My book, COMPLEX RIVALRY, is now available worldwide @UofMPress. A thread here on the book, for anyone interested in interstate rivalries, India-Pakistan conflict, realpolitik, war, peace, and rivalry transformation. #ComplexRivalry#India#Pakistan#Kashmir#war#peace
A full circle moment: back to my Alma mater!✨
I am happy to share that I have joined as an Associate Professor in the distinguished Department of Political Science at the @UnivofDelhi!✨
Excited to embark on this new chapter, it’s great to be back home: @UnivofDelhi! ✨
It took a long time, but finally my paper titled 'Emergence of India–Pakistan hydropolitics: the role of colonial state and communal nationalism' is out. Grateful to @SMohanOfficial for the unwavering support throughout this journey. https://t.co/15ak1xIT6e
@ankush_Gucci Heartiest congratulations @ankush_Gucci for your FIRST SOLO PEER-REVIEW ARTICLE! 🎉✨ It’s a terrific achievement & looking forward to more such SCOPUS indexed publications in the foreseeable future!
Keep moving…and be creative! ALL THE VERY BEST!
Delighted to share my new co-authored article, "Asymmetric Battleground: Terrorism and the Indo-Pakistani Protracted Conflict" with @AJosukutty in Bandung: Journal of Global South!✨✨✨
https://t.co/MtAfKHZMZL
I am pleased to announce dat 2 of my PhD scholars, Vasundra Raje & Bisat Tariq @BISATTARIQ05 ve been awarded PhD degree! 🎉 ✨
I am also thankful to external experts, Prof. Rajesh Kumar & Prof. @mathewjosephc1, for conducting viva-voce examination despite their hectic schedule!
Anish Sarkar.
3 years & 8 months old.
The youngest ever FIDE rated player.
A 1555 rating
At the age of 69 I think I play at a level of 1500.
I better play him while I can still keep up for a few moves..!
#IndianChess
Anish Sarkar rating.
My teacher @Navnita found me in my hideout @UniversityJammu almost after 2years of release of my book #ComplexRivalry @UofMPress. I thank her & Prof. @adbehera for surprise visit & sharing their precious time during the summers! Happy Teachers Day!
The Infosys Prize 2023 laureate in Social Sciences Prof. Karuna Mantena delivered the Infosys Prize Lecture at the University of Hyderabad on July 5, 2024. The lecture was hosted by the School of Social Sciences at University of Hyderabad. Prof. Mantena is Professor, Political Science, Columbia University, USA and Co-Director, Conference for the Study of Political Thought. She was awarded the Infosys Prize for her groundbreaking research on the theory of imperial rule, and the claim that this late imperial ideology became one of the important factors in the emergence of modern social theory. Prof. Mantena’s Infosys Prize lecture was chaired by Prof. Vasanthi Srinivasan of the Department of Political Science at the School of Social Sciences.
In her lecture Prof. Mantena discussed M.K. Gandhi’s analysis and rejection of violence in mass protest and consider why these matters for democracy today. Gandhi championed non-violent resistance as part of his protest against empire and colonial rule. However, the Rowlatt Satyagraha and the Non-Cooperation Movement, Gandhi’s first experiments in mass satyagraha, ended in outbreaks of violence. What was the cause of this violence? Gandhi worried that just as Indians were freeing themselves from slavery, they began acting like masters against those who were weaker, especially minorities of various kinds.
The Infosys Prize lecture series is intended as a platform for the Infosys Prize laureates to speak about their award-winning research to a wider audience of research scholars and students. The lectures are meant to spark conversations and enable an exchange of ideas among the scholarly community and aspiring researchers. You can read more about the Infosys Prize here.
@InfosysPrize@KMantena@Columbia
Just read!
I thank Dr. @pallaviraghava1 for a succinct, critical, and comparative evaluation of my book Complex Rivalry @UofMPress (2022) & Christopher Clary’s, Difficult Politics of Peace @OxUniPress (2022) in @IntlStudiesRev! ✨✨
https://t.co/wsq69OyrJe