight labour market will result in higher wage levels for non-farm jobs, thus giving rural households income which they can invest in agriculture.
However, establishing industries in rural areas often result in ‘primitive accumulation’, whereby land is appropriated from farmers and little or compensation paid. This may lead to strong counter movements, as in the case that Prof. Mukherji spoke about, focusing on the tumultous events around controversial industrialisation projects in Singur and Nandigram from 2006 and onwards.
West Bengal is currently of political interest because of the State elections that had just taken place. The Communist Party of India (CPM) has been in power since 1977, and has instituted land reforms, etc., and yet was, at the time of the SASNET lecture, in danger of being voted out of office. The results from the West Bengal assembly elections were to be published two days later, on 13th May 2011. Venue for the seminar: Lecture Hall No. 3, Dept. of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. Poster for the seminar. new

Gujjar woman
Speakers at the seminar, Praveen Kaushal Manto, Beppe Karlsson and Pernille Gooch.

Seminar
The Swedish South Asian Studies Network (SASNET) at Lund University; Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies (LUCSUS); and The Swallows India Bangladesh
jointly organised a seminar on ”Forest Rights in India” on Wednesday 4 may 2011, 13.00–17.00. The seminar, that drew an audience of about 30 people, was organised because 2011 has been selected to be the United Nation’s International Year of Forests. Issues related to forests and deforestation in India were discussed, as well as the problems that the tribal people who live there face. More information about the seminar.
The first speaker was Dr. Beppe Karlsson, Dept. of Social Antropology, Stockholm University, who talked about ”The Wet Desert and the Sacred Grove: Environmental Narratives in Northeast India“, focusing on the situation in the state of Meghalaya. Dr. Pernille Gooch, Human Ecology Division, Lund University, came next and talked about “Victims of Conservation or Rights as Forest Dwellers: Van Gujjar Pastoralists between Contesting Codes of Law“, and PhD candidate Nabikanta Jha, from the same department, made complimentary observations about the forest rights situation for the nomadic communities in the state of Uttarakhand.
Finally, Mr. Praveen Kaushal Manto from SOPHIA organisation in India, talked about ”Forest Rights – examples from The Himalayas & The Van Gujjars stategies for survival”. The seminar was moderated by Dr. Monica Erwér from the Swallows India Bangladesh.
Venue: Geocentrum I, room Världen, Sölvegatan 10, Lund.
Links to all three presentations.new

 

Ashok Deb art
Ambassador Ashok Sajjanhar flanked by Lars Eklund and Anna Lindberg from SASNET.

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.
See Lars Eklund’s photos from the day. new
PerA welcome address was delivered by Prof. Per Eriksson (photo), Lund University Vice Chancellor, after which H.E. Mr. Göran Tunhammar, the Governor of Skåne County gave a presentation.
H.E. Ashok Sajjanhar, Ambassador of India to Sweden and Latvia, then made an introduction to the theme for the day, Managing Diversity: The Indian Experience.

Sushil
Christina
Staffan
Ulf
Four of the seminar speakers: Sushil Khanna, Christina Nygren, Staffan Lindberg and Ulf Pehrsson.

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.
PublikDr. Stig Toft Madsen, Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS), Copenhagen, spoke about ”Managing External Complexities: India as a Soft Power”, referring to a recent UK conference on this issue; Dr. Christina Nygren, Visiting Research Fellow, Dept. of Oriental Languages, Stockholm University, spoke about ”Diversity in Indian theatre practices with special regard to folk traditions”; and Professor Staffan Lindberg, Dept. of Sociology, Lund University, spoke about ”The Role of Industry and State Policies in Rural Development – A Tamil Nadu Perspective”, based on his comparative sociological studies for the period 1979–2004.
AnetteIn the afternoon session devoted to business, Mr. Ulf Pehrsson, Vice President, Government and Industry Relations at Ericsson, gave a presentation on ”Doing business in India”, on Ericsson’s phenomenal growth in India, especially duirng the last 8 years. Finally, SASNET’s director, Dr. Anna Lindberg rounded off the seminar by heading a short summary session on ”Managing Diversity: The Indian Experience”.

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.
More information about the 14th April SASNET seminar
.     Conference poster.
Ingela Björck from Lund University Information department attended the seminar and wrote a report, entitled ”Mångfald i Indien”. Read her report (only in Swedish) new

Publik Dance audience

 

Seminar Lund
Participants at the March 22nd seminar: Madhumita Bhagat, William Radice, Bubu Munshi Eklund, Lars Eklund, Alia Ahmad, and Annemette Karpen.

SASNET successfully organised a Rabindranath Tagore 150th birth anniversary celebration week in Lund 20–24 March 2011.
GurudevIn collaboration with other local institutions and organisations, the week included popular lectures by by Dr. Olavi Hemmilä and P-O Henricson, Swedish experts on Rabindranath’s life and literature, as well as exhibitions, film shows, concerts and poetry reading.
On Tuesday 22 March, SASNET and Lund University organised a well-atttended academic seminar, featuring Prof. Wiliam Radice from SOAS, University of London. Prof. Radice, who has made new inspiring translations of Tagore’s poetry and prose from Bengali into English – a new volume of Gitanjali will be published in May 2011, spoke extensively and passionately about the relevance still present in his literature. More information on Prof. Radice’s lecture.

Claes-Göran Gabrielle Lipi
Claes-Göran Holmberg, Gabrielle Gunneberg and Lipi Ghosh.

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.
Tagore i KryptanFull information about the March 2011 Tagore Week in Lund.
See Lars Eklund’s photos from the Tagore Week.
Listen (on Youtube) to the Swedish choir Svart på Vitt singing Tagore’s song Ontoro Momo Bikoshito Koroas part of the Tagore Week. Please note a well-known male singer in the choir (on photo). new

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.

MariaAssociate 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. new

BrownbagIn 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. new

Swaran Singh in Lund
Professor Swaran Singh during his stay at Lund University, flanked by his hosts from the Dept. of Political Science, from left to right Associate Professors Anders Sannerstedt, Tomas Bergström and Catarina Kinnvall. Photo: Lars Eklund

• 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.
Prof. Singh teaches in Diplomacy & Disarmament Studies, and has written extensively on Asian Affairs, China’s foreign and security policy issues with special focus on China-India confidence building measures as also on Arms Control and Disarmament, Peace and Conflict Resolution, India’s foreign and security policy issues. Besides, he is President of the Association of Asia Scholars (an Asia-Wide Network with Secretariat in Delhi), General Secretary of Indian Association of Asian & Pacific Studies (Varanasi) and Member, Bangkok-based Asian Scholarship Foundation’s Regional Review Committee for South Asia.
In 2005, Prof. Singh spent some time as Guest Faculty at Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) in Stockholm.
More information, including seminar abstract. new

DMINFRA delegation
From left to right: Dr. Kjell-Ove Holmström, Dr. Anil Kakodkar, Mr. Per Malmberg, Dr. Ravi Rayanade, and Mr. Vijay Joshi.

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. new
In the second week of December 2010, a delegation from DM Foundation/DM Corporation, led by the eminent Indian nuclear scientist Dr. Anil Kakodkar, Chairman, Board of Directors, DM Foundation, visited Lund University. Dr. Kakodkar, previousy chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission of India, and Director of the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre in Trombay, was accompanied by Mr. Vijay Joshi, DM Corporation Director; Dr. Ravi Rayanade, DM Corporation Consultant; and Dr. Kjell-Ove Holmström, Member, Board of Directors, DM Foundation (but until October 2010 Assistant Professor in Molecular Biology at the School of Life Sciences, Skövde University). They were hosted by Mr. Per Malmberg, Sales Manager, Lund University Commissioned Education.
DMINFRADM Corporation is part of the DMINFRA industrial group chaired by the industrialist Dilip Mohite. The company was formerly known as Mohite & Mohite (Engineers and Contractors) Pvt. Ltd. In September 2010, DM Corporation was also involved in setting up a major collaboration agreement with ORF Genetics of Iceland, to develop, produce and market protein drugs (more information on this project).
During the visit to Lund University the dialogue continued with an aim to finalise a contract education collaboration between DM Foundation and Lund University Commissioned Education/Department of Biology. The delegation visited Ideon Science Park and Lund University’s Clinical Research Centre (CRC) and met the Pro Vice-Chancellor Eva Łkesson. They also had a meeting with representatives of the International Relations division; Anna Lindberg and Lars Eklund from SASNET; and a few Indian PhD candidates currently studying at Lund University. Finally, the delegation participated in a seminar with Peter Leifland, Executive Vice President, Alfa Laval Group, that was organised by the Sweden India Business Council (SIBC). More information on this seminar.

Film festival Lund
Anjali Monteiro and K.P. Jayasankar from Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) at the Focus Asia Documentary Film Festival in Lund, flanked by the two PhD candidates Roshni Pramanik and Emmanuel Raju, also coming from TISS but now scholarship holders at Lund University Centre for Risk Assessment and Management (LUCRAM).

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).
The theme of the festival was ”Urban Docs Asia: Identities, Memories, and Struggles in Asian Cities”. Professors Jayasankar and Monteiro were given an opportunity to show two of their documentary films shot in their hometown Mumbai – ”Saacha” and ”Naata”, and they also took part in the final day seminar on”Cities and the Visual: Ethnography, Documentaries, and Image-based Research”. More information about the Focus Asia Documentary Film Festival.
During their stay in Lund, Jayasankar and Monteiro were introduced to SASNET, meeting the director, Dr. Anna Lindberg and deputy director, Mr. Lars Eklund. They also met other Lund University researchers and a number of Indian PhD students currently studying in Lund as being scholarship holders through the Erasmus Mundus Action 2 Indo-European mobility programme. new


WesslerDr. Heinz Werner Wessler, Guest Professor at the Dept. of Linguistics and Philology, Uppsala University, holds a SASNET lecture at Lund University on ”The Liberating Force of Hindi and ‘Goddess English‘. Language Policies and Identity Politics in India”
, on Monday 6 December 2010. The seminar was organised in collaboration with the Dept. of Political Science.
Hind SwarajDr. Wessler took his starting point in the early anti-colonial classical “Hind Swaraj”, published a hundred years ago (1910), in which Mahatma Gandhi stressed the importance of a shift away from English to the Hindi/Hindustani language as a basic tool of cultural decolonization. English, so Gandhi argues, is part of the enslaving mechanism of colonial rule. The anti-colonial movement and in its aftermath independent India until today never openly questioned this position, even under challenge, and the promotion of a Sanskritized code of modern standard Hindi has continued to be a pillar of national language policies having lead to the reconciling “three languages formula” in Indian education.
In social reality, however, social upward mobility in Indian society has continued to be associated with English education, and Indian parents invest fortunes to secure Anglophone schooling to their offspring.
Venue for the seminar: Lilla konferensrummet, 2nd floor, Dept. of Political Science (Eden), Paradisgatan 5 H, Lund.
More information, including abstract.
During his two-days stay in Lund, Dr. Wessler interacted with SASNET’s deputy director Lars Eklund, discussing ongoing joint plans to commemorate the 150th birth anniversary of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore in Sweden and Denmark in March 2011. Academic seminars are planned to be held in both Lund and Uppsala, besides Stockholm, Copenhagen and Aarhus.
Heinz Werner also participated in in a seminar with Peter Leifland, Executive Vice President, Alfa Laval Group, that was organised in Lund on Tuesday 7 December by the Sweden India Business Council (SIBC). More information on this seminar. new

 

Seminar particiants Orjuela
Schalk
An interested audience followed the presentations by the lecturers at the November 24th Sri Lanka seminar, Camilla Orjuela and Peter Schalk.

A SASNET/UPF seminar on ”Sri Lanka after the War was held in Lund on Wednesday 24 November 2010.
The first speaker was Dr. Camilla Orjuela, Peace and Development Studies, School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg, who talked about ”Sri Lanka after the War: Sustainable Peace or new Conflicts?”, focusing on the fact that the 26 year long and brutal war came to an end in May 2009 as the Sri Lankan government defeated the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). However, an end to the war does not mean that the underlying conflicts that led to and sustained it have been dealt with. Can followed Professor Peter Schalk, Chair in the History of Religions (in particular in Hinduism and Buddhism) at the Faculty of Theology, Uppsala university. He held a presentation entitled ”Defeated but Defiant. The Ilamtamil Resistance Movement after May 2009”, largely focusing on the resistance movements still exisiting among the Tamil speaking Diaspora in London, Sidney, Oslo, Paris, Berlin and Toronto demonstrating defiance by keeping theur loyalty towards the Vattukottai resolution from 1976 that demanded the recognition of the right of self-determination of the Tamil speaking people in Ilam/Lanka.
The seminar was co-organised by SASNET and the Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University (UPF). Venue for the seminar: Café Athen, Sandgatan 2, Lund. See the poster for the seminar, including abstracts.
The entire seminar was recorded on video by the Association of Foreign Affairs, and can be seen on the web.
Go for the seminar video recording, part 1. new
Go for the seminar video recording, part 2. new

 

Lipi GhoshOn 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.
Prof. Ghosh is a historian, and as a visiting professor at Lund University, she will primarily be engaged in research, but also take an active role in teaching. In addition, she will deliver at least two public addresses during the academic year to be called “The ICCR Lecture on India. Her major areas of research interest are ethnicity, and minority & cultural studies in the context of South & Southeast Asia. She has written on issues such as ”Prostitution in Thailand: Myth and Reality”;Indian Diaspora in the Asian & Pacific Regions”; and ”Political Governance and Minority Rights in a South & Southeast Asian Scenario. Read her full CV. new

LipiOn 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.
Prof. Ghosh argues against this, taking Northeast
India as a case of positive interrelation between ethnicity, religion and identity (more information).

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 seminar was introduced with a beautiful inaugural prayer song by Rabindranath Tagore, performed by Bubu Munshi-Eklund with Harmonium accompaniment. The inaugural seminar also included a dance performance by the professional Odissi artist Anette Pooja from Gothenburg, and finally a mingling session where tea and Indian snacks from Govinda’s Restaurant were served. Venue for the seminar: Auditorium (hörsalen), Lund University’s Centre for Languages and Literature (SOL-Centrum), Helgonabacken 14, Lund. See full seminar programme. More photos from the seminar. new

Anette Lipi and Bubu
Anette Pooja. Lipi Ghosh and Bubu Munshi Eklund.
Lipi seminar Audience
After seminar

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.
SASNET was actively involved in finalizing the ICCR professorship at Lund University, with strong support from the Embassy of India in Stockholm. In April 2010, SASNET’s director, Dr. Anna Lindberg, participated in an official Lund University delegation to Delhi, where final negotiations were held with representatives of the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, and the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, regarding the proposed Indian visiting guest professorship at Lund University.
More information about the ICCR professorships at Lund University and worldwide.

Roger
Margret Frenz, Gunilla Carlecrantz (Acting Head of International Relations), Roger Jeffery, Anna Lindberg, and Henrik Hofvendahl (International Relations, in charge of LU’s Asia educational activities).

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).
During their stay in Lund, they had long and fruitful discussions with Anna Lindberg and Lars Eklund from SASNET, but they also given an opportunity to meet representatives of the university’s Division of International Relations; the succcessful International Masters programme on Applied Management in Development (LUMID); and Lund University’s Centre of Excellence for Sustainability Studies (LUCSUS). new

SASNET office
Roger Jeffery, Lars Eklund and Margret Frenz at SASNET’s office.

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.
Later the same day, on Tuesday 9 November, Margret Frenz held another SASNET lecture, this time in collaboration with the Dept. of Sociology. She spoke about ”Making the World One’s Home. Goan Migration across the Indian Ocean and Beyond”, focusing on the migration of Goans (from the present day Indian state of Goa) from South Asia to East Africa in the 19th and 20th centuries, and their second migration from East Africa to countries such as the UK and Canada. By analysing their migration patterns, their economic, social and political engagement in East Africa and in this process, their ability to recreate material and social practices, Dr. Frenz highlights how one community has made the world its home. Venue for the seminar: Conference room 3, Lund University, Dept. of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. More information about the seminar.

MicrocreditsA 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.
The seminar featured Markus Pauli, Doctoral Candidate, University of Heidelberg, Germany who talked about ”Microfinance in India – assessing its impact with the capability approach”; and Ms. Khushi Kabir, Coordinator for Nijera Kori, a non governmental development organization in Bangladesh, critical of microfinance. Ms. Kabir gave an engaged presentation entitled ”Setting Development Priorities: Economic Well Being or Empowerment for the Poorest” (see photo). The following discussion was moderated by Dr. Anna Lindberg, SASNET. Venue for the seminar: Café Athen, Sandgatan 2, Lund.
See the poster for the seminar.
The entire seminar was recorded on video by the Association of Foreign Affairs, and can be seen on the web.
Go for the seminar video recording, part 1. new
Go for the seminar video recording, part 2. new
Khushi and MarkusMarkusMarkus Pauli (photo to the left) is currently working on his doctoral thesis (with the provisional title ”The Power of Individual Freedom as a Concept and Practice in Development – Operationalization of the Capability Approach for Assessing the Impact of Poverty-Oriented Microfinance in India”) within Heidelberg University’s Cluster of Excellence ‘Asia and Europe in a Global Context’ Graduate Programme for Transcultural Studies. The thesis is based on based on fieldwork carried out in Tamil Nadu, India.
He also works as a Research Assistant to Prof. Subrata K. Mitra at the Dept. of Political Science, South Asia Institute, University of Heidelberg.
In his research based on fieldwork conducted in Tamil Nadu, Mr. Pauli studies the impact of microfinance in India, trying to operationalize the capability approach of Amartya Sen in order to draw a more comprehensive picture of the positive and negative impact of microfinance. The focus lies on those institutions which claim to target the very poor and who are providing additional services such as skill training, health care, sanitation or education.
Kushi Kabir is Executive Director for Nijera Kori, Bangladesh, an organisation working in 1,375 villages in 17 districts of Bangladesh, organising 293,746 landless peasants, of whom 154,853 are women. Nijera Kori believes in creating strong autonomous organizations of the rural poor, able to assert their rights and ensure their entitlements as citizens of Bangladesh, facilitating better access to rural services and available resources, with a view to building self-reliance through mobilisation and collective action rejecting use of micro credit as well as other service delivery approaches.
Ms. Kabir is also the Chairperson for the Association of Land Reform and Development (ALRD), a network of NGOs and Bangladeshi citizens active in land rights issues. She has for decades been actively involved in promoting gender equality, rights of women and other marginalised communities, land and water rights, secularism, environmental justice, food sovereignty, ensuring democratic values and accountability at all levels, besides protecting landless and slum dwellers from eviction, preventing transformation of agriculture land to shrimp farms, worked against the use of fatwas, extra judicial killings etc.
Read the full CVs of Markus Pauli and Khushi Kabir.

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.
The Global Gender Matters Network examines the transnational ways in which gender is configured socio-culturally, economically, and politically in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and Latin America. The Network encourages scholars with a particular interest in global gender matters to meet and discuss how sexualized and racialized roles, relationships, powers, and conflicts inform gender ideas and practices in particular non-Western contexts.
Venue: Dept. of Gender Studies, Building M1, Allhelgona Kyrkogata 14, Lund. More information. new

SajjanharOn 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.
(Photo to the right of Mr. Sajjanhar with Gunilla Carlecrantz and Ingalill Rahm Hallberg).
Representatives from the Division of International Relations informed the Ambassador about the ongoing Erasmus Mundus Action 2 mobility programmes that Lund university currently coordinates with a number of Indian partner universities (more information).
Per Malmberg, Sales Manager, Lund University Commissioned Education, discussed possible new India projects. The Ambassador also met a number of university professors, working on India related projects.
LTHA separate meting was held with SASNET’s director, Dr. Anna Lindberg, and deputy director, Mr. Lars Eklund, on details regarding the new ICCR professorship at Lund University, a position that will be taken up by Prof. Lipi Ghosh, Calcutta University from November 1st, 2010 (more information).
In the morning, the Ambassador also visited the university’s Faculty of Engineering (LTH) where he was introduced by its Vice-Dean for International Relations, Prof. Per Warfvinge. He then got an opportunity to visit the Department of Electrical and Information Technology, where Prof. Ove Edfors presented its Masters programmes in System-on-Chip (SoC) and Wireless Communication. There, the Ambassador was introduced to Indian students/PhD candidates.
(Photo to the left of PhD candidate Deepak Dasalukunte, Ms. Shikha Kudar, and Prof. Ove Edfors).new

Sri Lankan Ambassador in LundThe 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.
Srilankan universities are already involved in several collaboration projects with Swedish universities, especially with the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Uppsala University and Gävle University. A few joint projects are also running with Lund University researchers. Besides, Lund University Commissioned Education is involved in a number of ongoing professional training courses with Srilankan participants.
The meeting with Mr. Jayasooriya was hosted by Ms. Gunilla Carlecrantz, Acting Head of Lund University’s International Relations division. The other participants were Ms. Emma Alfredsson, Project Manager, Lund University Commissioned Education; Mr. Henrik Hofvendahl, Programme Officer in charge of Asia activities, International Relations Office; plus Anna Lindberg and Lars Eklund from SASNET. new


Lund UniversitySASNET has been closely involved in the planning for a new Asia Regional Erasmus Mundus Action 2 mobility programme that was decided upon by the European Commission in July 2010 (more information).
The project is led by Lund University that already since 2008 successfully coordinates an existing Indo-European Erasmus Mundus mobility programme. Now the university will also administer a new Asia Regional project that includes seven South Asian universities, four in India (Delhi University; Jadavpur University, Kolkata; Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur (IITK); and Tata Instititute of Social Sciences, Mumbai), and one each in Pakistan (Karachi University), Nepal (Tribhuvan University), and Bangladesh (Jahangirnagar University).
The project has been named EMEA – Erasmus Mundus Europe Asia – and will be open for applications from November 1, 2010 and remain open until December 15.
CoordinatorsThe project coordinators are Ms. Elisabeth Axell and Ms. Katarina Wingkvist, International Relations, Lund University (photo).
Go for the EMEA project web site. new
A first consortium meeting was held in Lund 23–24 September 2010, when Vice Chancellors and international coordinators from the consortium member universities came to Lund for a hectic meeting to decide upon the principles for the selection process, discuss the implementation of the project, and to elect a steering committeee. During the kick-off meeting, it was also decided to set up four thematic groups – on quality assurance, on development of joint projects, on events/conferences, and finally on a visibility strategy for the project. SASNET’s deputy director Lars Eklund is a member of this visibility strategy group.
More information about the Lund kick-off meeting. new

Seminar Shahana

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.
A large audience of students and faculty from Lund University, some of them actually coming from University of Karachi, attended the seminar and afterwards a group was formed to discuss immediate relief efforts. The seminar was jointly organised by SASNET and Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies (LUCSUS). Venue: Lecture Hall Världen, Geocentrum 1, Sölvegatan 10, Lund.
More information about the seminar
. new
The daily newspaper Sydsvenskan published an interview with Prof. Kazmi, on the new Erasmus Mundus mobility programme, on Thursday 23 September. Read the article entitled ”Utbytet med Asien ökar”. new


PandaAssociate Professor Jagannath Prasad Panda from the Institute for Defense Studies and Analysis (IDSA) in New Delhi, India, held a SASNET lecture on ”The Pattern of Sino-Indian Relations: Evaluating the Strategic Discourse
at Lund University on Wednesday 29 September 2010. The seminar is organised in collaboration with Associate Professor Catarina Kinnvall at the Department of Political Science, Lund University. Dr. Panda works as a Research Fellow at IDSA, the premier and most eminent think-tank body in India, since August 2010. He is also the Managing Editor for the Peace and Development Digest, published by Foundation for Peace and Sustainable Development in New Delhi. He defended his doctoral dissertation in 2007 at the School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi. His research interests focuses on Sino-Indian relations. He has come to Sweden in connection with collaborative research work at the Institute for Security and Development Policy (ISDP) in Nacka/Stockholm. He is preparing a paper on ”China, India and BRIC: Realist Interpretation of a Multi-polar World Order”. Venue for the seminar: Main conference hall (room 366), 2nd floor, Dept. of Political Science, Paradisgatan 5, Lund.
More information about the seminar
.
During his stay in Lund, Dr. Panda also visited SASNET’s office and discussed with its deputy director Lars Eklund on possible future collaboration projects between the Indian Institute for Defense Studies and Analysis, and SASNET. Photo from the meeting. new

VenkateshProf. 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.
Prof. Athreya has been co-operating for many years with Prof. Göran Djurfeldt and Prof. Emeritus Staffan Lindberg at Lund University. Among his most well-known publications are “Literacy and Empowerment” (Sage 1996) and “Barriers Broken” (with Djurfeldt and Lindberg, Sage 1990). Currently he is, just like Dr. Rajagopal mentioned above, co-operating with Djurfeldt and Lindberg at Lund University in a restudy after 25 years of 213 agricultural households in the Cauvery delta in Tamilnadu.
The lecture at Lund University was based on the 2009 World Food programme report ”State of Food Insecurity in Rural India”, to which he contributed (more information). Venue for the seminar: Dept. of Sociology, Conference room no. 1 (335), Paradisgatan 5, Lund.
See the poster for the lecture. new


• Dr. A. Rajagopal, R.S.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation in Chennai, India, lectures on ”Water Management and Agrarian change in India” at Lund University on Monday 13 September 2010, 13.15–15.00.
The seminar is jointly organised by SASNET and the Research group Society, Development, Environment (Samhälle, utveckling och miljö) at the Department of Sociology. Dr. Rajagopal received his PhD on Water Management in 1991. After that, he worked for many years as a researcher with the South Asia Consortium for Inter Disciplinary Water Resources Studies at Hyderabad, India. Currently he is co-operating with Prof. Göran Djurfeldt and Prof. Emeritus Staffan Lindberg at Lund University in a restudy after 25 years of 213 agricultural households in the Cauvery delta in Tamil Nadu. Dr. Rajagopal’s lecture is based on a paper presented at the 2010 World Water Week at Stockholm (more information). Venue for the seminar: Dept. of Sociology, Conference room no. 2 (405), Paradisgatan 5, Lund. new

Delegation
Dr. Atma Ram Shukla welcomed by Ms. Gunilla Carlecrantz, Acting Head of Lund University’s International Relations Division.

MikaelOn 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.
Four Indian PhD candidates had been invited to present their experiences from work and extracurricular activities at Lund University. They were Biswanath Das from Viswa Bharati University in Shantiniketan, currently at the Division of Chemical Physics, Department of Chemistry, LU; Ami Patel from Anand Agricultural University, currently at Dept. of Biotechnology, LU; Firoz Hussain Shah from Delhi University, and Pramod Kamble from Pravara Institute of Medical Sciences, Loni, both now currently at the Section of Microbial Ecology, Dept of Ecology, LU.
SASNET’s deputy director Lars Eklund also got time to present the Lund University based SASNET network.

Biogas delegation
Eric Rönnols and Virendra Kumar Vijay.

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.
Associate Professor Virendra Kumar Vijay from the Centre for Rural Development and Technology at the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IITD), was a member of the delegation. Dr. Vijay coordinates the Biogas Development & Training Centre at IITD.
During a visit to Lund University on the preceding day, the Indian delegation had a study tour to the Dept. of Biotechnology and met researchers working on biogas projects with Indian partners. They also visited the Pro Vice Chancellor of Lund University, Dr. Eva Åkesson.new

 

Falsterbo confThe 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).
GrahamThe keynote speaker was Prof. Emeritus Graham Chapman (photo) from the Dept. of Geography, Lancaster University, UK. Other main speakers were Dr. Sirpa Tenhunen, Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Helsinki, Finland; Mr. Teddy Primack, Director of Academic Documents Associates, USA; Associate Professor Jan Vang, Department of Production, Aalborg University, Denmark; Dr. Anna Godhe, Department of Marine Ecology, University of Gothenburg; and Dr. Maria Lantz, Department of Art & Architecture, Royal University College of Fine Arts (KKH), Stockholm.
Bird watchingThe 2010 Höllviken conference was a follow-up to the successful conference on the same topic that SASNET arranged the year before (more information on the 2009 conference). It proved to make a difference from the standard academic conferences and paid attention explicitly to the students. Something that was evaluated very positively from all participants. The 2010 conference was again held at Falsterbo conference retreat (Falsterbo kursgård) in Höllviken. This time an ornitological excursion led by Dr. Stig Toft Madsen was included in the programme, in order to watch birds and seals at the Falsterbo peninsula. (Prof. Bo Lindblad watches birds on photo above).
More information on the conference web page.
See the full programme in the conference folder.
See Lars Eklund’s photos from the conferencenew

Sudipta• 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.


Gitiara• Professor Gitiara Nasreen, Professor & Chair, Department of Mass Communication and Journalism, Dhaka University, Bangladesh, held a SASNET lecture on ”Images of Gender on Media in Bangladesh” at Lund University on Monday 24 May 2010
. The seminar was organized in collaboration with the Department of Sociology, Lund University.
More information about the seminar.
Prof. Nasreen had come to Sweden on invitation by The Global School Sweden (Globala Skolan), a programme run by the International Programme Office for Education and Training and supported by Sida, in order to participate in a Sida-funded seminar on the responsibility of the rich world – twenty-four hours for global learning, held in Stockholm 20–21 May (more information), but then travelled to Lund to visit researchers and students at relevant departments at Lund University – a visit planned for by SASNET’s Lars Eklund.
Accompanied by Mr. Bo Kramsjö, representative for Globala Skolan, she visited Lund University’s Dept. of Media and Communication Studies, where Prof. Peter Dahlgren (photo) had organised a programme including meeting with students and researchers. Before the afternoon seminar at the Dept. of Sociology, Prof. Nasreen was also given an opportunity to visit SASNET’s office at Scheelevägen.


Swati
Muhammad Azam Khan Swati, federal minister of Science and Technology from Pakistan, participated in a seminar on ”The Role of Overseas Pakistani Students in Nation Building” at Lund University on Saturday 22 May 2010. As a minister, Mr. Khan Swati has among other things played a pivotal role in establishing the Hazara University in District Mansehra. It is the only institution of higher learning in the area with special emphasis on universal values. The seminar was organised by Pakistani students of Asian Studies at Lund University, and Mr. Muhammad Athar Javed, South Asia expert in Copenhagen, Denmark (who also spoke at the seminar), with support from SASNET. The seminar was introduced by Dr. Anna Lindberg, Director of SASNET. After the Minister’s lecture, time was provided for an interactive debate/question-answer session. Refreshments along with Pakistani food were served. Venue: Hörsalen, Kårhuset, Faculty of Engineering (LTH), John Ericssons väg 3, Lund. More information.

Publiken• 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.
Arsenci in AsiaArsenic in groundwater constitutes a major human health issue in many countries globally. Although the source of arsenic is natural, people’s exposure to arsenic in drinking water is the result of extensive groundwater development that began in the 1970s with the support of international development agencies. The problem is particularly acute in the Bengal Delta Plains in Bangladesh and India but has also prevalent in many other parts of the world, including Argentina, Chile, Mongolia, and the United States. The problem of arsenic poisoning in the Bengali countryside has received considerable media attention, since it affects a maximum umber of people, 30 million in Bangladesh and 5 million in West Bengal.
Arsenic poisoning caused by the widespread boring of wells for drinking water has become a major problem, maybe on a scale equivalent to the problem of unhygienic surface water causing diarrhoea diseases (and which was the original reason behind the massive efforts to bore groundwater wells from the 1970s).
The seminar probed the issue of arsenic poisoning in a broad social context and an interdisciplinary perspective, with a focus on how to provide safe drinking water in the future, and what is presently being done by researchers, donors and practitioners working with these issues. The presentations gave insights from many different perspectives. Presentations were given by Prof. Torleif Dahlin, Engineering Geology, Lund University, Prof. Prosun Bhattacharya, KTH, Prof. Marie Vahter, Division of Metals & Health, Institute of Environmental Medicine (IMM), Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Dr. Abul Mandal, School of Life Sciences, Skövde University, Dr. Mattias von Brömssen, Ramböll AB, and Eva Hägerstrand, Coordinator for the Swallows India-Bangladesh Section, based in Lund. Prof. Lennart Olsson from LUCSUS was the moderator for the day and led the final discussion.
Funding was provided by Swedish Water House (SWH) in Stockholm, and Sydvatten AB in Malmö.
Read a report from the seminar.

Taro Maldives Male today

• 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.
Nils Finn Munch-Petersen talked about ”The Maldives – Paradise Lost?”, focusing on the current developments in the Indian Ocean republic, claimed to be threatened by a rise in sea level due to expected global warming. However, more immediate threats are issues such as a break-down of society caused by a growing economic and demographic imbalance precipitated by uncontrolled tourism growth and the influx of lowly-paid foreign workers. This leads to social inequality, a growing number of unemployed youth, narcotics related criminality and a growing Islamic fundamentalism.
Nils Finn Munch-Petersen is a social anthropologist who first visited the Maldives in the 1970s, and has since travelled extensively in the Northern and Southern Atolls for research and work for international organizations such as UNDP, UNICEF, UNFPA, and the World Bank. He is considered to be one of the leading, non-Maldivian, world specialists on the Maldives.
Another leading Nordic Maldives expert, Professor Emeritus Nils-Axel Mörner, previously connected to the Unit of Palegeophysics and Geodynamics, Stockholm University, was one among the audience, and his presence ensured a vital debate on the real problems that the Indian Ocean republic currently faces.
Venue for the seminar: Conference room, Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE), Lund University.More information.


D’Costa• Anthony P. D’Costa, Professor of Indian Studies at the Asia Research Centre (ARC), Copenhagen Business School, held an open SASNET lecture at Lund University on Monday 19 April 2010
, 11.15–13.00. He talked about ”India’s Changing Role in the Global Political Economy”.
The seminar was inaugurated by the Indian Ambassador to Sweden, H.E. Mr. Balkrishna Shetty, who also gave some some opening remarks.
Prior he came to ARC in 2008, Prof. Anthony D’Costa was with the University of Washington for eighteen years.  He has written extensively on the global steel, Indian automobile and IT industries, globalization, development, innovations, and industrial restructuring. He is currently working on globalization and the international mobility of IT workers examining migration pattern, immigration policies, national innovation systems, and tertiary education in India, China, Japan, and the US, co-authoring a photographic essay on Indian modernity and industrialization, and editing volumes on economic nationalism and the development experiences of India and China. More information about Anthony D’Costa.

Business
From left to right: Madhumita Bhagat, Per Eriksson, Balkrishna Shetty, Anna Lindberg and Marianne Granfelt.

The seminar was co-organised by the Sweden India Business Council (SIBC), and held with kind support from the Embassy of India in Sweden.
Venue for the seminar: Museum of Cultural History/Auditorium (Kulturens hörsal), Tegnérplatsen, Lund.
More information about the seminar.
After the seminar, Lund University Vice Chancellor Prof. Per Eriksson invited the Indian Ambassador, the First Secretary Mrs. Madhumita Bhagat and Prof. D’Costa for an official lunch at the Old Bishop’s House. The lunch was also attended by the University Director Dr. Marianne Granfelt, Anna Lindberg and Lars Eklund from SASNET, SIBC Senior Advisor Mr. Stig Victorin, and a few invited guests from Lund University.


Yadav• Prof. Yogendra Yadav, Senior Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi, India, held a SASNET lecture on ”Democracy and Poverty in India
, on Thursday 18 March 2010. The well-attended seminar was organised in collaboration with the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE). Yadav is a Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Study at Berlin, Germany, during the academic year 2009–2010. His areas of interests include democratic theory, election studies, survey research, political theory, modern Indian political thought and Indian socialism. He has co-authored State of Democracy in South Asia (OUP, 2008) and co-edited (with Sandeep Shastri and K C Suri) Electoral Politics in Indian States (OUP, 2009). He has also been involved in designing and coordinating the National Election Studies, the most comprehensive series of academic surveys of the Indian electorate, from 1996 to 2009. In his presentation, he focused on the co-existence of democracy and poverty, specifically the continued existence of electoral democracy with popular participation along with mass poverty. The paradox is not trivial: we have good reasons to be surprised about it. Making sense of this paradox takes us to the explanatory framework that may shed light on the mechanism that makes this paradoxical co-existence possible. The framework may also enable us to do a little more: understand the changes over time and differences across the various states in the relationship of democracy with poverty. More information.

Sheikh Hasina

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.
A large delegation of ministers and around 20 members of the Bangladeshi parliament (who have attended the COP 15 climate conference in Copenhagen) accompanied the Prime Minister from Copenhagen during this high-security visit to Lund. The interest from Lund University students and researchers, as well as from the local Bangladeshi community was overwhelming.
The lecture hall was crowded, and the event was documented by a couple of Bangladeshi TV company crews. More information.
See Lars Eklund’s photos from Sheikh Hasina’s visit to Lund.

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).


Nepal PLA• A joint SASNET/UPF (Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University) seminar on ”Political Transitions affecting the Peace Process in Nepal” was held in Lund on Wednesday 23 September 2009, 19.30–21.00
. Anjoo Sharan Upadhyaya, Professor of Political Science and Director, Centre for the Study of Nepal at Banaras Hindu University (BHU) in Varanasi, India, participated in the seminar along with Mr. Vijaykant Lal Karna, Nepalese ambassador to Scandinavia (based in Denmark) who is also a political scientist by profession, having worked at Tribhuvan University for 20 years.
The audience consisted of more than 70 people, mostly Lund University students, but also visiting Nepalese students (see photo with the Ambassador and a gathering of these).
Anjoo UpadhyayaIn her 35 years of teaching career at Banaras Hindu University, Prof. Anjoo Sharan Upadhyayay (photo) has been the Dean, Faculty of Social Sciences; and served twice as the Head, Department of Political Science. Outside of India, she has worked for example as Research Director at UNU/Ulster University INCORE (Institute of Conflict Resolution and Ethnicity), UK; as Fellow at London School of Economics & Politics (LSE), and as Scholar-in Residence at the Woodrow Wilson Centre for International Scholars, Washington DC, USA. Professor Upadhyaya has published extensively both nationally and internationally on themes related to issues of self-determination, ethnicity, conflict, federalism, gender, development and peace. Currently she is engaged in a collaboration project with Karlstad University. Dr. Leif Bjellin from the the Dept. of Cell and Organism Biology, Lund University, was the moderator for the seminar. Venue: Café Athen, Akademiska Föreningen (AF), Sandgatan 2, Lund. More information about the seminar.

Priyankar• 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.

Seminar Pakistan• 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.
Pakistan seminarProf. Ahmed is currently on leave from the Dept. of Political Science, Stockholm University. At ISAS, he is working on a research project ebtitled ”Is Pakistan a Garrison State?” The aim of the study is to generate a comprehensive analysis of the reasons why the military came to play the dominant role in Pakistani politics. He is also in the process of completing a major study based on first-hand accounts of the partition of the Punjab in 1947. Ishtiaq has taught and carried out research on issues of human rights, women’s rights and minorities extensively in South Asian contexts in general and in Pakistan in particular. He has also written extensively on the politics of South Asia, especially Pakistan. He wrote a weekly column in the Pakistan English-language newspapers, The Daily Times and The News International during May 2002 and June 2007. Besides, he is on the editorial advisory board of Asian Ethnicity, Journal of Punjab Studies, IPRI Journal and PIPS Journal of Conflict and Peace Studies.
Rubya Mehdi (photo to the right) has a PhD in Law, and is a senior researcher at the Carsten Niebuhr Institute, Dept. of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, University of Copenhagen. She is one of Denmark’s leading experts in Islamic law, and has conducted research in Denmark for 20 years. She is also a visiting professor with the Higher Education Commission of Pakistan, and she was involved in the Protection of Women Act 2006, which was passed to improve the situation of women in Pakistan. It also tried to make some changes in the Hudood ordinance which was very much discriminating against women in rape cases. Dr. Stig Toft Madsen, SASNET, was the moderator for the discussion. Venue: Café Athen, Akademiska Föreningen (AF), Sandgatan 2, Lund. More information. new

Ruby SainDr. 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.

Gandhi books• 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.
The function, including a puja ceremony by Ms. Bubu Munshi-Eklund, took place at Lund University’s Asia Library at Scheelevägen 15. A large number of Lund University professors and researchers, and also Indian students and guest researchers who have come to Lund University through the Erasmus Mundus External Cooperation Window India lot 15, participated. Lund University was officially represented by the Assistant Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Sven Strömqvist. The daily newspaper Sydsvenskan carried a report from the inauguration, and also Lund University magazine LUM in its issue No. 8/2009. See the newspaper reports. (as a pdf-file).

Book donationInger HaellquistMs. 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.
After the inauguration ceremony, and the presentation of the new book donation by the Indian Ambassador, a 45 minutes documentary on the life of Mahatma Gandhi was shown. The film, entitled ”Mahatma – A Great Soul of the 20th Century”, has been jointly produced by the Public Diplomacy Division, Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India; and the Gandhi Films Foundation.
Not only the book collection was inaugurated. Also SASNET’s web site on the Mahatma Gandhi collection (www.sasnet.lu.se/gandhi) was officially launched. The web site has been prepared for SASNET by the librarian Erik Svanström.

Shetty Arnold
Balkrishna Shetty and David Arnold.

• 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.
Gandhi seminarThe Ambassador, Mr. Balkrishna Shetty, was the first speaker, and he gave a personal narrative on Mahatma Gandhi’s life, the important role he has played in history, and the basic values that he stands for, values that should still play an important role.
Prof. David Arnold came next. His presentation, entitled ”Gandhi: The Mahatma and the Machine”, differed in its specific focus on Mahatma Gandhi’s complicated relation to machines. Whereas Gandhi was well-known for his resentment against modern industrial inventions that robbed people of their employment, he was still very much dependent on the radio transmitters, microphones, and trains, in order to reach out to the masses with his message.
After the seminar, a rich vegetarian buffet dinner from Restaurant Govinda was served to all participants in the foyer of SOL-Centrum.
Full information about SASNET’s Gandhi seminar.

SASNET• 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.
The aim of the conference was to gather masters students, PhD candidates, and young post-docs in Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Norway who focus on South Asia in their research studies. 45 participants came to the conference, that had been planned by an organising committee led by Dr. Kristina Myrvold, Dept. of History of Religions, Lund University, and Ms. Julia Velkova, MA in Eastern Philosophy and Culture from the University of Sofia, Bulgaria.
The aim behind the conference, which was very much similar to another successful conference that SASNET organised in Marstrand in October 2002 (more information about the 2002 conference), was to provide an opportunity for young scholars to present their future and ongoing research projects, establish contacts with colleagues in the Nordic countries, and discuss common challenges and opportunities when conducting research in South Asia related studies.

Mirja Teddy
Mirja Juntunen Teddy Primack
Vinayak Chaturvedi
Vinayak Chaturvedi and Pamela Price.

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”.
Prof. Pamela Price, Oslo University, was another principal speaker. She talked about ”Being a South Asianist in the Nordic countries: Being Glocal”.
Dr. Mirja Juntunen, Uppsala University, coordinator of the Nordic Center in India (NCI), talked about ”A Nordic Perspective on Prospects and Challenges for Scholarly Interaction with South Asia”; and Mr. Teddy Primack, Editor, Academic Documents Associates, New York, made an exciting and useful presentation entitled ”How to displease an editor” about how to deliver manuscripts for scientific publishing.
A number of thematic sessions were led by Prof. Knut A. Jacobsen, University of Bergen (History, Religion, and Culture I); Dr. Peter B Andersen, Copenhagen University (History, Religion, and Culture II); Dr. Catarina Kinnvall, Lund University (Society, Development, and Gender); Dr. Per Hilding, Stockholm University (Nature, Health, and Environment); and Dr. Per Knutsson, Gothenburg University (Technology, Economics, and International Relations).

SessionFinally 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).
The ”champions” were Prof. Bo Lindblad, Karolinska Institutet; Dr. Anna Godhe, Gothenburg University; Dr. Jan Magnusson, Lund University; Dr. Christer Norström, Stockholm University, Prof. Devdatt Dubhashi, Chalmers University of Technology; Dr. Zarina Kabir, Karolinska Institutet; Dr. Stig Toft Madsen, SASNET; and Prof. Staffan Lindberg, Lund University. See the programme, including a list of participants (as a pdf-file)
More photos from the conference.

LFA• 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.
SohiniThey gave a presentation titled ”Application of Classical Indian Music in World Music of today”. The artists visited Scandinavia as part of a European tour (with concerts in Copenhagen on May 26th and in Lund on May 27th).
The Malmö seminar was jointly organised by Lund University Intercultural Education Research Forum (since November 2008 coordinated by the International Art and Cultural Education Competency Centre, KIKK, at Malmö Academy of Music), and SASNET. Besides the three Indian artists, who discussed Indian forms of music and dance and show their skills, two presentations of ongoing research projects at Lund University were given. Dr. Bosse Bergstedt, Dept. of Education talked about ”The Genuine Voice – on a Prelinguistic Fellowship”; and Senior Lecturer Eva Sæther, Dept. of Music Education Research talked about ”To play oneself Persian or Swedish – or?”. Venue: Musikhögskolan i Malmö, Ystadvägen 25. More information.

Tiwari and Håkansson
Anna Lindberg, SASNET, Krister Håkansson, Växjö University, G.N. Tiwari, IIT Delhi, and Lars Eklund, SASNET.

• 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.

Tabish Khair seminar
Tabish Khair flanked by Claes-Göran Holmberg, and Anna Lindberg.

• 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.
More information.

Balkrishna Shetty• 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.
SIBC
SASNET also co-hosted an India seminar in co-operation with SIBC (Sweden-India Business Council) and Ideon Research park, where the Ambassador was the key speaker. With his wide experiences he gave an interesting presentation. In recent years he has been posted at the Embassy of India in Paris, as Minister (Economic), dealing with all bilateral economic matters and relations with Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). He has also been associated with the establishment of TEAM–9 (Techno-Economic Cooperation for Africa–India Movement), a regional economic cooperation mechanism between India and eight West African countries. From September 2005 to January 2009, he was Ambassador of India to Bahrain. Besides the speech by the Ambassador, the seminar also included a presentation by Prof. Baboo Nair, who talked about ”Doing Business in India”. SASNET’s Director, Dr. Anna Lindberg, was the moderator. More information.
During his stay in Lund and Malmö, the Ambassador also visited the Mayor of Lund, Ms Annica Annerby Jansson, visited Lund University’s Faculty of Engineering, and especially its Department of Electrical and Information Technology. In the evening Mr. Shetty went to Malmö, first to visit the Bollywood cinema hall in Limhamn, and then to host a reception at Hipp for 100 invited guests, mostly from the Indian community in Malmö/Lund, but also a delegation from Malmö University, and people working on India related projects within art, music, and theatre.
Read the full programme for the Ambassador’s visit to Lund on May 14, 2009, and see photos.

Deepak
Dipak Malik lectures at Lund University, flanked by Staffan Lindberg and Göran Djurfeldt.

• 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).
More information.

Project partners
The project partners, from left to right Dr. Ebbe Nordlander, Professor Shariff Enamur Kabir and Professor Pradeep Mathur.

• 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.
During the visit in Lund, Prof. Shariff Enamur Kabir also met with Lund University’s Pro vice-chancellor Eva Åkesson to discuss a possible Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between Lund University and Jahangirnagar University.

Walter Andersen• 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.

Ravinder Kaur in Lund
Prof. Ravinder Kaur after the prsentation at Lund University, surrounded by SASNET’s present Director Anna Lindberg and its former Director Staffan Lindberg.

• 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.

Daya Thussu 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.

Nanolab Lund• 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.

Nepal seminar David Ludden
Vijaykant Lal Karna, Nepali Ambassador to Scandinavia speaks during the SASNET/UPF Nepal seminar in Lund. He is being flanked by Staffan Lindberg to the left and Katak Malla to the right. Prof. David Ludden was the main speaker to the seminar.

• 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.
SASNET’s former Director Prof. Staffan Lindberg, Dept. of Sociology, Lund University was the moderator for the seminar that drew a crowd of around 40 people. Venue for the seminar: Auditorium (Hörsalen) at Lund University’s Centre for Languages and Literature (SOL-Centrum), Helgonabacken 14, Lund. See the full information about the seminar and the three speakers (as a pdf-file).
Ambassadsor and BexellDuring their stay in Lund, the Ambassador Mr. Vijaykant Lal Karna and Dr. Katak Mallafrom Stockholm University, old colleagues fom Tribhuvan University, also visited SASNET’s root node office at Scheelevägen. A fruitful discussion took place regarding the ongoing democratic transition process in Nepal and the urgency of support for the positive development. The Ambassador would welcome such initiatives from Sweden, and he thinks that SASNET should play a facilitating role.
A meeting was also organised in the afternoon for the Ambassador and the other participants to the SASNET/UPF Nepal seminar to meet the Vice Chancellor of Lund University, Prof. Göran Bexell (photo from the accasion).
Earlier the same daty, Prof. David Ludden also held a lecture on the concept of Asian area studies, for Master’s students at Lund University. In an illuminating talk, he briefly explained the US national agenda behind the set up and funding of Area Studies departments in US universities. The relevance of area studies (which had a prominent role during the Cold War years) was questioned in the 1990s by advocates of Globalisation as a new way to understand and articulate knowledge about the world; the need for experts on a particular area (or country) seemed outdated in the face of the new globalising world, where borders wouldn’t matter anymore and local differences would eventually be absorbed in the greater global frame. The tragic shock of 9/11, however, brought area studies back to the limelight; US realised it needed a corpus of highly professional experts on areas considered at risk for national security. SASNET’s Maria Tonini attended the lecture, read her report. new

Rana P B Singh• 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.
Rana P.B. Singh is a Professor of Cultural Geography at Banaras Hindu University, BHU. He has been involved in studying, performing and promoting the heritage planning, eco-tourism and rural studies and development in the Varanasi region for more than two decades, as consultant, project director, collaborator and organiser. In research, he combines the trilogy of historical process, cultural tradition and environmental ethics to understand the people and landscape in India. His publications include more than 30 volumes, and 150 research papers. He has also a long and strong connection to Sweden, regularly coming here since 1988 mostly being a visiting professor at Karlstad University, but he has also given lectures at the universities of Lund, Göteborg, Uppsala, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Aarhus, Łbo, Vasa, Oslo and Bergen. As president of the Indo-Nordic Cultural Association in Varanasi Prof. Singh has been involved in organising various India Study programmes for both Karlstad University and also Copenhagen University, and been a keen SASNET promoter in India. In 2004 he participated in the 18th ECMSAS conference, organised by SASNET in Lund. He convened Panel No 46 on ”Spirit and Power of Sacred Places, and Preservation of Cultural Heritage”. This year Prof. Singh was invited as a visiting faculty for a month to the Dept. of Religious Studies and Theology at Göteborg University. Read a summary of the SASNET lecture. During his stay in Lund, Prof. Singh also visited SASNET’s root node office at Ideon Research Park and had discussions with the acting director Sidsel Hansson and deputy director Lars Eklund. Besides, he was given an opportunity to meet Erik Svanström, the librarian that is currently working for SASNET with digitalization of the Karl Reinhold Haellquist memorial collection (more information). This unique collection consists of more than 6000 South Asia related books, journals, videotapes and pamphlets on various aspects of South Asian studies that was donated to SASNET and the Asia Library in 2004. Since an important part of donation focuses on Mahatma Gandhi and his work, Mr. Svanström has created a special web site with this material, a web site that will soon be published by SASNET. Prof. Singh showed great enthusiasm for the project and contributed with several ideas on links. (Photo of Rana P B Singh with Erik Svanström).

LTH seminar
Participants to the LTH seminar on Indo-Swedish research and educational collaboration, from left to right Sidsel Hansson and Lars Eklund, SASNET, Per Warfvinge, LTH, Ramon Wyss, KTH, and Tomas Aronsson, Vinnova.

• 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).
Lars Eklund then presented SASNET and its role as a national resource base for increased collaboration between researchers and institutions in Sweden and India (and the rest of South Asia). Finally Prof. Per Warfvinge, Vice-Dean for International Relations at the Faculty of Engineering presented the European Commission funded Erasmus Mundus External Cooperation Window (EMECW) programmes and especially the new India lot being coordinated by Lund University. This programme will enable a mobility flow of 400 fully funded students, researchers and academic staff per year between European and Indian universities. Prof. Warfvinge talked about the great possibilities of the EMECW programme, and the urgency of a quick process to recruit students and researchers. SASNET’s acting Director Dr. Sidsel Hansson will become the coordinator for this EU-India programme (more information).

• 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).

Durre S Ahmed• 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.

Widman Bengt K
Allan Widman and Bengt Kristiansson.

• 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.

Radhika Desai• 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.
Prof. Desai is the author of ”Slouching Towards Ayodhya: From Congress to Hindutva in Indian Politics” (2004) and ”Intellectuals and Socialism: Social Democrats‚ and the Labour Party” (1994), a New Statesman and Society Book of the Month, and editor of Developmental and Cultural Nationalisms a special issue of Third World Quarterly (2008). She is also the author of of numerous articles in Economic and Political Weekly, New Left Review, Third World Quarterly and other journals and in edited collections on parties, political economy, culture and nationalism. She is currently working on two books ”When Was Globalization? Origin and End of a US Strategy”, and ”The Making of the Indian Capitalist Class”. The main reason for her coming to Sweden was to participate in the 2008 European Social Forum, held in Malmö 17-21 September. Venue for the Lund lecture: Main conference room, Dept. of Political Science, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. More information.

Parul in LundParul 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.

Full programme for SASNET seminars and lectures during the Fall 2008 (as a pdf-file)

Baul Shilpi Östertull
Bauls in Lund
Baul Shilpi
Top: Members of the baul troupe invited to tour Sweden by Dr. Christina Nygren (standing in the middle) during their visit to Lund.
To the left: Baul Shilpi workshop with the choir Svart på Vitt in Lund, Monday 25 August 2008.

• 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.
More information about Baul Shilpi (in Swedish only).

Venkatesh• 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.

SIBC• 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.

Anirudh Krishna• 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)

Hans Blomkvist Katrin Uba
Hans Blomkvist and Katrin Uba.

• 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.

Samantha• 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.

KILLING TIME• 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.

Sunandan• 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.

SASNET seminar• 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.
The Ambassador of Pakistan to Sweden, H.E. Mr. Shaheen A. Gillani was the key speaker to talk about the theme for the evening, questioning the use of the concept ”terrorism” only by individuals and groups but excluding the prevalent cases of state terrorism.

SASNET seminar Iram Asif
Three of the speakers at the well-attended seminar on Global Terrorism: Shaheen A Gillani, Bo Huldt and Iram Asif.

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.
A newspaper report about the seminar appeared in the 12 October issue of the weekly web magazine Veckobladet. Read the article, written by Bertil Egerö.

Priyankar Upadhyaya• 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.

Gefont film• 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.
On Monday 26 March 2007, Ravinder Kaur, Post-doctoral Fellow at Roskilde University, Denmark, gave a lecture about ”Islam between East and West – the political situation in Pakistan and Afghanistan”. Venue: Department of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5, Lund. On Tuesday 3 April 2007, Dr. Camilla Orjuela, Researcher at the Dept. of Peace and Development Studies, School of Global Studies, Göteborg University, lectured about ”Ethnicity and Violent Conflict in Sri Lanka”. Venue: Java Hall, Scheelevägen 15 A, Lund. On Tuesday 17 April, Neil Webster, Senior researcher at Development Studies, Danish Institute of International Studies (DIIS), Copenhagen, lectured about ”Nepal: Kingdom versus Maoism”. Venue: Java Hall, Scheelevägen 15 A, Lund.

Seminar group• 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.

Eva Arnvig• 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.
Allahs børnIn 2002 she received the Media Communications Association (MCA) Gold Award for the documentary ”Children of Allah”, about everyday life in the Haqqania madrassah in Pakistan (photo from the film to the left).
Arnvig seminarIn her speech Eva Arnvig presented a grim picture of the situation in the country today. According to her view, the military occupation by Nato forces has now turned the clock back to the situation in 1994, with bad governance, murder and kidnappings. The Taliban rule years were actually the most peaceful in recent times, and it is therefore no surprise that the support for the Taliban is widespread even today. A solution to the crisis in Afghanistan can, Arnvig pointed out, never be won by weapons, but negotiations are absolutely necessary. Negotiations that have to include the Taliban. After the lecture, a discussion followed with Anders Davidson from SCA Lund (photo of Eva and Andersabove), and several people in the audience. Some of them with own first hand experiences from the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, and also a large number of Masters students at Lund University, were given an opportunity to raise questions to Eva Arnvig.

K C Suri• 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).

Ingrid EckermanBhopal book• 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.

Word and ViolinSri 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)

Sucha Singh Gill• 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 seminar 18 April 2006
Seminar in Lund Tuesday 18 April 2006. From left to right: Dr. Chandrabose, Alia Ahmad and Sirimevan S. Colombage.

• 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.

UPF
Staffan Lindberg, Gunilla Blomqvist and Petter Larsson at the seminar 29 March 2006.

• 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.
The seminar was jointly organised by SASNET and the Association of Foreign Affairs in Lund, and the venue was Nya Festsalen in the Academic Society Building (AF), Lund.
Gunilla Blomqvist used findings from her 2004 doctoral dissertation on ”Gender Discourses at Work: Export Industry Workers and Construction Workers in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India”. In the Lund seminar she focused on gender segregation and the situation of women within the garment export industry in Cehnnai. Her main thesis was that the discrimination and seclusion of women was reproduced when they entered the labour market as mostly unskilled or semi-skilled workers. However, coming out of the home, the work place and collectivity also offered a new opportunites for changing genedr roles and emancipation.
Based on results from his ongoing research project in rural Tamil Nadu, Staffan Lindberg then talked about the emancipation of women during the past 25 years. The main factors in changing gender relations are increased work outside agriculture, the development of Self Help Groups, and increasing participation in local politics.
Petter Larsson, finally, discussed issues of g lobalisation and similarities/differences between the Asian development of today and the European industrialisation 100–150 years ago. An important difference, he pointed out, was the increasing informalisation of labour and the lack of labour laws covering small workshops and home based wage labour. In the discussion it was pointed out that this made it much more different to organise trade unions and protect labour rights.
The seminar was well attended by Lund university students, many of them from the Masters programme in Asian studies. More information on the seminar (as a pdf-file).

• 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 Patel is a well-known scholar doing research on gender, population and sustainable development in India, including the issues of female foeticide and missing girls. For a period of six months she is holding the India Studies Chair at the South Asia Institute/Dept. of Anthropology at Heidelberg University, Germany. More information (as a pdf-file)

• 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 journalist Stig Larsén wrote an article on the seminar in Sydsvenskan, 12 april 2005. Read the article, called ”Tsunamihjälp får skarp kritik (as a pdf-file). Sören Sommelius, journalist and a participant in the seminar himself, also wrote an article, in Helsingborgs Dagblad 13 April 2005. Read the article, called ”Hur länge varar vårt intresse för offren?

Professor Abul Barkat (to the left) held two lectures, organised by SASNET, in Lund. Here with Bashir Ahmed, Bangladeshi student at Lund University’s Masters programme in South Asian studies, and Jeanette Schlaucher, former student of Human Ecology at Lund University.

• 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)
Abul Barkat also gave another lecture at the Green Library in Lund later on the same day, Tuesday 15 March 2005. In a lecture focusing on ”The Right to Development & Human Decelopment”, jointly organised by SASNET and the Swallows India-Bangladesh section in Lund, Barkat discussed the development assistance Bangladesh has received over the years – 40 Billion US dollars since 1971. ”Has this helped Bangladesh”, Barkat asks, and gives the answer himself: ”No, 75 p.c. of the money has been embezzled!”.

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.
He lectured on ”Informalisation of work in India”. Professor Breman has a long and distinguished career as field researcher on working life in western India and Java, Indonesia. Most recently he has studied the closure and firing of workers in the textile industries in Ahmedabad in the 1990s. With these studies he is one of the main contributors to the development of a new theory and understanding of the informal sector in Third World capitalist economies.

• 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”.

Staffan Lindberg, SASNET; M Hassan, Lecturer, F G Degree College, Skardu, Pakistan; Pakistan ambassador
Mr Shahid A Kamal; and Lars Eklund, SASNET.
                                             Photo: Britta Collberg

• 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.
In the evening Mr Shahid A Kamal held a public lecture on ”The conflict in Afghanistan, and the Pakistan–India relations”, an arrangement in collaboration with the Lund Association of Foreign Affairs.
More information about the ambassador’s visit.

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.

Sudhir Kakar• 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.
The final discussion round at the last day of SASNET’s workshop on global networking in August, 2001, a discussion which summed up the whole workshop, is transcribed and available on the SASNET gateway. Go straight to it.

• 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”.

Back to SASNET

Search the SASNET Web Index


SASNET – Swedish South Asian Studies Network/Lund University
Address: Scheelevägen 15 D, SE-223 70 Lund, Sweden
Phone: +46 46 222 73 40
Webmaster: Lars Eklund
Last updated 2011-09-01

 

Call for SASNET International Conference on the Structural Transformation of South Asia

South Asia in Transformation: World of Slums,
Global Power Houses or Utopias?
 
Migration, labour, and family changes in a dynamic region

20-22 May 2015, in Lund, Sweden

The Swedish South Asian Studies Network (SASNET) at Lund University invited researchers with a focus on South Asia to a three-day conference in Lund, May 2015. The conference aimed to explore the impact of the on-going structural transformation in South Asia.
The conference was inaugurated by 
Jonas Hafström, Chair of the Board of Lund University. See the poster.

South Asia is currently undergoing a structural transformation in which large sections of the population are gradually moving from the agricultural sector into other sectors of the economy and/or geographical areas, mainly urban areas. These processes include urbanization, the growth of a new middle class, and increasing national and transnational migration.

The purpose of the conference was to explore the social consequences of the transformation of South Asian societies (and by implication, the world). Structural transformations produce new opportunities and risks as job possibilities and wealth are created and redistributed unevenly. This may lead to the marginalization of some groups as well as social conflicts. The aim of this conference was also to map the social impact of South Asia’s structural transformation so far, with specific reference to changes in labour migration patterns and in the composition of the care economy of families and households. Each of these aspects is often studied in isolation despite the fact that they are deeply interrelated.

Further, the conference explored interrelated social and economic aspects of sustainability simultaneously and targeted a process whose outcomes will be felt across the world, given the sheer population size of South Asia. For global sustainability purposes, it is crucial to map the current state of affairs and explore different development possibilities and scenarios for this region. Papers that compare South Asia with other regions were encouraged.

The conference was generously funded by the Crafoord Foundation, Forte and the Swedish Research Council

Panels:

1.     Urbanization and Social Sustainability. Full information about Panel no. 1
        Panel Chair: Vandana Desai, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK

2.     Changes in Family and Households.  Full information about Panel no. 2
        Panel Chair: Linda Lane, University of Gothenburg

3.     Migration, Environment and Social Sustainability.  Full information about Panel no. 3
        Panel Chair: Chona R. Echavez, Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit (AREU), Kabul
        and Debojyoti Das, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK

4.     Gender and Governance in South Asia.  Full information about Panel no. 4
        Panel Chair: Malin Jordal, Uppsala University
        and J. Devika, Centre for Development Studies (CDS), Thiruvananthapuram, India

5.     Ethnicity, Religion and Changing Caste Relations.  Full information about Panel no. 5
        Panel Chair: Ravinder Kaur, University of Copenhagen
        and Winnie Bothe, Department of Political Science, Lund University, Sweden

6.     Changing Labour Markets.  Full information about Panel no. 6
        Panel Chair: Mashiur Rahman, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh.

7.     Structural Transformation and Social Conflicts.  Full information about Panel no. 7
        Panel Chairs: Kenneth Bo Nielsen, University of Oslo;
        and Patrik Oscarsson, University of Gothenburg

Conference schedule:

DAY 1: Wednesday 20th May 

9.00 – 10:00   Registration and Fika (tea and coffee)
   at Nya Festsalen in the Academic Society Building (AF), Sandgatan 2
10.15 – 10:45   Welcome note, in Lilla Salen, AF

  Lars Eklund, Acting Director, SASNET

  Jonas Hafström, Chair of the Board of Lund University

10.45 – 11:30   Keynote Lecture by Prof. Gita Sen.
  ”Social inequality as a barrier to growth and poverty reduction:
    South Asian dilemmas”
     Lilla Salen, AF. Open to the public
12:00 – 13:15   Lunch at Nya Festsalen, AF
13.30 – 15.30   Panel slot 1
  Seven parallell sessons, see above
  Department of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5 G
15.30 – 16.00   Tea and coffee break at Nya Festsalen, AF
16.00 – 17.00   Keynote Lecture by Prof. Rajni Palriwala:
  ”Trajectories of desire: Reflections on marriage,
      social change and the state in India”
       Lilla Salen, AF. Open to the public
17.15 – 18.15   Guided tour of Lund city (optional)
       Those wishing to participate should gather at the main 
           entrance to the Lund Cathedral (western side).
19.00 –   Dinner at Nya Festsalen, AF

DAY 2: Thursday 21st May

8:30 – 9:00   Fika (Tea and coffee)
   at Nya Festsalen in the Academic Society Building (AF), Sandgatan 2
9.00 – 10.00   Keynote Lecture by Prof. Abram de Swaan:
     ”Are poor people enough of a nuisance?
      Changing elite perceptions of the poor on the national and the global scale”
         Lilla Salen, AF. Open to the public
10.15 – 12.15   Panel slot 2
  Seven parallell sessons, see above
   Department of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5 G
12.30 – 13.30   Lunch at Nya Festsalen, AF
13.45 – 15.30   Panel slot 3
  Seven parallell sessons, see above
  Department of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5 G
15.30 – 16.00   Tea and Coffee Break
  Department of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5 G
16:00 – 17.15   Panel slot 4
   Seven parallell sessons, see above
  Department of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5 G
17.15 – 19.00   Break
19.00–   Dinner with entertainment at Nya Festsalen, AF

DAY 3: Friday 22nd May

09:00 – 10:00 Panel slot 5 (Optional)

  Seven parallell sessons, see above
  Department of Sociology, Paradisgatan 5 G

10.15 – 11.15   Keynote Lecture by Prof. Ruth Kattumuri: 
        ”Two dollars-a-day Population and Love’s Labour’s Gained”
        Lilla Salen in the Academic Society Building (AF), Sandgatan 2
             Open to the public
11.15 – 12.00   Round table discussion in Lilla Salen, AF
  with professors Gita Sen; Abram de Swaan; Rajni Pajriwala; and Ruth Kattumuri.    
       Discussant: Prof. Staffan Lindberg, Lund University
12.00 – 12.15   Summary and closing remarks from organizers
       Lilla Salen, AF
12.30 – 13.30   Lunch in Nya Festsalen, AF

Venue information: 

– All the panel sessions were held at the Lund University Sociology Building (Paradisgatan 5G, Lund)

– Welcome note, keynote speeches lunch, dinner, concluding ceremony and most of the fika breaks were held at AF Borgen, (Sandgatan 2, Lund). 

Keynote speakers:

Gita Sen, Ruth Kattumuri, Abram de Swaan. and Rajni Palriwala

– Gita Sen (Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore, India and Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard University)
– Ruth Kattumuri  (London School of Economics, London, England)
– Abram de Swaan (University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
– Rajni Palriwala (University of Delhi, India)

Conference venues:

The registration, keynote speeches, coffe/tea breaks, and all meals (lunch and dinner) will be held at the Academic Union Building – Akademiska Föreningen (AF), Sandgatan 2 in central Lund close to the Cathedral and the main University building.

The panels will be held in seminar rooms in Lund University’s Department of Sociology building at Paradisgatan 5 G, five minutes walk from the AF building. 

SASNET student volunteers assisted the conference participants to find the way between the two venues and to the correct seminar rooms.

Conference fee
(including lunch and dinner):

      100 Euros for participants travelling within Europe (SEK 935 for Swedish participants)
        50 Euros for students, and for participants travelling from South Asia 

       The conference fee should be paid before May 5th, 2015.
        Payments could be made either by

       • Credit card payment via Lund University online banking, go for the web page form,
                                              and there choose to pay for the SASNET conference.
       or
       • Bank transfer paymentSee the Lund University banking information.
          NOTE you need to write that the payment is for ”SASNET, cost account 859581”.

       Please note that participants will be responsible for covering their own travel and accommodation expense,
        unless provided a SASNET travel grant ( the selection is over). Information on accommodation in Lund.

Transport to and from Lund:

Copenhagen Airport (Kastrup) serves Lund. From Copenhagen Airport you can take a direct regional train (Öresundstrafiken) to Lund Central Station. Please note you have to buy the ticket by credit card in the ticket automats at the airport. It is not possible to buy tickets on board the train.
Trains depart every 20 minutes, 24 hours a day, and takes about 45 minutes. A single ticket from Kastrup Airport costs 135 SEK.

– There is also a overnight train service (Berlin Night Express) connecting Malmö to Berlin three days a week during May 2015. More information.

Inspirational reading:

The UNRISD Flagship Report: Combating Poverty and Inequality. Here you can find the full report: http://www.unrisd.org/publications/cpi

Conference conveners:

    Lars Eklund, +46 731 508844, lars.eklund@sasnet.lu.se

    Olle FrödinLubna Hawwa Jacco Visserconference@sasnet.lu.se

Report from SASNET 2015 Conference on the Structural Transformation of South Asia

        See Call for SASNET International Conference on the Structural Transformation of South Asia.   See the conference poster.

More than 70 researchers from Europe and South Asia turned up for theconference that consisted of seven panels, each one led by eminent researchers. The theme of the panels varied from ”Urbanization and Social Sustainability”, to ”Ethnicity, Religion and Changing Caste Relations”, ”Changes in Family and Household”, ”Migration, Environment and Social Sustainability”, ”Governance in South Asia”; ”Changing Labour Markets”and ”Structural Transformation and Social Conflicts”. 
The conference had managed to attract four eminent keynote speakers, namely Prof. Abram de Swaan from University of Amsterdam; Prof. Rajni Palriwala from University of Delhi (the two of them on the photo to the right);  Prof. Gita Sen from Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore; and Prof. Ruth Kattumuri from London School of Economics.

Travel grants to South Asian scholars

The networking was intense with a large continent of young, promising researchers from South Asia – India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Afghanistan – presenting their papers along with Scandinavian colleagues. SASNET had given travel grants to no less than 30 young South Asian researchers.
The conference aimed to explore the impact of the on-going structural transformation in South Asia, in which large sections of the population are gradually moving from the agricultural sector into other sectors of the economy and/or geographical areas, mainly urban areas. These processes include urbanization, the growth of a new middle class, and increasing national and transnational migration. 
The purpose of the conference was to explore the social consequences of the transformation of South Asian societies (and by implication, the world). Structural transformations produce new opportunities and risks as job possibilities and wealth are created and redistributed unevenly. This may lead to the marginalization of some groups as well as social conflicts.

Comparative studies encouraged

Lars Eklund
Jonas Hafström

The aim of this conference was also to map the social impact of South Asia’s structural transformation so far, with specific reference to changes in labour migration patterns and in the composition of the care economy of families and households.
Each of these aspects is often studied in isolation despite the fact that they are deeply interrelated. Furthermore, the conference explored interrelated social and economic aspects of sustainability simultaneously and targeted a process whose outcomes will be felt across the world, given the sheer population size of South Asia. For global sustainability purposes, it is crucial to map the current state of affairs and explore different development possibilities and scenarios for this region. Papers that compared South Asia with other regions were encouraged.
The conference was introduced by SASNET acting director Lars Eklund, after which Jonas Hafström, the newly appointed Chair of the Board of Lund University, held an inspired inaugural speech. See a recording of the opening cermony of the 2015 SASNET Conference.
Professor Gita Sen – photo to the right – from the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore, India (and Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard University) was the first keynote speaker, giving an appreciated presentation, entitled ”Social inequality as a barrier to growth and poverty reduction: South Asian dilemmas”.
See Gita Sen’s lecture youtube version, recorded by Talat Bhat.

Conference panels:

The keynotes took place at the Academic Union Building (AF) whereas the panel sesssions all took place at the Dept.of Sociology, 10 minutes walk away. Seven parallell sessions were held divided into five slots in three days. Most papers are available to download, go to the respective panel page.

1.     Urbanization and Social Sustainability. Full information about Panel no. 1
        Panel Chair: Vandana Desai, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK

2.     Changes in Family and Households.  Full information about Panel no. 2
        Panel Chair: Linda Lane, University of Gothenburg

3.     Migration, Environment and Social Sustainability.  Full information about Panel no. 3
        Panel Chair: Chona R. Echavez, Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit (AREU), Kabul
        and Debojyoti Das, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK

Panel 4 on Gender and Governance in South Asia, led by J Devika and Malin Jordal.

4.     Gender and Governance in South Asia.  Full information about Panel no. 4
        Panel Chair: Malin Jordal, Uppsala University
        and J. Devika, Centre for Development Studies (CDS), Thiruvananthapuram, India

5.     Ethnicity, Religion and Changing Caste Relations.  Full information about Panel no. 5
        Panel Chair: Ravinder Kaur, University of Copenhagen
        and Winnie Bothe, Department of Political Science, Lund University, Sweden

6.     Changing Labour Markets.  Full information about Panel no. 6
        Panel Chair: Mashiur Rahman, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh.

7.     Structural Transformation and Social Conflicts.  Full information about Panel no. 7
        Panel Chairs: Kenneth Bo Nielsen, University of Oslo;
        and Patrik Oscarsson, University of Gothenburg

More keynote addresses

On Day 1, Wednesday 20th May, a second keynote lecture was held in late afternoon. This time it was Professor Rajni Palriwala from University of Delhi who spoke about ”Trajectories of Desire: Reflections on Marriage, Social Change and the State in India”. Being a public lecture it also attracted many people from outside the conference. 
See the lecture youtube version, recorded by Talat Bhat.

Then followed an optional guided tour of Lund city with Lars Lundberg, renowned for his entertaining but still true to facts way of presenting history. In the nice sunny weather, Lars brought the 40-odd people who turned up outside the Cathedral, for a walk in historical quarters centred around the Lundagård park. Ending bythe University main building, the White House, Lars Eklund made a complimentary visit to the Concocation Hall inside the university building possible. Carin Brenner, Chief of Protocol Officer at Lund University, happened to pass by and being an old aquaintance of Lars, she was kind enough to open up the auditorium, with its wonderful interior, popular to photograph for the South Asian visitors.

Thursday morning started with yet another keynote presentation, this time by legendary Professor Abram de Swaan from University of Amsterdam. He spoke about ”Are Poor People Enough of a Nuisance? Changing Elite Perceptions of the Poor on the National and the Global Scale”, and met a receptive audience in a crowded hall.
See the lecture youtube version, recorded by Talat Bhat.

Staffan Lindberg moderating the final roundtable, with Ruth Kattumuri and Abram de Swaan.

The rest of Thursday was then devoted to panels, and most of them were actually finished by evening, well in time for the gala dinner at Tegnérs Restaurant.
After the buffet meal, a Swedish folk dance troupe, Studenternas Folkdanslag, performed with a half an hour dance programme, rounded up by leading the conference participants into a long dance, very much appreciated,

The programme for the final day, Friday 22nd May, also started with a keynote presentation, by Professor. Ruth Kattumuri from London School of Economics. She spoke about ”Two dollars-a-day Population and Love’s Labour’s Gained”, a presentation filled with statistical information about India.
See the lecture youtube version, recorded by Talat Bhat.

After her presentation the stage was opened for all the four keynote presenters, for an interesting round table discussion, moderated by former SASNET director, Professor Staffan Lindberg, Lund University. Besides their conversation, Staffan also invited representatives of the seven panels that had been held, for them to summarize the results of each panel.

Finally, the conferece convener Lars Eklund thanked the keynote speakers, the panel chair persons, the steering committee planning for this conferece for more than a year – Anna Lindberg, Olle Frödin, Andreas Johansson, Lubna Hawwa and Jacco Visser – and the five student assistants (Rubana Musharrat, Maria Jäppinen, Sixten Lundqvist, Liz Kiziukiewicz and Phu Doma Lama) that made the smooth functioning of the conference possible. They were all given gifts to remember Lund University and the successful conference being held.

Panel 5 on Ethnicity, Religion and Changing Caste Relations, led by Ravinder Kaur and Winnie Bothe.
Malin Jordal, Prarthana Saikia, and Nabanita Mishra

 
Debojyoti Das, Jörgen Dige Pedersen, and Arup Pramanik
Keshav Bashyal and Aftab Alam
Alin Kadfak and Sheba Saeed.
Meah Mostafiz, Kenneth Nielsen, Karina Standal, and Mashiur Rahman.
Jenny Grönwall and Anna Jonsson from Linköping University.

 
 
Chona Echavez and Sheba Saeed.
Rajni Palriwala and Abram de Swaan.
Maytreyi Choudhury, North Bengal University, Siliguri, at Paradisgatan near to the conference venues.
Chairs of the seven panels being felicitated after the conference by Lars Eklund. Devika, Vandana Desai, Chona Echavez, Linda Lane, Winnie Bothe, Mashiur Rahman and Debojyoti Das. Kenneth Nielsen, Patrik Oskarsson, Malin Jordal and Ravinder Kaur had already left.
Rajni Palriwala and Abram de Swaan.
Appreciated guided tour around central parts of Lund, led by Lars Lundberg.
Thanks to Maria Jäppinen and the other student assistants.
Lubna Hawwa from the conference steering committee.

Conference dinner, Lars and Bubu Eklund;
Gita Sen, J. Devika and others.

Staff and members of SASNET’s Board for the period 2013 – 2016

The SASNET Board for the period from 7th February 2013 up till 31 December 2016:

The members of the board, except the representatives for students, were appointed for the period 2013–2015 by Eva Wiberg, Pro Vice Chancellor, Lund University, in a decision made on Thursday 7th February 2013. By that time, SASNET had been running without a board for 2,5 years.
On 18th December 2014 a change was made, decision taken by Vice Chancellor er Eriksson: Prof. Stefan Jonsson, Uppsala University, was replaced as board member by Dr. Kristina Myrvold, Linnaeus University.
In September 2015, Lund University decided to prolong the mandate for board up to December 2016. All board members except one, Fredrik Tufvesson, agreed to this proposition. A new member will be appointed later during 2015.

Chairperson:

  • Dr. Anna Lindberg, SASNET Director

Other members:

  • Professor Helle Rydström,
    Department of Gender Studies
, Lund University.
     Representative for the Faculty of Social Sciences, LU

  • Professor Olle Qvarnström, Department of History and
     Anthropology of Religion
, Lund University
     Representative for the Faculty of Humanities and Theology, LU

  • Professor Måns Svensson, Centre for Work, Technology and Society, Lund University

  • Associate Professor Kristina Myrvold, History of Religion,
     Linnaeus University, Växjö

  • Dr. Anders Fänge, former Site Manager,
     Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA)

  + Maximum three students representatives, appointed by
     Lund University Social Science Students Union association,
     for a period of on academic year at a time.
    Student representatives appointed for the
    period up to 30 June 2016:

  • Ms. Rubana Musharrat, 2nd year MSc student at  
    Lund University Masters Programme in Asian Studies
    at the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies (ACE)

  • Mr. Lukas Fietz, 1st year MSc student at Lund University
     Master’s Programmme in Disaster Risk Management and Climate Change Adaption
     at the Dept. of Risk Management and Societal Resilience (LUCRAM)

  • Ms. Nashfa Hawwa, 2nd year MSc student at Lund University
    Master’s programme at International Institute of Industrial Environmental Economics (IIIEE)

Board member from 2013-2015:

•  Professor  Fredrik Tufvesson, Department of Electrical and
     Information Technology
, Lund University
              left the board in December 2015

See also documents on former SASNET boards:

SASNET Staff 2016:

 
Anna Lindberg
– Director
Mobile: +46 (0)70 301 7727
• Lars Eklund
– Deputy Director/Research Communication Officer
Curriculum Vitae.
Mobile: +46 (0)731 50 88 44
• Andreas Johansson
– Research Coordinator
Phone: +46 (0)470 70 89 27
• Andreas Mattsson
– Project Coordinator
Phone: +46 (0)73 628 65 50
Elina Vidarsson
– Assistant Communications
   Officer
Phone: +46 722 520 723     from 3 March 2016          

 

Newsletter 128 – 28 October 2011

Contents:

Maglehem

SASNET News

• SASNET hosted meeting on joint Swedish masters programme in South Asian studies

On Tuesday 18 October 2011, SASNET hosted a meeting at Lund University between representatives of South Asia oriented research within Humanities and Social Sciences at the universities of Stockholm, Uppsala, Gothenburg and Lund. The constructive meeting aimed to discuss increased collaboration on South Asian studies between these four major Swedish universities, and possibilities for launching a joint Swedish Masters programme in South Asian studies.

At Uppsala University a Forum for South Asian Studies was formed recently (more information), and at Stockholm University a Forum for Asian Studies was formed in 2010 (more information). At University of Gothenburg the researchers are involved in the Go:India project launched in May 2011 (more information); and at Lund University SASNET is the driving force in connecting researchers working on South Asia related projects in all disciplines. 

On the photo from left to right: Lars Eklund, SASNET/Lund University; Henrik Berglund, Stockholm University; Åke Sander, University of Gothenburg; Julia Velkova, SASNET/Lund University; Kristina Myrvold, Lund University; Anna Lindberg, SASNET/Lund University; Gunnel Cederlöf, Uppsala University; Pernille Gooch, Lund University; Jan Magnusson, Lund University; and Sigridur Beck, University of Gothenburg.

• SASNET co-organised Fifth European PhD workshop in South Asia Studies in Paris

The Fifth European PhD workshop in South Asia Studies was held in Paris at the Centre d’Etudes de l’Inde et de l’Asie du Sud (CEIAS) from 22 to 24 September 2011. Previous PhD workshops have been jointly organised by Heidelberg University, Germany; Ghent University, Belgium; University of Edinburgh; UK: and Le Centre d’Études de l’Inde et de l’Asie du Sud (CEIAS), Paris, France, but from 2011, SASNET is also being a co-organiser. 
Read a report from the Paris workshop.

• SASNET/Swallows seminar on Violence, Caste Discrimination and Resistance

A seminar on ”Violence, Caste Discrimination and Resistance –  The situation of Dalits in India” will be held at Lund University on Thursday 3 November 2011, 13.15–16.00. It is jointly organised by SASNET, Lund University and the Swallows India Bangladesh, an organisation based in Lund.  
Dr. Aase Mygind Madsen will give a presentation on ”Dalits in the caste system”, focusing on the social and economic discrimination they face in India, and the prospects of change. 

Aase works as Associate Professor at the Department of Social Work, VIA University College in Aarhus, Denmark. Her main field of research interest is on processes of social exclusion and integration. In 1996, she defended her doctoral dissertation entitled ”Untouchables: Stuck at the Bottom or Moving Upward? A Study of Changing Conditions for the Scheduled Castes in five Villages in Karnataka, South India”.
Over a period of 30 years she has been engaged in activities related to social problems in the 3rd world as well as taken part in Danish, Nordic and European Development Researchers’ network. She has also worked on gender issues in Denmark and the Third World. 

Kathir and Thilagam from the Indian non-governmental organisation Evidence will talk about their work to support victims of caste based violence and discrimination and how they advocate for change. Evidence is a Madurai based organisation working in the state of Tamil Nadu, and involved in collaboration with the Swallows India Bangladesh. Its aim is to create a society that ensures equality and justice to all. Activities include undertaking fact finding missions  following incidents of atrocities against Dalits and Tribals in order to establish the facts of an incident and compile the necessary documentary evidence enabling the victims/survivors to access formal justice through the law. More information.

Venue for the seminar: Edebalksalen, School of Social Work (Socialhögskolan), Bredgatan 26, Lund. See SASNET’s poster for the seminar.

• Afghanistan Evening at Doc Lounge Lund on 8th November

In 1989, Swedish journalist, Khazar Fatemi fled the war torn country of Afghanistan with her life. Twenty years later, the former refugee returned to the place that has always remained in her heart. She has now produced the documentary ”Where My Heart Beats”.

This film follows Khazar’s dangerous, painful, and inspirational journey back home to reconnect with the amazing people of this broken nation. Behind the shadow of war and devastation, Khazar shows us a window into Afghanistan life that most people never see in the media… A window into the lives of a nation with unimaginable struggles, and an unwavering will to survive.

On Tuesday 8 November 2011, at 19.00, a Doc Lounge event focusing on Afghanistan will be held at Mejeriet, Stora Södergatan 64 in Lund. It is co-organised by SASNET. To this event, ”Where My Heart Beats” will be screened, and the director Khazar Fatemi (photo) will participate in a discussion with Anders Fänge, representing the local section of the Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA). Fänge was for 20 years SCA’s head of office in Kabul until he retired last year and settled in Skåne.

The poet and singer/songwriter Thomas Wiehe will also perform during the evening. Entrance fee for the programme is SEK 60. 
More information about the Afghanistan Evening at Doc Lounge.
See SASNET’s poster for the Doc Lounge event.

• SASNET Brown Bag seminar on Indian Food System Transformation with Olle Frödin on November 10th

OlleOn Thursday 10 November 2011, at 12.00, SASNET holds its third Brown bag lunch seminar during the fall semester 2011. Dr. Olle Frödin from the Department of Sociology will talk about ”Modernization, Neoliberal Globalization or Variegated Development: the Indian Food System Transformation in Comparative Perspective”. The lecture reviews three theoretical approaches to agro-food system change, placed at different levels on the ladder of generality. It then considers these approaches in relation to Indiaâs changing agro-food system. Finally, it examines the general and the particularistic features of the Indian case, and discusses their implications for theories relating to global governance and international political economy.
See the seminar poster.

The aim of SASNET’s Brown Bag seminars, introduced in January 2011, is to present and disseminate the eminent South Asia related research that is carried out in so many departments at Lund University. 
The seminars are open to the public, and during the fall 2011 they are held once a month at Thursdays at Murbeckssalen, Gula Villan (inside the Botanical Gardens), Östra Vallgatan 14, Lund.

More information about the seminar series.

• SASNET seminar on Pakistani History, Politics and Society

Dr Henrik Chetan Aspengren holds a seminar at Lund University on ”Pakistan – History, Politics, Society” on Thursday 17 November 2011, 13.15 – 15.00. The seminar is jointly organised by SASNET, the Lund University Master in International Development and Management programme (LUMID) and ABF Lund. Venue: Geocentrum, Flygeln, Sölvegatan 10, Lund. 
See the seminar poster.

Pakistan is a country of paradoxes. It is a country rich in culture and human and natural resources, where poverty and illiteracy is rising. Democracy is shallow and easily manipulated, military power is entrenched and religious and political violence is commonplace. Pakistan was born out of an idea of safeguarding Muslim interests in a decolonised South Asia, but many of its citizens now feel let down. Yet all around the country there are social movements and committed individuals working for positive change. Dr Aspengren, author of the book “Pakistan – Upprorens land” (Norstedts, 2011), will in this lecture put developments in Pakistan in their broader social, political and historical context.
In his book, Aspengren mixes writings on South Asian history with travel writing. Through detailed descriptions on life in, for example, a Sufi-shrine in Sindh, or a village of land less peasants in Malakand close to the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, Aspengren discusses a wide range of topics: the Pakistani military’s role in politics; struggles for women’s rights, democracy, or land rights; religious tolerance and extremism. As such, the book provides social and historic context to events reported in the news. More information on the book.

In January 2010, Henrik Chetan Aspengren was awarded a PhD from the Dept. of Politics and International Studies, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, UK for a thesis entitled ”Social Imperialism – And how it was applied in the Bombay Presidency, 1895–1925. Since then he has been living in Geneva , Switzerland, but has now returned to Sweden, where he is to some extent connected to the Dept. of History, Uppsala University. 
More information about his research.

• SASNET/Lund University visit to Ambassador of Nepal

On Thursday 20 October 2011, Anna Lindberg and Lars Eklund from SASNET were invited to visit the Ambassador of Nepal to Sweden and Denmark, Mr. Vijaykant L. Karna, in his Hellerup residence. The Ambassador has a close relation to SASNET, having participated in a number of important seminars at Lund University in recent years.

Ms. Elisabeth Axell from Lund University’s division of International Relations was also invited to the Ambassador, since she is the coordinator of an Erasmus Mundus Asia regional mobility programme involving Tribhuvan University in Kathmandu (more information).

• Professor Karanth lectured on the social transformation of Indian society

KaranthG K Karanth, ICCR Guest Professor at the Department of  Sociology, Lund University, held an open lecture entitled ”Pigeonholing Oneself: Emerging Identies in Contemporary India” on Wednesday 19 October 2011, 15.15–17.00. The seminar focused on the general consensus that Indian society has been witnessing a new wave of rapid social transformation. It is meant to initiate a discussion to assess these transformations and to locate them in the wider debate on the feasability of social susainability – even as the concept is undergoing a refinement. 

Prof. Karanth states that, even though one is eager to anticipate many radical changes, in regard to the identies of persons, it is useful to bear in mind Arjun Appadurai’s summing up of Ashis Nandy’s offering of lessons in any discussion of self-making in contemporary India: ”Do not fall prey to the temptation of electing one or the other kind of Indian to be the authentic one over the others dismissed as kinds of geographical, temporal or social borders” (Appadurai: ‘Is Homo Hierarchicus? 1986). What then are the identies and what are the social processes involved in their emergence? There are claims that some identities – especially that of caste, are fading, and new ones emerging, some of which are sponsored by the state itself, while the others are a result of the political processes. There is suspicion and opposition on behalf of one section, while there are those clamouring for the state’s endorsement of the new identities.
See the seminar poster.

• More information about SASNET and its activities 

See SASNET’s page, http://www.sasnet.lu.se/sasnet-news
 

Research Community News

• European Spallation Source (ESS) in close contact with Indian research institutes

Even though the coming European Spallation Source (ESS) based at Lund, Sweden, is a European project (at present 17 partner countries are represented in the ESS Steering Committee), frequent contacts exist with eminent researchers and research institutions worldwide, not the least in Asia where the competence in the field is high. These collaborative efforts may at a later stage result in formal agreements. 
Dr. Mats Lindroos (photo), Head of the Accelerator Division at ESS, has travelled several times to Asian countries during the recent years to discuss various forms of collaboration on an equal basis for mutual benefits.
In India, he has established good contacts at the Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology (RRCAT) in Indore;  the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) in Mumbai, and especially with  the Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre (VECC) in Kolkata, a premier R & D unit of the Department of Atomic Energy, Government of India. 
More information about ESS India contacts.

• Lund University co-organised 4th Indian National Training Program on Youth Friendly Health Services

The 4th National Training Program (NTP), India on Youth Friendly Health Services was held over a period of 3 weeks from 19th September, 2011 to 7th October, 2011, part of it in India, and the rest in Sweden.

The aim of the NTP is to orient the Indian doctors and program managers towards providing youth friendly health services and cater to the needs of the young people, with a special focus on sexual and reproductive health and rights. The NTP programs are conducted by the Division of Social medicine and Global Health, Lund University in Sweden, and the National Institute of Health and Family welfare (NIHFW), the Indian Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MOHFW) and MAMTA – Health Institute for Mother and Child (an Indian NGO based in Delhi).

The programme is funded by a SEK 3.5 m partership cooperation grant from the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) for the perod 2010–2013. The overall objective of the NTP is to strengthen participants’ capacity on delivering youth friendly health services mainly through the public health facilities that address the sexual and reproductive health concerns of young people in the age group of 10-24 years. The areas of work are the Indian states of Maharashtra, Himachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh and Delhi. 
Read a detailed report from the 4th NTP on Youth Friendly Health Services.

• New five-year strategy for SPIDER network at Stockholm University

SPIDER, a Swedish resource center for ICT for Development (ICT4D) established in 2004 and based at Stockholm University, has launched its 2.0. Strategy and Roadmap 2011-2015. The aim of SPIDER is to support the use of ICT for development and poverty reduction, and it is to a large extent (90 %) funded by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida). Previously, many projects focused on Sri Lanka, but during the coming years the only country in South Asia involved in SPIDER projects is Bangladesh. 
When Spider was established in 2004, it was hosted by the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), but in 2010, the Spider host university was shifted to the Department of Computer and Systems Sciences (DSV) at Stockholm University.
The new strategy outlines an overall aim to become an internationally recognized ICT4D broker, serving as a central node in a network of actors from academia, civil society, government and business. More information on the new strategy 2011-2015.

• Karlstad University contact person in Varanasi passed away

Mr Om Prakash Sharma, the key person in establishing and running the Karlstad University Centre for Indian Studies (Ganga Mahal) in Varanasi, passed away on 25 October 2011. (Seen with Karlstad University students on Lars Eklund’s photo from 2002).
Known as  “Om-Ji” for a large number of students, teachers and researchers from Karlstad University coming for shorter and longer stays in Varanasi, died at his native place near Shimla where he had gone only a few days earlier.
Since 1995 Karlstad University has had its study centre, Ganga Mahal, in a mansion facing the Ganga at Assi Ghat, rented from the Maharaja of Varanasi. Here students can live, and the study centre is also open to students from other programmes than the above mentioned. Researchers and doctoral students even from other universities in Sweden, e g Linköping, Umeå, Lund, Uppsala and KTH, have stayed at the centre and made it a base for their field studies. Ganga Mahal has also welcomed guests from Swedish folk high schools, and groups of teachers, artists and writers. 
More information about Karlstad University‘s Varanasi connection.

Om Prakash Sharma was employed part time by Karlstad University to work as a co-ordinator at the Study centre. He was also working as a language teacher (Hindi) at the Banaras Hindu University (BHU). Omji previously worked for the American Peace Corps in the 1970’s and later on for the Sociology department of London University (from which he has got a Masters degree), the Himachal Pradesh state government, and the American Wisconsin programme. He was in touch with Karlstad University ever since 1986-87, when he first organised a study tour to Nepal for Karlstad University teachers training students led by P O Fjällsby. Dr. Marc Katz had at that time already good connections in Varanasi after spending a long time there, working on his thesis. This resulted in a formal agreement on co-operation between Karlstad University and Banaras Hindu University, BHU, in 1988, and later on the establishment of the Study Centre.

• Report from SCAS workshop on Modern India Political Thought
Sunil Khilnani. Sudipta Kaviraj.
 

On 16-17 September, 2011, the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study (SCAS) hosted a workshop entitled ”The Identity of Modern India Political Thought: Power, Politics and the Political” in Uppsala. The workshop was organized on behalf of the Indian-European Advanced Research Network (IEARN), and was a work meeting of its Intellectual History-Political Thought Group.

The aim of the Uppsala workshop, which was the fourth meeting of the group, was to continue the work towards the publication of a collaborative volume, with the working title The Identity of Modern India Political Thought: Power, Politics and the Political. Workshop participants included Sudipta Kaviraj (Columbia University, New York), Sunil Khilnani (King’s College, London), Karuna Mantena (Yale University, New Haven, CT), and Dilip Menon (University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg). 
Read a report from the Uppsala SCAS workshop.

• Fellowships offered at Nehru Memorial Museum and Library in New Delhi

The Nehru Memorial Museum and Library (NMML) in New Delhi, India, offers fellowships to scholars to pursue research in (i) Modern Indian History and Contemporary Studies (ii) Perspectives in Indian Development (social economic and cultural) and (iii) India and Changing Trends in World Economy and Polity.
The fellowships are only open to Indian nationals. They are offered at three levels: Junior Fellow, Fellow and Senior Fellow.  The emoluments, including allowances, will correspond to that of Assistant Professor, Associate Professor and Professor of Central Universities, respectively. CPF/GPF facilities will be extended only to scholars having permanent jobs who take up the fellowship after taking leave without pay from their parent departments.  Fellowships offered are for a duration of two years only.  Fellows will be based in Delhi except for a maximum of five fellows who may be permitted by the Selection Committee to be based outside Delhi.
Applications for the current round of fellowship should reach the NMML on or before October 30, 2011.  More information.

• Announcement for PhD position in Indology at Uppsala University

Uppsala University invites applications for a PhD position in Indology, to be based at the Department of Linguistics and Philology from January 1, 2012. The department especially encourages applicants with project descriptions relating to modern South Asia. Deadline for applications is Monday 14 November 2011. More information.

• Neelambar Hatti interviewed on India’s missing girls

In an 24th October 2011 article published by the Allianz Knowledge Site, Neelambar Hatti (photo) of the Department of Economic History at Lund University, is interviewed about the child sex ratios in India, where increasingly wealthy, well-educated and ‘modernized’ Indians are choosing not to have girl children. In the article, entitled ”Gendercide: India’s Missing Girls”, Hatti characterizes the development a demographic timebomb. Read the article.

Allianz Knowledge is a corporate responsibility platform focused on climatic and demographic change, energy, microfinance, mobility, and health. It is financed by Allianz, a global financial services company headquartered in Munich, Germany.
In another article in the same issue, Indian demographer K.S. James from the Institute for Social and Economic Change (ISEC) in Bangalore speaks about another aspect of the  Demographic Profile India theme, on how there is a stark north-south divide in the Indian population that could have far-reaching consequences for the stability of the country. 
Read this article, entitled ”Poles Apart: India’s Demographic Divide”.

• Fellowship Opportunity: Research Field Fellowships on Village Dynamics in South Asia

The International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) invites research and development institutes to respond to this Request for Proposals (RFP), either from individual researchers or in collaboration with PhD students from Asia who wish to undertake field research in an ICRISAT-NCAP-IRRI project on Village Dynamics Studies in India and Bangladesh.
The researcher can make use of the data collected under the VDSA project (micro and meso level), undertake field trips to collect additional data or for ground truthing the data to address her/his research topic. Research fellowships funded through this RFP will contribute to policies, practices and innovations that alleviate rural poverty by analyzing and disseminating knowledge on rural livelihoods, poverty dynamics and development pathways of the poor in the semi-arid tropics and humid tropics of India and Bangladesh as well as on issues related to efficiency, equity and sustainability of agriculture. 
The Research Field Proposals aim at:
• Funding innovative projects with high potential for impact at research, institutional and policy levels;
• Promoting the development of new research partnerships between IARCs, National Agricultural Research Institutions, Advance Research Institutes and Universities; and
• Providing Asian research scholars with funding to undertake research on rural livelihoods, poverty dynamics and development pathways in India and Bangladesh.
 More information.

• New book on Sikhs in Europe. Migration, Identities and Representations

In November 2011, Ashgate publishes a volume on ”Sikhs in Europe. Migration, Identities and Representations”, edited by renowned Scandinavian researchers Knut Jacobsen, Professor of History of Religion, University of Bergen, Norway; and Dr. Kristina Myrvold, Dept. of History and Anthropology of Religion, Lund University, Sweden.

Sikhs in Europe are neglected in the study of religions and migrant groups: previous studies have focused on the history, culture and religious practices of Sikhs in North America and the UK, but few have focused on Sikhs in continental Europe. This book fills this gap, presenting new data and analyses of Sikhs in eleven European countries; examining the broader European presence of Sikhs in new and old host countries. Focusing on patterns of migration, transmission of traditions, identity construction and cultural representations from the perspective of local Sikh communities, this book explores important patterns of settlement, institution building and cultural transmission among European Sikhs.
The book includes articles by (among others) Laura Hirvi; Kathryn Lum; Eleanor Nesbitt; and Satwinder Singh. 
Full information about the book.

• David Lewis writes on Bangladesh. Politics, Economy and Civil Society

David Lewis, Professor of social policy and development at the London School of Economics & Political Science, has written a book on Bangladeshi society with a new perspective. The book entitled ”Bangladesh. Politics, Economy and Civil Society” will be published in December 2011 by Cambridge University Press in UK.

40 years on from its independence, and as the country in South Asia to which people pay least attention, this is a good moment to take stock of the impressive transformations made since its ‘basket case’ status of the 1970s/1980s, and to consider the many lessons the country may now offer the rest of the world: in relation to its growing role in addressing climate change, its success with maintaining a stable democracy in a Muslim majority country, and its role as a global laboratory for a range of innovations in development and poverty reduction. More information about the book.

Professor Lewis has a Swedish connection, in being an adviser to the Bangladesh Reality Check Approach initiative set up by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) and the Swedish Embassy in Dhaka in 2007. The Reality Check Approach is an effort to find out how policymakers know what effect their policies are having on the people they serve.  Field teams visit and spend quality time with ordinary households living in poverty in different parts of the country, listen to their stories, and document their experiences. These are written up into an annual report for policy-makers and widely circulated (see the report from 2009). The overall objective is to listen to the voices of the poor and understand people’s perspectives on primary healthcare and primary education, which are supported through two large sector programmes. It is a qualitative study which gathers grassroots experiences, opinions and insights which complements monitoring and evaluation mechanisms within these programmes. This Reality Check Approach is an opportunity to put faces and voices to the numbers as well as provision of answers to ‘how’ and ‘why’. It will deliberately explore the range of poor people’s experiences and consciously embraces context specific differences.
Prof. Lewis has written an article about the Reality Check Approach in the Guardian 10 March 2011. 
Read the article entitled ”Closing the gap between development policymakers and people”.

• V Subramanian writes on the linking issue of South Asian rivers

A year ago in 2010, Professor Emeritus Vaidyanatha Subramanian from the School of Environmental Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in New Delhi, India, published a most interesting book entitled ”Rivers of South Asia. To link or not to link” at Capital Publishing Company, New Delhi. The book addresses key issues related to linking various rivers in South Asia. The primary question that is being addressed is: ”Do we want a large number of individual and might river basins or a single SAARC river basin?” 
More about the book.
Subramanian is Professor in Biogeochemistry, and has a connection to Sweden. Between 2002 and 2007 he was associated to Uppsala University in a collaborative program in teaching and research, being a Palme Fellow. 
More information about Prof. Subramanian

• More information about South Asia related research at Swedish and Nordic universities

See SASNET’s page, http://www.sasnet.lu.se/research-community-news

Educational News

• Swedish universities coordinate two Erasmus Mundus Asia Regional lots 2011

Erasmus New

In July 2011, the European Commission, through its Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA) decided upon the 2011 Erasmus Mundus Action 2 – Strand 1 – Partnership programmes for its Asia Regional lots. They are one-way (Asia to Europe) scholarship programmes for students on undergraduate, master, doctoral and post-doctoral level as well as for university staff in academic or administrative positions, financed by the European Commission.

Swedish universities – Lund and Mälardalen – coordinate two of the lots focusing on South Asia, and another two Swedish universities – Uppsala and KTH Royal Institute of Technology – are partners in Asia Regional lots.
Applications for the lots coordinated by Lund and Mälardalen can be delivered from 15th October till 1 December 2011.

Just like in 2010, ten European-Asian university consortiums were  selected for the two Asia Regional lots (in 2011 named lots 12 and 13) to begin during the academic year 2012/13.

Lund University

– Lund University, that already successfully coordinates one of the existing Indo-European Erasmus Mundus Action 2 programmes (more information), was re-selected to coordinate its Asia Regional lot, named EMEA – Erasmus Mundus Europe Asia, that it was first awarded in 2010.
The South Asian consortium members are: Delhi University; Jadavpur University, Kolkata; Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur (IITK); Tata Instititute of Social Sciences, Mumbai; Karachi University; Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu; and Jahangirnagar University, Savar, Bangladesh. Full information is available on the EMEA web site.   

Four other Asia Regional lot 12 projects were selected on 15th July 2011. Two of them were re-selected from last year:

– The EXPERTS consortium coordinated by Karl August University, Göttingen, Germany, with nine South Asian partner universities in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka and India. Uppsala University is a partner university in this lot.
– The EMMA West consortium coordinated by University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, France, with seven South Asian partner universities in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and India.
Deadlines for new applications for these two programmes have not been published yet.

Besides them, two new consortia were selected:

– One of them being coordinated by Mälardalen University in Västerås, Sweden. The consortium has been named IDEAS (Innovation and Design for Euro-Asian Scholars). An on-line application is open between 15th October and 1st December 2011.
The South Asian consortium members are: Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai, India; Lahore University of Management (LUMS), Pakistan; Royal University of Bhutan; and Tribhuvan University, Nepal. 
Full information is available on the IDEAS web site

– Finally, another new Asia Regional lot 12 is coordinated by City University London, UK. It is named STRONG-TIES (Strengthening Training and Research Through Networking and Globalization of Teaching in Engineering Studies), and has eight South Asian partner universities in Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nepal, India, Bhutan and Afghanistan.
University of Southern Denmark in Odense is a Nordic partner.

Besides, KTH Royal Institute of Technology is a Swedish partner in the Lot 13 AREAS (Academic Relations between Europe and Asia) consortium, coordinated  by Politecnico di Torino, Italy (with one South Asian partner university). 

Read more about the South Asia oriented 2011 Erasmus Mundus Action 2 Asia Regional lots.

• University of Turku course on Food in Indian History

During the Fall semester 2011, the Department of Social Research at University of Turku (Åbo), Finland, offers a 3 credits course on ”Food in Indian History. Production, Consumption and Culture from the Colonial Times to the Present”.
The lecturer is Dr. Naresh Chandra Sourabh. In 2008, Dr. Sourabh defended his doctoral dissertation entitled ”The Culture of Women’s Housework. A Case Study of Bihar, India” at University of Helsinki.
The course at University of Turku aims to analyse how food, especially its production and consumption, has shaped Indian history. Although in all civilizations food customs and religion are closely connected, in India this relationship is exceptionally strong. More information about the new course.

• Apply for MSc programme in South Asia and International Development at Edinburgh

From September 2011, the Centre for South Asian Studies at the University of Edinburgh introduced a new MSc programme in South Asia and International Development. It is the only UK postgraduate international development programme with an explicit South Asia focus. This programme is linked to the University of Edinburgh’s Global Development Academy, which fosters a dynamic interdisciplinary community of scholars who are working in partnership throughout the world to tackle the most important issues facing international development. Courses provide analytical skills to help students to understand the processes that have shaped poverty and underdevelopment with particular reference to India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka. The programme is interdisciplinary, combining rigorous training in analytical and qualitative methods with an emphasis on policy and practice as they relate to international development. It has two compulsory, core courses. They are ”Politics and Theories of International Development” and ”South Asia: the Roots of Poverty and Development”.
Applications can be submitted now for entry in September 2012. The closing date for applications will be July 15th 2012.

Please note that it is in your interest to apply well before the closing date: Scholarship and funding schemes have different closing dates for application and generally require applicants to have a firm offer of a place at Edinburgh. The paperwork connected with visas and immigration also takes time to process. For any queries about the MSc programme, please contact the Programme Director, Dr Jeevan Sharma, Lecturer in South Asia and International Development School of Social and Political Science. More information on the program web page, http://www.sps.ed.ac.uk/said

• Lund University students to do field work at CREST in Kerala
Lizzie Sagrelius and Emelie Rohne.

With active support from SASNET, Emelie Rohne and Lizzie Sagrelius, third year students at the Bachelor of Science Programme in Development Studies (BIDS) at Lund University, have been accepted to do field work for their BA thesis at the Centre for Research and Education for Social Transformation (CREST) in Kozhikode, Kerala, India. At CREST, they will be supervised by Dr. Vinod Krishnan.

CREST is an autonomous institution under Government of Kerala, India. It has been conceived as a national institute of humanities, science and professional studies, addressing the needs of the Dalits, Adivasis and other marginalized communities of India while integrating with the informational society. Since 2008, CREST is an associated partner in an Indo-European mobility programme initiated by SASNET and coordinated by Lund University – the Erasmus Mundus External Cooperation Window programme lot 15/13 (more information).  

Lizzie Sagrelius will work on a project entitled ”Access and benefits sharing”, where she will study the patent process of certain tropical plants in Kerala, and the effects of access and benefits sharing. 
Emelie Rohne will study about the role of farmers in the Kerala experience (formerly called the Kerala model of the development) – whether they were included or not in the process of creation of the Kerala experience of high social development with economic growth. 
While in Kerala, Lizzie and Emelie wil also spend some time at the Centre for Development Research (CDS) in Thiruvananthapuram.

• More information about South Asia related education at Swedish and Nordic universities
See SASNET’s page, http://www.sasnet.lu.se/education-news

Conferences and workshops

• Amritsar conference on Water Security and Climate Change

The Guru Arjan Dev Institute of Development Studies in Amritsar, India, holds its 3rd annual seminar on ”Water Security and Climate Change: Challenges and Strategies”, 4–6 November 2011. The conference is hosted by the Guru Nanak Dev University. Invited speakers include  Sheikh Md. Monzurul Huq, Dept. of Geography and Environment, Jahangirnagar University, Bangladesh, who will speak about ”Challenges and Opportunities for Water Security”; Rais Ahmad, Dept. of Agricultural Economics & Business Management, Aligarh Muslim University, India, who will speak about ”Water and Food Security”; and Neelambar Hatti, Dept. of Economic History, Lund University, Sweden, who will speak about ”Policy, Governance and Regulatory Framework”.
Full information about the conference.

• Ascona conference on Pilgrimages and Sanctuaries

The Centro Incontri Umani Ascona in Switzerland, organises a conference entitled ”Pilgrimages and Sanctuaries: Art, Music and Rituals” on 11–12 November 2011, with several South Asia related presentations. The conference conveners are P. Khosronejad, Department of Social Anthropology, University of St Andrews, Scotland; T. Zarcone, CNRS – GSRL/EPHE, Paris; and A. Hobart, University College, London.
Among papers to be presented could be mentioned one by Richard Blurton, Dept. of Asia, British Museum, London, UK, on ”Pilgrimage to Banggajang: lake-dwelling goddesses and their devotees in the eastern Himalayas”; one by Michel Boivin, CNRS – CEIAS/EHESS, Paris, France, on ”Building a local culture in a Sufi centre: the kishti and other artefacts in Sehwan Sharif, Pakistan”; and one by Sanjay Garg, SAARC Cultural Centre, Colombo, Sri Lanka, on ”Pilgrims’ memorabilia in the social landscape of India”. More information

• Kolkata researcher gives two guest lectures at Copenhagen University

Dr. Manabi Majumdar, Fellow in Political Science at the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences (CSSS) in Kolkata, gives two public guest lectures at University of Copenhagen 16–17 November 2011. The seminars are organised by the Centre of Global South Asian Studies, with support from the Copenhagen University. Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies (ToRS), Asian Dynamics Initiative (ADI) and Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS).

On Wednesday 16th November, 13.15–15.00, Dr. Majumdar will speak about ”Politics of Human Development in an Indian State”. The paper focuses on the Indian state of West Bengal. This state has the distinction of having a 34-year long tenure of Left rule which has suffered a setback in early 2011. Set within a theoretical debate on policies being a means for either social justice activism or governmentalism, this paper argues that despite the stated pro-poor stance of the left political regime, its human development planning efforts have remained quite inadequate. 
Venue: History of Religions Section, Room 0.34, Artillerivej 86, Copenhagen. More information about the seminar.

On Thursday 17th November, 13.15–14.30, Dr. Majumdar will speak about ”Health Inequity and Democratic Deficit: Learning by India from India”. This paper focuses on a host of social conditions that produce poor health as well as health inequity, and on the lack of adequate social and policy action to combat these social causes of ill health.
Venue: NIAS, Leifsgade 33, 3rd floor, 2300 Copenhagen. More information about the seminar.

• International Indo-Swedish Seminar on ”Practice-based Knowledge in the 21st Century” in Varanasi

GOIndia

An International Indo-Swedish Seminar on ”Practice-based Knowledge in the 21st Century” will be held in Varanasi, India, 14–16 November 2011. It is being organized by the Dept. of Philosophy & Religion, Faculty of Arts at Banaras Hindu University (BHU), under the auspices of the BHU-Gothenburg University collaboration within the GO:India programme. The aim of this conference is to see and reflect on new sides of the social worlds and the social and humanistic sciences in India and Sweden using the perspectives of practice based knowledge developed within social work, religious work, health care as well as in the arts and philosophy, in order to identify and generate new interesting platforms for academic cooperation. More information

• Comparative Education Society of India annual International Conference 2011

 The Comparative Education Society of India (CESI) organises its Annual International Conference 2011 in Hyderabad, India 16–18 November 2011. It is being organised under the auspices of the Dept. of Sociology, University of Hyderabad. Scholars of South Asia who are working on the issues related to education are encouraged to send their abstracts. The theme of the 2011 conference is ‘Rethinking Education Policy’. An attempt will be made to discuss and debate education policy in its entirety from a comparative perspective. The Conference is expected to bring educationists, social scientists, policy makers and practitioners together to deliberate various aspects of the dynamics of education policy and its making and processes. More information.

• Stockholm conference on Political regimes, growth politics and conflict in Asia

The Forum for Asian Studies at Stockholm University, and the Nordic Institute for Asian Studies (NIAS) in Copenhagen jointly arrange the 5th Annual Nordic NIAS Council Conference & PhD Course in Stockholm on 21–25 November 2011. The theme for the 2011 event is ”Political regimes, growth politics and conflict in Asia. Responses to changing environmental, economic and socio-cultural conditions in Asia”. The primary focus of the conference is the responses to these ongoing socio-economic, cultural, economic and environmental changes in Asia. In what ways are changes being interpreted by actors in Asian societies? What are the nature and implications of the encounters produced by these recent changes? Conference participation is open to all scholars and graduate students. As this is an interdisciplinary conference we especially encourage contributions from all social science disciplines as well as interdisciplinary perspectives. 

The conference will be combined with workshop activities where doctoral candidates may present and discuss their research projects with senior researchers as well as other fellow doctoral candidates. The first two days will be devoted to panels and keynote speakers while the last two days will focus on workshops for doctoral students. The conference/workshop can be taken as a 7.5 ECTS credit course. More information.

• Copenhagen conference on ‘Future of Development Research: Exploring the Nordic perspective(s)?’ 

Conference 2011A Nordic conference on A Nordic conference on ‘Future of Development Research: Exploring the Nordic perspective(s)?’ is held in Copenhagen, Denmark, 24–25 November 2011. It is jointly organised by the Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation in Uppsala; the Nordic Africa Institute in Uppsala, the Finnish Society for Development Research (FSDR), the Norwegian Association of Development Researchers (NFU), and the Association of Development Researchers in Denmark (FAU). A number of Nordic institutions working in the field of development research are also involved, in Sweden the School of Global Studies & Gothenburg Centre for Globalization and Development, both at Gothenburg University. Venue for the conference: Copenhagen Business School (CBS), Dalgas Have, Copenhagen. 
Conference information by FAU, or by NFU
South AsiaThe theme of the conference’s workshop no. 9 is ”Nordic Perspectives on South Asian Development”.The workshop is organised by Kenneth Bo Nielsen, Centre for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo; Dayabati Roy, Dept. of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, University of Copenhagen; and Annika Wetlesen, Dept. of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo. University of Oslo has decided to merge its annual contemporary India seminar this year with the joint Nordic conference on development research in Copenhagen and its workshop no. 9. At the same time broadening the focus for the seminar somewhat, opening up for contributions that focus on other parts of South Asia as well. 

• Oxford Sociology conference on “South Asia in Transition”

Oxford Sociology Conference

The Department of Sociology at the University of Oxford organises a conference on South Asia in Transition to be held 25-26 November 2011. Its aim is to explore and capture the social, political, economic and cultural transformations that have taken place in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Afghanistan and Maldives in the past twenty years. The primary panels will encompass the following themes: – Political Participation: Democracy, Dictatorship and Beyond; – Transformations in Political Economy: State, Capital and Changing Labour Relations; – Politics of Resistance: Social Movement and Violent Conflicts; – Social Exclusion and the Minority Question; – The South Asian Diaspora: The Politics of Conflict, Identity and Change; – Reaching ‘the poor’: Towards Multidimensional Poverty Eradication Throughout South Asia. More information

• Kolkata seminar on ”Conflict, Terrorism and Resolution: The South Asian Scenario” 

The Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Calcutta in Kolkata, India organizes an International seminar on ”Conflict, Terrorism and Resolution: The South Asian Scenario” on 26 November 2011. The event will be attended by foreign delegates from SAARC and Southeast Asian countries, including, scholars, experts and academicians from India. The Seminar is aimed at providing an interactive platform for sharing of expertise and experience between India and other South Asian countries which are severely affected by the scourge of terrorism and militancy. Keeping the annihilation of founder-figures of terrorist organization, the al-Qaeda and the LTTE in mind, the deliberations of the seminar is an attempt to examine the security situation of the region, the law enforcement mechanisms and cooperation amongst global/regional organizations to fight the scourge of terrorism in the most volatile region of the world.

Among the sessions, one focuses on ”Future of Terrorism in South Asia”, chaired by Prof. Purusottam Bhattacharya, Jadavpur University; another on ”The Internal Dynamics of Militancy, Conflict and Separatism in South Asia”, chaired by Prof. Rajagopal Dhar Chakraborti, Calcutta University; and a third on ”Counter-Terrorism Cooperation in Fighting the Malaise of Terrorism in South Asia”, chaired by Prof. Swapna Bhattacharya Chakraborti, Calcutta University.

• Islamabad Colloquium on ”Public Action in Pakistan: Vacillating between Apathy and Anger”

ISAPSThe Institute of Social and Policy Sciences (I-SAPS) in Islamabad, Pakistan invites papers for the first annual Colloquium on ”Public Action in Pakistan: Vacillating between Apathy and Anger” to be held 27–28 November 2011. The Colloquium is first in the series of annual multi-disciplinary colloquia which will allow different social sciences perspectives leverage and enrich each other. Beyond its scholarly goals, the organisers hope that the Colloquium would inform the debates on public policy and development agenda in Pakistan. I-SAPS is inviting scholars in local as well as international academia to discuss the difficulties in dealing with social change especially in developing and Muslim societies like Pakistan from multi-disciplinary aspects, with special reference to individual’s personal behavior and its relation to societal changes. More information.

• Sixth NORASIA conference in Oslo focuses on 21st Century Asia Research

The Norwegian Network for Asian Studies invites for its 6th NORASIA conference, to be held at the University of Oslo 12–14 December 2011. The theme for the conference will be “Asias århundre: Hvor går Asia-forskningen?” (Asia’s Century: Where is Asia Research heading for?). It focuses on which trends that are dominant in current Norwegian Asia research, and which priorities that will be set during coming years. Issues of high relevance for students and prospective researchers but also to representatives of business and civil society. Participants should register before 1 November 2011.
Venue for the conference: University of Oslo, Helga Engs hus, Blindern. More information.
One of the workshops at the NORASIA VI conference in Oslo focuses on ”Asian Migration to Scandinavia”. It is being organised by Kenneth Bo Nielsen, Centre for Development and the Environment (SUM), University of Oslo, and Karina Dalgas, Department of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen. In this workshop the aim is to explore the vast field of Asian migration to Scandinavia by engaging in an exploratory and ambitious comparative exercise. What can we learn by comparing vastly different patterns of migration originating in Asia, and passing through or terminating in Scandinavia? Which cultural, national and regional differences make a difference, and how do changing legislative frameworks enable or constrain migrant practices? MA and PhD students with recent field experience are particularly invited to present their work. Abstract should be delivered to the organisers no later than 15 November. Full information

• Australia symposium on India and the Age of Crisis

The University of Western Australia in Crawley organises a symposium on the local politics of global economic and ecological fragility, 2–3 February 2012. The purpose of this symposium, entitled ”India And The Age Of Crisis” is to consider how politics in India are likely to be shaped by global economic and ecological crises. In particular, the organisers seek contributions that address one or more of the following sub-themes on the intersections between global crisis and the specificity of politics and society in India:
– Historical perspectives on crisis; – Crisis and Governance; – Economy and Crisis; – Labour and crisis; – Crisis and society; and – Business and Crisis.
The symposium is being convened by Michael Gillan, Associate Professor, The University of Western Australia Business School. Deadline for submission of abstracts is 1 December 2011.
A selection of papers from the symposium will be published in a special issue of South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies in 2013. To register for this event please download and return a registration form
More information about the symposium.

• Allahabad conference on Civil Society in the Era of Globalization

A two-day Indian National Seminar on ”Civil Society in the Era of Globalization” will be held at Allahabad, India, 24–25 February 2012. It is organised by the Rajiv Gandhi Chair in Contemporary Studies at University of Allahabad (the Chair being established by the Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India.
The seminar will focus on the following areas: • Theoretical Concept of Civil Society; • Historiography of the Institutional Evolution of Civil Society; • Civil Society in the era of Globalization; • Rise and Growth of Civil Society in India; • Evaluation of Different Civil Society movements in India; • Challenges of Civil Society; • Civil Society, Democracy and Public Policy; • State and Civil Society; and • Market and Civil Society

The list of areas mentioned above may be treated as illustrative rather than exhaustive. Paper-presenters are free to choose an area of their interest which broadly falls within the theme of the seminar i.e. Civil Society in the Era of Globalization. Papers will be reviewed by a committee formed for this purpose. Needless to mention that besides hospitality the Rajiv Gandhi Chair will bear travel expenses by Indian participants as per university rules. Deadline for the submission of abstracts is 15th January 2012. Full information.

• Copenhagen 2012 conference on Rising Asia – Anxious Europe

The Asian Dynamics Initiative (ADI) at University of Copenhagen, Denmark, invites participants to an international conference entitled ”Rising Asia – Anxious Europe” to be held at the University of Copenhagen on 2–3 May 2012.

The conference features distinguished keynote speakers including Professor Peter van der Veer (photo), Director of the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity at Göttingen, Germany, and paper presentations from an inter-disciplinary group of scholars, focusing on Europe’s ‘new’ relationship with Asia or the changes in Europe and Asia against the backdrop of such changing relationships.

Rising Asia – Anxious Europe is the fourth in a series of annual conferences initiated by ADI in 2008. ADI is a cross-faculty and interdisciplinary effort to meet the current challenges and demands for better knowledge of and deeper insights into Asian matters. Abstracts (no more than 250 words) should be submitted by 15 January 2012. Full information about the ADI 2012 conference.

• Ghent conference on Knowledge Transfer, Product Exchange and Human Movement in the Indian Ocean

Ghent University organises an interdisciplinary conference on “Crossroads between Empires and Peripheries – Knowledge Transfer, Product Exchange and Human Movement in the Indian Ocean World” to take place between 21–23 June 2012 in Ghent, Belgium. The main focus of the conference will be to explore the dichotomy between legal and illegal (contraband), private and official exchange, anchored in the following five topics: – Private and official commercial exchange; – Exchange of knowledge, technology, and ideology; – Human movement and migration (including slave trade); – Controversy or parallelism of tribute and trade; – Indirect impacts of IOW global exchange (e.g. diseases, espionage, creolization, etc.). 
Abstracts of papers exploring these issues should be submitted by 15 November 2011. Full papers are due by 15 April 2012. Full information.

• Other conferences connected to South Asian studies all over the World

See SASNET’s page, http://www.sasnet.lu.se/conferences/conferences
 

Important lectures and seminars in Scandinavia

• Lund University organises Stockholm seminar on Global Development of Sexual and Reproductive Health

Lund University arranges a seminar entitled ”Towards a more healthy world – change is possible. Important investments in the Global Development of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights” in Stockholm on Friday 11 November 2011. The half-day seminar will be organised in collaboration with the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) and 120 colleagues from 22 participating countries.
Between 2005 and 2010 Sida has invested in eight international training programmes in the field of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights. In these programmes, conducted by the Division of Social Medicine and Global Health at Lund University, 200 obstetricians and midwives from 30 African, Asian and Eastern European countries have participated and a total of 70 pilot projects in the respective countries have been implemented.
The Stockholm conference is held to show the excellent results, in line with the Millennium Development Goals (MDG), which this Swedish funded International Training Programme has achieved. Notable results the groups have achieved are: Reductions in maternal mortality, improvement of access to reproductive health services, improvement of antenatal care, introduction of youth friendly health services, improved family planning services and increased awareness of HIV prevention.
The results will be presented by the programme leaders Anette Agardh and Karen Odberg Pettersson, Lund University. Venue: Sida Headquarters, Valhallavägen 199, Stockholm. 
See the invitation to the Stockholm seminar.

• Copenhagen seminar on Evolution of Productive Sectors in Bangladesh

The Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS) invites to a Bangladesh related seminar in the fall 2011 seminar series on Elites, Production and Poverty (EPP) on Wednesday, 16 November 2011, 14.00-16.00. Venue: DIIS, Main Auditorium, Strandgade 71, ground floor, Copenhagen. 

The seminar is entitled ”The Evolution of the Political Settlement and Productive Sectors in Bangladesh”, and will deal with the evolution of the productive sector in Bangladesh from a country that was almost devoid of any industry in the 1970s to one with the world’s third biggest garments exporting industry today. Specific features of its political settlement allowed this transition to happen in the context of lucky international conditions. But the evolving political settlement also hampers the development of policy to promote new sectors and in particular hampers the development of infrastructure like power and roads that are seriously constraining contemporary development.

Speakers include Mushtaq Khan, Professor of Economics at SOAS, University of London, and Lindsay Whitfield, Associate Professor in Global Studies at Roskilde University.
Participation is free of charge, but registration is required. This should be done no later than Tuesday 15 November 2011. More information

• Hina Jilani holds the 2011 Anna Lindh Lecture at Lund University

The Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (RWI), an independent academic institution working in close cooperation with Lund University, organizes its yearly Anna Lindh Lecture on Wednesday 16 November 2011, at 17.15.

This year’s invited speaker is Hina Jilani, lawyer practicing at the Supreme Court of Pakistan, and is the Director of AGHS Legal Aid Cell, a legal aid and human rights NGO in Pakistan. She will hold a lecture entitled ”Protection of Human Rights in Situations of Crises: A Defender’s Perspective”. Ms. Jilani established Pakistan’s first all-women’s law firm in 1980, and cases she has conducted have on numerous occasions become landmarks for setting standards for human rights in Pakistan. In 1992 she was appointed Advocate of the Supreme Court in Pakistan. Special areas of concern in her work have been the rights of women, minorities, children and prisoners, including political prisoners.

Ms. Jilani served as the Special Representative of the UN Secretary General on Human Rights Defenders from 2000 to 2008. She was appointed as a member of the UN Fact Finding Mission on Gaza in April 2009, and was also a member of the UN established International Commission of Inquiry on Darfur in October 2004.

The lecture is organized in collaboration with the Association of Foreign Affairs at Lund University (UPF). Venue: Lund University Hall (Universitetsaulan), Universitetsplatsen.
More information

• Stockholm conference on Education and the Future of Afghanistan

The Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA) invites to two events to be held in Stockholm on 21–22 November 2011.
In the evening of the 21st of November, a public seminar about education in Afghanistan is organised. It is being hosted by the Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA), in collaboration with the European Network of NGOs in Afghanistan (ENNA) and the Embassy of Canada in Stockholm. It is a public seminar where senior experts will discuss the future of education with the Afghan Minister of Education Farooq Wardak. Venue: The Canadian Embassy, Klarabergsgatan 23, 6th floor, Stockholm.
The second event is SCA’s annual International Conference on Tuesday 22 November. The title of the 2011 conference is ”The future of Afghanistan”, where the focus of the disscussion will be on what challenges the Afghan youth are facing today. It is a full day event being hosted by SCA and the Museum of Ethnography. Participants include Afghan Minister of Education, Mr. Farooq Wardak, and Sweden’s Minister for International Development Cooperation, Ms. Gunilla Carlsson. Number of seats are limited, please register before November 4th. Venue: Etnografiska museet, Djurgårdsbrunnsvägen 34, Stockholm. 
More information.

• Knut Jacobsen lectures at Lund University on December 9th

Professor Knut A. Jacobsen, University of Bergen, will give a public lecture on ”Doctrines of Salvific Space: Some Unique Characteristics of Hindu Pilgrimage Mythology” at Lund University on Friday 9 December 2011, 10.15-12.00.
The lecture is based on his forthcoming book titled “Pilgrimage in the Hindu Tradition: Salvific Space” (Routledge, 2012). More information is available at: http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415590389/
Venue: Room 438, Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Allhelgona Kyrkogata 8, Lund.
See the lecture poster.

• Information about South Asia related lectures and seminars

See SASNET’s page, http://www.sasnet.lu.se/conferences/conferences

Business and Politics

See SASNET’s page, http://www.sasnet.lu.se/news-sources/swedish-politics-and-business-related-south-asia
 

South Asia related culture in Scandinavia

• Eminent Bharatanatyam and Kathak dancers perform at Södra Teatern in Stockholm

A spectacular evening of Indian classical dances by internationally renowned Bharatanatyam and Kathak dancers will take place at Södra Teatern in Stockholm on Thursday 3 November 2011, at 19.00. The dance troupe consists of performers from the dance school of the eminent Bharatanatyam exponent Ms. Saroja Vaidyanathan of Ganesa Natyalaya in New Delhi, and of the world renowned Kathak performer Ms. Shovana Narayan. The dance performance comes true because of the Embassy of India in Stockholm. It will showcase exquisite themes traditionally associated with Bharatanatyam and Kathak dance forms.
Tickets (SEK 180) for the event are available at Södra Teatern Box Office, Mosebacke Torg 1-3, phone number 08-53199490. See the concert poster.

• Copenhagen concert with Subhankar Chatterjee

The Indian classical singer Subhankar Chatterjee from Kolkata performs in Copenhagen on Friday 28th October 2011, at 20.00. Chatterjee was trained in Atrauli gharana, and has performed all over India and in Europe (Haag, Tübingen, München, London, Vienna). The concert is organised by Dansk Musikforening. Venue: Ansgarkirken, Mågevej 33, Copenhagen. 
More information

• London universities organise Indian documentary film festival

A documentary film festival entitled ”Persistence Resistance 2011: Documentary Practices in India” will be held 1–8 November 2011. The festival , held for the fourth year, is premised on the belief that documentary practices in any place actively participate in the shaping of our times. The strong history of documentary filmmaking in India and the continued explorations and experimentations with documentary form offer an extensive intellectual and creative platform to think through and debate current urgencies in South Asia as well as in the UK, Europe and elsewhere internationally.
The festival is jointly organised by School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), and Goldsmiths, University of London; London School of Economics (LSE); University of Westminster; and Brunel University. 

The focus lies on in-depth conversations between and amongst filmmakers and theorists, linked to screenings, round-tables and with plenty of time for open discussions with the audience.
Filmmakers Arun Khopkar, Deepa Dhanraj, Rahul Roy, Rajula Shah and Saba Dewan, from India, Yasmine Kabir from Bangladesh, as well as UK based filmmakers John Wyver, Mairead McClean, Mao Mollona, Margaret Dickinson and Simon Chambers will be joined by, and be in conversations with, Alisa Lebow, Alpa Shah, Guilia Battaglia, Laura Bear, Lotte Hoek, Lucia King, Nicole Wolf, Partha Mitter, Radha D’Souza, Ravi Vasudevan, Ros Gray, Rosie Thomas, Stephen Hughes, Stewart Motha and Ziba Mir Hosseini. All welcome and all events are free.
Full information about the documentary festival.

• Indian concerts and workshops at Planeta Festival in Gothenburg

The eighth Planeta Festival will be held in Gothenburg and nearby places on the Swedish west coast 2–6 November 2011. Planeta is a unique festival, organised by a network of 23 organizations and associations keen to endeavour exciting encounters between people from all over the world.

The 2011 Planeta Festival includes a classical Indian concert performance by the Anubhab group (photo) from Kolkata, consisting of Preetam Bannerjee (Sitar), Debashish Bhattacharjee (Tablas), and Subho Bhattacharya (Vocals).  Their concert will be held on Thursday 3 November at 19.00. Venue: Kulturhuset Kåken, Kålltorpsgatan 2, Gothenburg.
On Saturday 5 November at 11.00, Odissi dancer Anette Pooja will lead a beginners course in Bollywood dance. Venue: Kulturhuset Oceanen, Stigbergstorget 8, Gothenburg.
Finally on Sunday 6 November at 12.00, a workshop will be held on Indian music, rhytms and Tabla playing. The workshop is led by the Tabla musician Rahul Pophali, Venue: Kulturhuset Kåken, Kålltorpsgatan 2, Gothenburg.
More information about the 2011 Planeta Festival.

• Iqbal Academy Scandinavia events in November 2011

Iqbal Academy Scandinavia commemorates the birthday of the great poet and philosopher Dr. Allama Muhammad Iqbal with two events in Copenhagen in November 2011. On 12th November, an Iqbal Seminar will be held at the Faculty of Theology, University of Copenhagen, and on the 19th November 2011, Iqbal Day will be celebrated with a cultural programme exclusively relating to the poetry of Dr. Iqbal. Renowned Ghazal singer Najma Akthar will present a musical programme with selected ghazals of Allama Iqbal and songs/ghazals written by other famous poets of the subcontinent. 
More information.

• Initiative Asia invites to cultural programme in Stockholm

Initiative Asia (iA) is a Stockholm based organization dedicated to friendship and cooperation among Swedes, particularly Swedes with South Asian origins. iA now invites to its South Asia Friendship Event 2011, that will be held on Sunday 20 November, 15.30–19.00 at Åsö Gymnasium, Skanstull, Stockholm. The programme includes Bengali songs, Kathak and Bollywood dance, Ghazals, and Dandia stick dance. The Ambassadors of Pakistan, India and Bangladesh will all participate.

See the poster for the South Asia Friendship Event 2011.

iA is a network, working for cultural, intellectual and social interaction between peoples and countries. In ideological, religious, political and economic matters iA shall be neutral and unbound. The work is coordinated through a Coordinating group and an iA-Council, consisting of committed citizens, coordinators and contact persons from different cooperating organizations. More information

• 11th edition of River to River Florence Indian Film Festival

The 11th edition of River to River Florence Indian Film Festival will be held 2–8 December 2011 in Florence, Italy. The River to River festival, under the Patronage of the Embassy of India in Rome, is the first festival in the world entirely devoted to films from and about India.  
For more information visit the official Festival website

• Information about South Asia related culture in Sweden/ Scandinavia 

See SASNET’s page, http://www.sasnet.lu.se/cultural-events

New and updated items on SASNET web site

• Swedish departments where research on South Asia is going on:

Constantly added to the list of research environments at Swedish universities, presented by SASNET. The full list now includes more than 280 departments, with detailed descriptions of the South Asia related research and education taking place! Go to http://www.sasnet.lu.se/institutions/research-environments

‡ Division of Public Health Sciences, Department of Health and Environment, Faculty of Social and Life Sciences, Karlstad University. Involved in a collaborative initiative with three renowned Bangladeshi institutions – Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University, BSMMU; Institute of Child and Mother Health, ICMH; and Centre for Injury Prevention and Research, Bangladesh, CIPRB. Includes Linnaeus Palme collaboration project.

• Useful travelling information

Look at our Travel Advice page. Updated travel advises from the The British Foreign & Commonwealth Office about safety aspects on travelling to the countries of South Asia.


Best regards

 
  Lars Eklund

Deputy director/webmaster
SASNET/Swedish South Asian Studies Network

SASNET is a national network for research, education, and information about South Asia and is based at Lund University. Its aim is to promote a dynamic networking process in which Swedish researchers cooperate with their counterparts in South Asia and around the globe.
The SASNET network is open to all branches of the natural and social sciences. Priority is given to interdisciplinary cooperation across faculties, and more particularly to institutions in the Nordic countries and South Asia. SASNET believes that South Asian studies will be most fruitfully pursued as a cooperative endeavour among researchers in different institutions who have a solid base in their mother disciplines.
The network is financed by Lund University.

Postal address: SASNET – Swedish South Asian Studies Network, Scheelevägen 15 D, SE-223 70 Lund, Sweden 
Visiting address: Ideon Research Park, House Alpha 1 (first floor, room no. 2040), in the premises of the Centre for East and South East Asian Studies at Lund University (ACE).

Erasmus Mundus India and Asia regional mobility programmes 2012

On July, 17, 2012, the European Commission’s Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA) decided upon the 2012 round of the Erasmus Mundus Action 2 – Strand 1 – Partnership programme, EU’s flagship programme aimed at promoting the attractiveness of the European Higher Education system and third country cooperation and partnerships. The new programmes for mobility activities will start during the academic year 2012–2013. The scholarship programme is open for students on undergraduate, master, doctoral and post-doctoral level as well as for university staff in academic or administrative positions from Asia to Europe only. 

Erasmus Mundus Asia regional
mobility programmes 2011

Erasmus Mundus Asia regional
mobility programmes 2010

Information about existing South Asia related EMECW/Erasmus Mundus Action 2 projects from 2008 till 2010.

Lot No. 9 (corresponding to Lot 12 in 2011!) is primarily devoted to South Asia, where the proposals should include universities in at least three of the following group A countries: Afghanistan, Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan, and Bangladesh; besides at least two of the following group B countries: Sri Lanka, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Maldives, Philippines, Thailand, China, and North Korea. Four projects were selected, among them a continuation of the EMEA project, coordinated by Lund University. Read more…
Lot No. 10 (corresponding to Lot 13 in 2011!) on the other hand is primarily devoted to South-East Asian countries, but also also gives the possibility to include Sri Lanka, India and/or Maldives as group B countries. Four projects were selected, out of which one includes Indian universities.  Read more…
Lot No. 11 is devoted to India. Four projects were selected, among them the IBIES project, coordinated by Aarhus University, Denmark. The Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm is a partner in two of the other India lots.  Read more…

See the complete list of selected Erasmus Mundus Action 2 projects for 2012.

LOT 9

Lund University coordinates Asia Regional lot No. 9 – SASNET an Associate partner

Lund University was again given the responsibility to coordinate one of the four Asia Regional consortium lots No 9.
Web page: http://www.emeuropeasia.org

The 2012 EMEA consortium consists of a slightly different setup of European and Asian member universities and associates than in the previous (2010 and 2011) Lund University administered EMEA Asia Regional Lot, with no Indian universities involved any longer. The EMEA project received further funding for scholarships for nationals from Bangladesh, China, Malaysia, Nepal, Pakistan and Thailand. The next scholarship application will be open between October 15 and December 1, 2012.
The European universities consortium members are: Lund University, Sweden; Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece; University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; University of Antwerp, Belgium; University College Dublin, Ireland; University College London, UK; University of Milan, Italy; University of Pierre and Marie Curie, Paris, France; and University of Warsaw, Poland.
The Asian consortium members are: Peking University (joint coordinator), Fudan University, Tsinghua University, Xiamen University and Zhejiang University – all in China; Mahidol University, Thailand; University of Malaya, Malaysia; and the following universities in South Asia:
     – Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET), Dhaka
     – Jahangirnagar University, Savar, Bangladesh
     – Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal
     – University of Karachi, Pakistan

SASNET has joined the consortium as an Associate Partner, along with a number of other universities and institutes. They include: 
     – Shahjalal University of Science & Technology (SUST), Sylhet, Bangladesh
     – Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS), Dhaka
     – Hajvery University, Pakistan

The budget for the consortium will be EUR 2.5 m, and the mobility flow (from Asia to Europe only) to at least 100 individual partnerships. The project coordinator is Ms. Elisabeth Axell, International Relations Office, Lund University.

Three other Asia Regional Lot 9 projects

Three other Asia Regional lot 9 projects were selected on 17th July 2012. Two of them were re-selected from last year, namely the EXPERTS III consortium coordinated by Karl August University, Göttingen, Germany; and the EMMA West 2013 consortium coordinated by Universidade de Evora, Portugal. 
Besides them, one new consortium was selected, the cLink consortium, coordinated by University of Northumbria at Newcastle, UK.

EXPERTS III consortium:

Coordinated by Karl August University, Göttingen, Germany.

EXPERTS is a scholarship project targeted to citizens of Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka and Thailand. 
Web site: http://www.expertsasia.eu/

Uppsala University and University of Turku are Nordic partner universities of this consortium. The local coordinator at Uppsala University is Mr. Jonathan Schalk at the university’s International Office. 
More information about the Erasmus Mundus Action 2 Scholarships at Uppsala University’s Mundus web page.

      The following South Asian universities are members of the EXPERTS consortium:

      – Royal University of Bhutan
      – Kathmandu University, Nepal
      – Tribhuvan University, Nepal
      – Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), Pakistan
      – University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka
      – Khulna University, Bangladesh
      – University of Pune, India
      – University of Delhi, India
      – Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai, India, is an associated partner.

EMMA West 2013 consortium:
Coordinated by University of Evora, Portugal.
Web site: http://emmasia.uevora.pt/

Other European consortium partners include Université de Nice-Sophia Antipolis, France; Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Germany; and University of Warsaw, Poland.

    The following South Asian universities are consortium members:

      – University of Dhaka, Bangladesh
      – Ahsanullah University of Science and Technology, Dhaka, Bangladesh
      – BRAC University, Dhaka, Bangladesh
      – Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India
      – Kathmandu University, Nepal
      – COMSATS Institute of Information and Technology, Pakistan
      – NED University of Engineering and Technology, Karachi, Pakistan
      – Fatimah Jinnah Women University, Rawalpindi
      (The consortium also includes two universities in the Philippines)
The EMMA West 2013 kick-off meeting will happen at Warsaw University on 16–19 October 2012. A call for applications should be made public in the meantime. The programme coordinator is Mr. José Carlos Tiago de Oliveira at Évora University.

cLink consortium
Coordinated by University of Northumbria at Newcastle, UK.
Web page for the cLink project.

Clink aims to foster partnerships of emerging Asian countries (Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan, China, India, Malaysia and Thailand) with the EU countries (Germany, Romania, Hungary, France, and UK) to reinforce the existing collaborations developed through the EAST-WEST Asia Link project, eLINK and eTourism. The project is coordinated by Professor Alamgir Hossain, Head of Northumbria University’s Computational Intelligence Group.

The following South Asian universities are consortium members:

     – Royal University of Bhutan, Bhutan
     – Kantipur Engineering College, Nepal
     – Mohammed Ali Jinnah University, Karachi, Pakistan
     – Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India
     – United International University, Dhaka, Bangladesh

More information about the clink project.

Lot 10 consortium with South Asian partners

Four consortia were also selected for the South-East Asia oriented Lot No 10 (that still may include South Asian partner universities). Only one of the consortia includes South Asian partner universities. This is the GATE consortium, coordinated by Johannes Kepler University, Linz, Austria.

GATE consortium
Coordinated by Johannes Kepler University, Linz, Austria.
University of Tampere is a Nordic partner university.
Web page for the GATE project.

The consortium includes 19 partner universities including seven European universities and 12 non-European universities from India, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Mongolia, Indonesia, Thailand, China and Malaysia. The total funding for the consortium under the program is 2.5 million Euros. The project duration is from 2012 to 2016. More information.

       The following South Asian universities are consortium members:

       – The Maharaja Sayajirao University, Vadodara, India
       – Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras, Chennai, India

LOT 11 (INDIA)

Aarhus University coordinates and KTH participates in 2012 India programme lots

After a break of two years, decisions have also been taken regarding a separate India lot (nr 11), designed to promote academic collaboration between EU and India. Four consortia have been selected, each involving 20 partner universities in Europe and India. Each project will have a budget of EUR 3 m, and the minimum number of individual mobility flow should be 100 fully funded students/researchers/academic staff. The flow is only from India to Europe, not the other way. At least 25 % of the Indian universities in the lot should be located in what is identified by the Government of India to be less developed districts of the country. One of the lots is coordinated by Aarhus University, Denmark, whereas KTH in Stockholm is a partner in two of the India lots. 
Amazingly, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras in Chennai is the Indian coordinator for two of the lots.

The following four consortia were selected for the India mobility programme:

– Interdisciplinary Bridges in Indo-European Studies (IBIES) project, coordinated by Aarhus University, Denmark

Indian coordinating partner university: Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras, Chennai.
Other European members are Leiden University, Netherlands; University of Milan, Italy; University of Warsaw, Poland; Reutlingen University, Germany; and University of Applied Sciences, Bremen, Germany. 
In India, the partner universities are: 
      – Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras, Chennai
      – Banasthali University, Tonk District, Rajasthan
      – Bastar University, Jagdalpur
      – Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi
      – Mangalore University
      – Manipal University
      – Manomaniam Sundaranar University, Tirunelveli
      – Pondicherry University
      – Sambalpur University
      – Symbiosis International University, Pune
      – University of Calcutta, Kolkata
      – University of Delhi
      – Vinoba Bhave University, Hazaribagh.

– Experience Europe as an Indian (SVAGATA) Project,
coordinated by Ghent University, Belgium

Web page: http://www.cslc.in/files/events/Svagata.pdf
The Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm is a partner university in this project.
Other European members include University of Groningen, The Netherlands; Université Montpellier 2 Science et Techniques, France; and University of Tartu, Estonia. 
In India, the partner universities are: 
      – Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bangalore
      – M.S. Ramaiah Medical College, Bangalore; 
      – National Law School of India University, Bangalore
      – Karnataka Veterinary, Animal and Fisheries Sciences University, Mangalore
      – Gulbarga University
      – Anna University, Chennai
      – Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai
      – Mahatma Gandhi Mission Trust, Aurangabad
      – Amrita Institute for Medical Sciences and Research, Kochi.
  Associate partners include 
      – University of Delhi
      – Tezpur University
      – Central University of Jharkhand in Ranchi
      – Manipur University in Imphal
      – Karnataka State Law University in Hubli
      – Bengal Engineering and Science University in Shibpur
      – Saurashtra University in Rajkot

– India for EU II project,
coordinated by Politecnico di Torino, Italy

More information: http://www.sasnet.lu.se/indiaforeuii.pdf 
The Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm is a partner university also in this project.
Other European members include Aalto University Foundation, Finland; Ecole Centrale de Nantes, France; Universidade do Porto, Portugal; and Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Germany. 
In India, the partner universities are: 
      – Anugrah Narayan College, Patna
      – Anna University, Chennai
      – Centre of Environmental Planning and Technology University, Ahmedabad
      – Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi
      – Indian Statistical Institute (ISI), Kolkata
      – Indian School of Mines, Dhanbad
      – Jadavpur University, Kolkata
      – Kakatiya University, Warangal
      – University of Pune.

– HERITAGE project,
coordinated by Ecole Centrale de Nantes, France

More information: http://www.sasnet.lu.se/heritage12.pdf
Indian coordinating partner university: Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras, Chennai.
Other European members include Universidad de Sevilla, Spain; Politecnico di Milano, Italy;  Politecnico di Torino, Italy; and Warszaw University of Technology, Poland.
In India, the partner universities are: 
      – Anna University, Chennai
      – Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bangalore
      – Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Mumbai
      – Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Guwahati
      – Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kanpur
      – Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras, Chennai
      – National Institute of Technology, Warangal
      – National Institute of Technology, Rourkela.
Associate partners include:
      – University of Delhi
      – Vellore Institute of Technology
      – Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Rajasthan.

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Technology, Linnaeus University, Växjö, 2015

Postal address: SE-351 95 Växjö, Sweden
Visiting address: Lückligs plats 1, House M, Entrance 1, Teleborg
Web page: http://lnu.se/subjects/mechanical-engineering?l=en

Collaboration with South Asia

In 2005 a Linnaeus-Palme International Exchange Programme was launched between the Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, School of Engineering, Växjö University and the Indian Institute of Technology(Bharatiya Prodyogiki Sansthan) in Kharagpur, India. Prof. Om Prakash was the coordinatior for the project, and his counterpart on the Indian side was Prof. S. K. Dube, Director of IIT Kharagpur. As part of the exchange programme, Prof. Dube visited Växjö in June 2006.

During the second year (2006-2007) money was given for one teacher exhange from either side. More information.
For the year 2007-08, the exchange programme was increased to include 2 teachers from Växjö to IIT Kharagpur and 2 teachers from IIT to Växjö.

Late Professor Om Prakash(photo to the left) was involved in plans for a major research project to be carried out in partnership with IIT Delhi. The project title is “Photovoltaic Technology Development with Field Experience of its Operation and Maintenance“. The central idea of the project is to learn from the failures in real life operation of the photovoltaic systems for electric generation. In this way improve their reliability and availability, and ultimately reduce the life cycle cost of such systems.  The contact person for this project at IIT Delhi is Professor G.N. Tiwari at the Centre for Energy Studies at IIT Delhi.
In February 2007 the 3rd International Conference on Solar Radiation and Day Lighting, ”SOLARIS 2007” was held at IIT Delhi. The conference was organised by Professors Dube and Tiwari; and Prof. Prakash was a member of an International Steering Committee. The theme of “Solaris 2007” was ”Solar Radiation: Key to Climate Control, Day Lighting and Agriculture”. During the conference, the intention was to marshal these resources to explore ideas and lay out specific details regarding how each kind of energy – wind, bioenergy, geothermal etc. – is related to the Sun and also, how the Sun controls the climate, weather and agriculture of the planet on which we live.

In August 2007, Prof. Prakash received SEK 75 000 as a SASNET Planning grant for interdisciplinary workshops, for a conference on ”Implementation strategies for the transfer of hybrid photovoltaic-thermal technology (H-PV/T) from research to lab to field”, to be carried out in collaboration with IIT Delhi. The conference is supposed to function as an incitament to introduce solar energy in Indian villages without electricity. See the full list of SASNET planning grants 2007.
Due to illness, Prof. Prakash has not been able to fullfill the plans for this workshop. He actually passed away in the summer 2009.
In his place, Dr. Krister Håkansson at the School of Social Sciences, Växjö University, with whom Prof. Prakash already had established collaboration, took over his role. Krister Håkansson planned for the conference in collaboration with Prof. G.N. Tiwari at IIT Delhi.
The conference was held in New Delhi 25–28 August 2009. It was jointly organised by the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi, the Bag Energy Research Society (BERS) in India, and Växjö University, Sweden, and the participants came from all over India, and included farmers from rural areas, maintenance engineers, social scientist/workers, technical experts and representatives of different NGO:s. Full information about the conference

The aim of the workshop is that it should function as a starting shot for the implementation of solar energy in poor Indian villages, and to reflect different aspects of this – technical as well as social and cultural with a high level of participatory cooperation. Persons working or having knowledge of solar energy technologies in the area related to agriculture in remote area will be invited to the conference, where participants first learn the technologies with practicals and convinced to desire to work in future with our networking groups, and NGO representatives can share their experience with problem faced by them during implementation of such technologies in rural area.
Tentively the following two future venues for implementation of the project have been proposed, namely one rural area, Ballia in the state of Uttar Pradesh, and one medium-sized city, Varanasi also in Uttar Pradesh.

Department of Biology and Environmental Science, Linnaeus University, Kalmar, 2015

Postal Address: Institutionen för Biologi och Miljö, Linnéuniversitetet, SE 391 82 Kalmar.
Web page: http://lnu.se/faculty-of-health-and-life-sciences/departments-at-the-faculty/department-of-biology-and-environmental-science?l=en

Department of Biology and Environmental Science is part of the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences. 



Environmental Science & Engineering Group (ESEG)

Visiting address: Norra Vägen 47, Kalmar
Web page: http://lnu.se/forskargrupper/eseg-the-environmental-science-and-engineering-group

Contact person: Professor William Hogland, phone: +46 (0)480 446721
Personal web page: http://lnu.se/research-groups/eseg-the-environmental-science-and-engineering-group/staff/william-hogland?l=en

Professor William Hogland has been working with waste management and recovery since the late 1980’s, first in the Dept. of Water Resources Engineering, Lund University, and then at Kalmar University. In 1999 he was awarded the professoral chair of Environmental Engineering at the Dept. of Technology. All along he has also participated in national and international committees on both Urban Hydrology and Waste Management; and worked for the International Energy Agency (IEA). He has experiences of teaching and research in over 50 countries, and has been employed as a lecturer and supervisor in several international courses in the area of water resources and waste management in developing countries. Besides he has published more than 250 reports and papers in his research fields; Hydrology and urban environmental studies: Hydraulics and technical development; Water and waste water treatment; Water/waste management in developing countries; Waste fuels and energy from waste; Landfilling and material recovery/energy utilisation; Waste characterisation, recycling and product development; System analysis of Municipal solid waste(MSW); and System analysis in industries.

While at Lund University, Prof. Hogland was also engaged in organising educational training programmes for professionals working with solid waste management in developing countries. Programmes being funded by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, Sida. These courses are still run, but now by Chalmers University of Technology in Göteborg.

At the University of Kalmar, Prof. William Hogland has been responsible for organising the so-called Kalmar Eco-tech conferences since 1997. The sixth Eco-tech Conference, coinciding with the 30th Anniversary of the university itself, was held 26–28 November 2007, and Prof. Hogland was the contact person for the event. The theme for the conference was ”Technologies for Waste and Wastewater Management and Emissions Related to Climate”, and it also included a section about ”Waste and Waste Water Management in Tropical Climate”, jointly organised by the Dept. of Technology, University of Kalmar, and the Asian Institute of Technology in Bangkok. For more information, see http://www.eco-tech.hik.se.
Three Indian speakers/participants for the conference were invited with the help of a SASNET guest lecture programme grant. Dr. Sunil Kumar, Dr. Kurian Joseph, and Dr. Anjali Srivastava, visited Sweden. They participated in a special section on Waste and Waste Water Management in Tropical Climate. See the full list of SASNET planning grants 2007.
The Conference in total was very sucessful with 200 participants from 29 countries. Kalmar Eco-tech’07 resulted in a proceedings were 81 papers are collected.

Prof. Hogland participated in the SASNET workshop on ”The role of South Asia in the internationalisation of higher education in Sweden held in Stockholm 29-29 November 2006, where he gave a presentation in the session about ”South Asian students in soft sciences in Sweden”. Read Prof. Hogland’s presentation at the workshop (as a pdf-file).
Prof. Hogland was previously connected to the Department of Technology at Kalmar University, but this unit was closed down in early 2007. Due to the academic and administrative collaboration between Kalmar University, Växjö University and Blekinge Institute of Technology, most of the engineering programmes at Kalmar University has moved over to Blekinge. Prof. Hogland stays on in Kalmar, but he has moved over to the School of Pure and Applied Natural Sciences.
On Thursday 15 February 2007, SASNET’s Director Staffan Lindberg and Deputy Director Lars Eklund visited Kalmar University and had a meeting with Prof. Hogland. He presented plans for a new BSc/MSc/PhD programme in Environmental Science and Engineering that is planned for in collaboration with the Asian Institute of Technology in Thailand. Read the SASNET report from the meeting.

Research connected to South Asia

William Hogland is, along with Dr Lennart Mårtensson, School of Engineering, Kristianstad University; Professor Lennart Mathiasson, Dept. of Analytical Chemistry, Lund University; and Dinesh Raj Manandharfrom the Environmental Public Health Organization (ENPHO), Kathmandu, Nepal; engaged in a major research project on waste management in Kathmandu, Nepal, financed by a two-years Sida grant for the years 2003–04 (SEK 450 000 per year). The departments in Kathmandu, Nepal involved in the project are the Central Department of Microbiology (CDM), Tribhuvan University; the Environmental Public Health Organization; and the Development Network (P) Ltd. (Dnet). Dinesh Raj Manandhar spent 6 months during the Spring 2004 in Kalmar, working with hydrological issues.
Project name: Analysis of Pollutants from City Dump/Landfills in Kathmandu Valley, Nepal, with Emphasis on Heavy Metals and Persistant Organics.
Summary of research programme: The objective is to characterise leachate with respect to heavy metals and persistent organics from dump sites in Nepal and to compare with Swedish conditions. The efficiency of different geofilters will be studied on site in Nepal with respect to pollutant reduction in leachat The information obtained from experiments and workshops will be used for building competence in Sweden about waste management in Nepal and help to improve the local situation. A basis for standardisation of evaluation methodology will be established. Mitigation measures to combat the environmental pollution and protect the water resources from leachate contamination will be proposed.

PhD students from the department worked with the setting-up of the experiments in Nepal and they also performed the analyses in Sweden, and Minor field studies have been carried out by Swedish Masters students from the three Swedish universities involved. The three senior researchers supervise the work performed in the project both in Sweden and Nepal, and they are also responsible for the arrangement of work-shops and compilation of working material based on experimental experiences and discussions with authorities in Nepal. In October 2003 they arranged a workshop on ”Waste management in developing countries” in Kathmandu.
Read an article on the project, and field work carried out on the Kathmandu city dump by the Kalmar University students Christina Anderzén, and Veronica Blees, in Östra Småland 8 November 2003.

In December 2005 Staffan Lindberg and Lars Eklund from SASNET visited Development Network in Kathmandu and met Dr. Manandhar and his researcher colleagues involved in the collaborative project mentioned above. Read a report from the meeting.

The Swedish researchers mentioned above, based at three south Swedish universities, have formed a research group called Laqua, focusing on water and-waste management issues and focus a significant part of the research and teaching of the group for future work in developing countries. It is headed by Prof. William Hogland. The base of knowledge also includes local socio-economic realities, which will facilitate discussions on how to establish more efficient waste and water treatment systems in the developing countries. The gained competence will be utilised for development of systems, tailor-made for actual sites.
With external funding, the Laqua has developed the Nepal project and established a Swedish Centre of Excellence in Nepal for Support of Development of a Sustainable Society in Nepal, offering among other things a PhD course in International Environmental Engineering Sciences for Eco-Cyclic System. More information about the Swedish Centre in Nepal.

Kathmandu International Conference 2006

An International conference on Sustainable Solid Waste Management in Developing Countries, called ”For a Better Tomorrow” was held in Kathmandu, Nepal, 8–12 January 2006. The conference – the first one to focus on local waste management issues in Nepal – was organized by DNet, an organization involved in the issue in Kathmandu, on behalf of Kathmandu University and the Swedish LAQUA group (involving the three universities of Kalmar, Lund and Kristianstad). The conference was funded by the International Foundation for Science, and its Scientific Program Coordinator Dr. Cecilia Öman was present. More information on the conference.
A conference declaration was issued afterwards. Read the declaration.

PhD Course on International Environmental Engineering Sciences for Eco-Cyclic Systems

A PhD Course on International Environmental Engineering Sciences for Eco-Cyclic Systems was held in Kathmandu 16-24 October 2008. The theme for the course was Solid Waste and Water Management, and was later supposed to be followed by another two PhD courses dealing with ”Air Pollution and Soil Remediation” (to be held in either Bangladesh, Thailand, Malaysia or India) and ”Chemical Analytical Studies – Sampling and Analyses in Practice” to be held in Sweden.
The Kathmandu course, equal to 8 ECTS, was organised by the Swedish Centre of Excellence for Support of Development of a Sustainable Society in Nepal, a collaboration initiative between Kathmandu University, Tribhuvan University, Asian Institute of Technology in Bangkok, Anna University in Chennai, and the Laqua group. The Centre is funded by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agence Sida. The objective behind the course is to increase the knowledge and the scientific level of the PhD students from Sweden and from Nepal concerning waste and water management problems in developing countries and to increase the research cooperation with South East Asia with the help of the knowledge of the Laqua Research Group, and researchers from the Sida ARPET program. Full information about the course (as a pdf-file).

Marine Microbiology

Visiting address: Barlastgatan 11, Kalmar
Web page: http://lnu.se/research-groups/marine-microbiology-?l=en

10 years ago, a collaboration project was established with the University of Ruhuna in Matara, Sri Lanka. The collaboration project got financial support from the Swedish International Programme Office for Education and Training (Internationella programkontoret) in the form of a Linnaeus-Palme International Exchange Programme grant. The grant was first given in March 2007, for exchange activities involving sending teachers and students both ways from 2007-08. More information about the Linnaeus Palme grants 2007.
The contact person on the Srilankan side was Dr. P.B. Terney Pradeep Kumara, Lecturer at the Dept. of Oceanography and Marine Geology, University of Ruhuna.
The Linnaeus Palme collaboration project included a planning tour during 2007, and the first exchange of teachers took place in 2008.
For several years, Dr. Kumara has been connected to the CORDIO project, administered from the University of Kalmar (more information below), and he was also registered as a PhD Candidate at the School in Kalmar, supervised by Prof. Olof Lindén. Mr. Kumara defended his thesis focusing on ‘Coral larval settlement on reefs recovering from major disturbances and factors affecting on larval settlement‘ in 2008.

Previously, University of Kalmar had a separate Division of Natural Resources Management, and this division was strongly involved in an international project on Coral Reef Degradation in the Indian Ocean – CORDIO. It was launched in 1999 by Professor Olof Lindén, who worked as co-opted (”adjungerad”) Professor at the University of Kalmar. He is now Professor in Marine Environmental Management at the World Maritime University in Malmö.
CORDIO was a collaborative program involving researchers in 11 countries in the central and western Indian Ocean. It was created to assess the widespread degradation of the coral reefs throughout the region. Gradually much of the research focused on mitigation of damage to reefs and on alternative livelihoods for people dependant on reefs that are being degraded due to climate change and other stress factors
CORDIO was supported by Sida (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency), the Government of Finland, the Dutch Trust Fund of the World Bank, WWF (World Wide Fund for Nature) and IUCN (World Conservation Union). In December 2003, the board of Sida Research Department decided to continue the support to the CORDIO project for another 4-year period (2004-2007). The total sum that Sida provided was SEK 12 million. The support focused on the following project areas: A. Long-term ecological and socioeconomic research; B. Targeted research; C. Alternative livelihoods (research and development); D. Training and capacity building; and E. Networking and communications.
CORDIO had its central coordination within the School of Pure and Applied Natural Sciences at the University of Kalmar, Sweden and regional centres in East Africa (Kenya), South Asia (Sri Lanka) and Indian Ocean Islands (Seychelles).
The Swedish centre was coordinated by Prof. Olof Lindén and Dr. David Souter. In 2005, an extensive report was edited by Lindén and Souter, entitled ”Coral Reef Degradation in the Indian Ocean Status Report 2005”. Go for the report.
The report included a large number of case studies, several of them dealing with India, Sri Lanka and the Maldives, e g an article title ”Bandaramulla Reef of Southern Sri-Lanka: Present Status and Impacts of Coral Mining”, written by P. B. Terney Pradeep Kumara (mentioned above) with inputs from Olof Lindén and Prof. P.R.T. Cumaranathunga. Read the article.

Regional CORDIO office for South Asia

The CORDIO programme had a regional office in South Asia, based in Colombo, Sri Lanka. It was headed by Dr. Jerker Tamelander, now working as Head of United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Regional Office for Asia Pacific. Tamelander with an MSc in Marine Biology from Gothenburg University leads UNEP’s work on coral reefs, working closely with Regional Seas programmes on a range of issues including climate change adaptation, water quality, fisheries and poverty. He also advises and supports UNEP’s ‘blue carbon’ initiative on management of coastal ecosystems for climate change mitigation. Jerker has worked in applied marine research, management and policy development for more than 15 years, as an employee of the Finnish Institute of Marine Research, with UNEP focusing on Regional Seas Conventions and Action Plans, and most recently as Manager, Oceans and Climate Change at the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). 
During the years 1999–2004, the CORDIO Regional Coordinator was Dan Wilhelmsson from the Dept. of Zoology, Stockholm University.

The collaboration between CORDIO and  National Aquatic Resources Research and Development Agency (NARA) in Sri Lanka built on previous capacity development and support provided by Sida/SAREC between 1989 and 1998. In addition, CORDIO  funded a M.Sc. study investigating the spatial and temporal patterns of coral recruitment in the Maldives. The CORDIO programme also trained several people at MRC in methods to conduct general coral reef surveys and assessments of recruitment and erosion of reefs. Furthermore, the first comprehensive surveys of the reefs of the Tuticorin Coast in India were conducted by Suganthi Devadason Marine Research Institute (SDMRI) as part of the CORDIO Programme. Through the institutional capacity building within the programme, SDMRI  established a research group equipped for repeated monitoring of coral reefs along the Tuticorin Coast. Several of the projects carried out by SDMRI provided students with PhD degrees.
With assistance from the (NARA) and the Sri Lanka Sub-Aqua Club, CORDIO provided training and basic equipment to students at Eastern University, Batticaloa, on the east coast of Sri Lanka. Eastern University completed the first surveys of the reefs of Passichuda during 2003–2004. Upon request, CORDIO also organised a training course in coral reef monitoring at Colombo University in 2000. Moreover, CORDIO provided support for a number of researchers from India, Sri Lanka and the Maldives to attend international coral reef training courses and conferences.
Read the CORDIO Asia Final Report.

Department of Psychology, Linnaeus University, Växjö/Kalmar, 2015

Postal address: Institutionen för psykologi, Linnéuniversitetet, SE-351 95 Växjö, Sweden
Visiting address: Georg Lückligs väg 8, House K, Entrance 4, Teleborg
Web page: http://lnu.se/faculty-of-health-and-life-sciences/our-research?l=en#Psychology

Psychology used to be part of the School of Social Sciences, but has now been shifted over to the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences. 

Dr. Krister Håkansson is based at the Dept. of Psychology. Besides is also working at Karolinska Institutet Medical University in Stockholm. His research interests include Cross-cultural Psychology. More information from his personal web page.
Krister Håkansson has become involved in organising a conference on the introduction of solar energy to villages in northern India. The conference titled ”Implementation strategies for the transfer of hybrid photovoltaic-thermal technology (H-PV/T) from research to lab to field” was in New Delhi 25–28 August 2009.
The conference, partly funded by SASNET, should have been organised by Late Professor Om Prakash at the Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, School of Technology and Design, Växjö University, in collaboration with the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi. However, due to bad health (he actually passed away in the summer 2009) Prof. Prakash could not realise the project, and the responsibilty was then handed over to Krister Håkansson, with whom there already existed collaboration.
The workshop was jointly organised by the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi, the Bag Energy Research Society (BERS) in India, and Växjö University, Sweden, and the participants came from all over India, and included farmers from rural areas, maintenance engineers, social scientist/workers, technical experts and representatives of different NGO:s. Full information about the conference.

The workshop is then supposed to function as an incitament to introduce solar energy in Indian villages without electricity. Different aspects – technical as well as social and cultural will be discussed. Persons working or having knowledge of solar energy technologies in the area related to agriculture in remote area will be invited to the conference, where participants first learn the technologies with practicals and convinced to desire to work in future with our networking groups, and NGO representatives can share their experience with problem faced by them during implementation of such technologies in rural areas.
Tentively the following two future venues for implementation of the project have been proposed, namely one rural area, Ballia in the state of Uttar Pradesh, and one medium-sized city, Varanasi also in Uttar Pradesh.

Anna Lindberg, SASNET, Krister Håkansson, Växjö University, G.N. Tiwari, IIT Delhi, and Lars Eklund, SASNET.

Being a psychologist, Krister Håkansson is interested to launch a broad interdisciplinary research project on issues connected to village development and the introduction of solar energy, but also other possible research topics. SASNET’s deputy director Lars Eklund visited Växjö University in March 2009 and discussed this with Dr. Håkansson (read Lars Eklund’s report).
In May 2009, the Indian collaboration partner, Prof. G.N. Tiwari from the Centre for Energy Studies at Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi visited Växjö University in order to discuss the final planning for the conference to be held at IIT Delhi. During his visit he held a lecture on Wednesday 20 May 2009, entitled ”Sustainable Energy Alternatives. Renewable Energy Research at Solar Energy Park, IIT, Delhi”.
The day before, Prof. Tiwari and Dr. Håkansson travelled down to Lund, and visited SASNET’s root node office. Discussions were held with Anna Lindberg and Lars Eklund from SASNET. (Photo to the right)

Professor Emil Uddhammar was based at the Dept. of Political Science within the School of Social Sciences. He was appointed Professor at Växjö University in 2006. Before that, he worked at the Dept. of Government, Uppsala University. More information about his Uppsala research. His research interests are democracy and institutions, institutions and development, conservation and development and also Swedish politics and political theory. More information from his personal web page.
Prof. Uddhammar has been involved in research projects focusing on East Africa, but also in comparative studies with India. One such project was a comparative research study on Development and biodiversity in East Africa and India, a project funded by the Swedish Research Council for the period 2005-07. It focused on the impact different institutional arrangements – political, legal and economic – had on bio-diversity and human development. In India Dr. Uddhammar collaborated with Dr. Vikram Dayal, Research Associate at TERI, the Energy and Resources Institute in New Delhi. More information on the project.

In March 2007, Prof. Uddhammar and the then School of Social Sciences, Växjö University, received a small Linnaeus Palme International Exchange Programme grant from the Swedish International Programme Office for Education and Training for the contract period 1 July 2007– 30 June 2008. The grant should be used to develop an exchange of students and teachers between Växjö and TERI in New Delhi. More information about the Linnaeus Palme grants 2007.

In December 2008, Dr. Nilanjan Ghosh, Senior Vice President at MCX Academia of Economic Research (MAER), Mumbai, India was invited to the department in Växjö by Prof. Uddhammar for a week. Dr. Ghosh obtained his doctorate from the Indian Institute of Management (IIM) in Kolkata and later been a researcher and lecturer at the TERI Institute in New Delhi. Presently as Senior Vice President, he heads the research, consultancy, and publications initiatives of MAER, an economic research and consultancy centre at the Multi Commodity Exchange of India Limited (MCX) in Mumbai. Nilanjan Ghosh is involved in projects/ consultancies sponsored by the Swedish Research Council, FORMAS, UNEP (Nairobi), World Bank, CDEP (IIM–Kolkata), IUCN, UNCTAD, and others.
A research seminar on ”Trans-boundary water disputes” was held at the School of Social Sciences on Tuesday 2 December 2008. Dr. Ghosh presented a paper titled ”A scarcity value based explanation of trans-boundary water disputes: the case of the Cauvery River Basin in India”. The issue is at the forefront of the global environmental debate, not least because scarce water resources could lead to conflicts. Efficient management of such resources and appropriate institutional arrangements are hot topics. 

Department of Health and Caring Sciences, Linnaeus University, Kalmar/Växjö, 2005

Address: Institutionen för hälso- och vårdvetenskap (HV), Linnaeus University, Stagneliusgatan 14 B, SE-392 34  Kalmar, Sweden
Web page: http://lnu.se/faculty-of-health-and-life-sciences/departments-at-the-faculty/department-of-health-and-care-sciences?l=en

Contact person: Professor Katarina Swahnberg, phone: +46 (0)480 446977

South Asia related research

Sunil Kumar Joshi and Katarina Swahnberg in Kathmandu.   Photo: Lars Eklund

Katarina Swahnberg has worked for many years at the Division of Gender and Medicine, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine (IKE), Linköping University, but moved to Kalmar on 1 January 2013, where she has been appointed Professor in Health Sciences and Global Health.
She defended her doctoral dissertation on ”The Prevalence of Gender Violence. Studies of four kinds of Abuse in five Nordic Countries”, at the Division of Women’s Health, Department of Molecular and Clinical Medicine in Linköping on 4 June 2003.
At Linköping University, Katarina was strongly involved in both educational and research collaboration with South Asia, especially with India and Nepal. More information.

Together with with Sunil Kumar JoshiProfessor in Community Medicine at Kathmandu Medical College (affiliated to Kathmandu University), she is involved in a collaborative research project entitled and the project is entitled ”Hidden Issue: Women and Girls Trafficking in Nepal”. The project received a planning grant from the Swedish Research Links (Asian–Swedish research partnership programme) in 2009, and will hopefully get more funding to take ahead. The background is the situation where Nepal has evolved as a ”sending country”, a central part in global trafficking. Surveys reveal that 70 out of 75 districts within Nepal are vulnerable to trafficking. The main aim of the research project is to contribute to the prevention of trafficking of women and girls and promote rehabilitative measures in order to attain a better society and healthier life of the victims. The empirical study will be conducted in Nepal. More information.
SASNET‘s deputy director Lars Eklund met Katarina Swahnberg and Sunil Kumar Joshi during his visit to Nepal in November 2012. Read his report.

Advance project

Katarina Swahnberg is involved in a major international collaborative research project, entitled Advance. It focuses on gender-based violence (GBV), prevalent around the world and covers a range of events which pose significant risks for the physical, sexual and psychological health of women and children, in addition to their social and economic well-being. The ADVANCE study focuses on violence that occurs within families – domestic violence. The overall project objective is to improve antenatal care services for victims of domestic violence in Nepal and Sri Lanka in order to reduce maternal and infant morbidity and mortality. Go for the Advance home page.

In Nepal, secondary research aims include analysing how GBV has been integrated into Nepali health policies and systems in order to inform other countries considering similar policy responses, and to develop culturally- and contextually-sensitive tools for identifying women experiencing domestic violence in antenatal care settings. In Sri Lanka, secondary research aims include assessing the prevalence of domestic violence experienced by pregnant women in: (i) Colombo district and (ii) the estate sectors of Badulla district, to determine the prevalence and consequences of abuse perpetrated by health care workers in antenatal care settings in Colombo district, and to assess the availability, acceptability and quality of antenatal services for pregnant women experiencing domestic violence in the estate sectors of Badulla district.

ADVANCE was initiated by partners in Nepal and Sri Lanka, and is now a research collaboration of four scientific institutions. The coordinating institution is the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) in Trondheim, Norway.  The collaborating institution in Nepal is Kathmandu University (KU), including two affiliate institutes: Dhulikhel Hospital & Kathmandu Medical College and Teaching Hospital.  The collaborating institution in Sri Lanka is the University of Sri Jayewardenepura in Colombo.  The final partner institution is the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.  The research team also includes advisors from the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing in Baltimore (USA) and Linnaeus University in Kalmar (Sweden).
The Principal Investigators are Berit Schei, Professor of Women’s Health, Department of Public Health and General Practice, Faculty of Medicine at NTNU in Trondheim; and Sunil Kumar Joshi in Kathmandu.

23 A, Sardar Sankar Road,
Kolkata 700 029, INDIA

e-mail addresses:
sydasien@sydasien.se

Through frequent travelling, Lars Eklund  built up a strong network of researchers working on South Asia related issues at Swedish universities, and their academic collaboration partners in South Asia.

He is a journalist with strong South Asia connections, both professionally and personally – being married to an Indian/Bengali wife and involved in many cultural activies focusing on South Asia.
From 1982 till 2007 he was the editor-in-chief of SYDASIEN (South Asia – Political and Cultural Magazine), besides working as reporter cum sub-editor for daily newspapers in different parts of Sweden.

Lars was the deputy director for the Swedish South Asian Studies Network (SASNET) from it was launched in January 2001 till he retired in December 2016. Read his SASNET History 2000-2016 document, published in October 2020.

Between 2014 and 2019, Lars was the treasurer for the European Association for South Asian Studies (EASAS).

It should also be mentioned that Lars has travelled extensively to most parts of Asia since the early 1970s, and has visited all the eight South Asian nations on SASNET contact missions. His extramural activities include lecturing on Indian society, history, culture and religion.

Together with his wife Bubu, he organises cultural seminar programmes on the Nobel Laurate Rabindranath Tagore, and since 2012 they run a singing choir with mostly Swedish people performing Rabindranath’s songs in original Bengali language.

Biography from 2003 (the
first 50 years of my life!): http://www.larseklund.in/larseklundlife.html

Contact us