Political Conflict, Gender and People’s Rights Initiative

Political Conflict, Gender and People’s Rights Initiative

India: The surveillant state

August 29, 2022

The Telegraph writer Prasanta Ray discusses Angana Chatterji’s co-authored book, Majoritarian State: How Hindu Nationalism is Changing India.

UC Berkeley-Stanford Collaborative Project “From Nation To Homeland: Religion, State And Belonging In South Asia” Receives $370,000 Grant From Henry Luce Foundation

April 9, 2021

PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release: April 9, 2021
Contact: Political Conflict, Gender and People’s Rights Initiative at the Center for Race and Gender (PCRes-CRG), email: rng2@berkeley.edu

UC Berkeley-Stanford Collaborative Project “From Nation to Homeland: Religion, State and Belonging in South Asia” Receives $370,000 Grant from Henry Luce Foundation

April 9, 2021: The Political...

‘Do we not have any rights?’ Indian Muslims’ fear after Assam evictions

October 18, 2021

“These evictions in Dhalpur are part of the BJP’s drive to politicise and dismantle the citizenship rights of the Bengali Muslims in Assam, and this is a very dangerous path,” saidAngana Chatterji, an anthropologist at University of California, Berkeley, who recently wrote a study on the alleged abuses in Assam.

“We see the chilling nationalist fervour that these evictions induce. It reiterates their violent divide-and-conquer policy...

‘Most damaging effect of majoritarianism on India’s polarised democracy is undermining of the rule of law’

May 9, 2019

The Indian Express’ interview with Angana P. Chatterji (Co-chair,Political Conflict, Gender and People’s Rights Initiative) discusses her bookMajoritarian State: How Hindu Nationalism is Changing India.

The Guardian view on Narendra Modi’s landslide: bad for India’s soul

May 23, 2019

Narendra Modi’s op-ed in The Guardian includes Angana P. Chatterji’s (Co-chairPolitical Conflict, Gender and People’s Rights Initiative) co-authored book, Majoritarian State to discuss the political climate in India.

Journalist Arrests: A Historical Punch to Help Troubled Press

September 9, 2019

US-based Chatterji’s detailed study onBuried Evidence: Unknown, Unmarked, and Mass Graves, brought focus on the unmarked graves found in Kashmir for the first time. The unearthing happened in March 2008, and thereafter, Chatterji and her groups identified 2,700 such unknown, unmarked and mass graves that contained over 2,900 bodies in 55 villages in Bandipora, Baramulla, and Kupwara districts of Kashmir.

Chatterji had said in an interview, “If independent investigations are undertaken... it is reasonable to assume that the 8,000+ enforced disappearances since 1989 would...

Archive, Counter-Memory

March 6, 2020

Research Scholar and Co-Chair ofPolitical Conflict, Gender & People’s Rights Initiative,Angana P. Chatterji, recently announced the opening of theArchive on Legacies of Conflict in South Asia: The Right to Heal.

Between March 2012 and November 2016, Dr. Chatterji and her team conceptualized the Archive....

'It Is Dangerous To Speak Up In India Today.' What the Resignations of 2 Academics Show About Freedom of Expression Under Modi

March 19, 2021

“[T]his was part of an escalating strategy where public intellectuals, civil society advocates, and human rights defenders who are progressive, liberal, with a certain idea of the free university and freedom of speech in a democratic society, were being identified, discouraged, and targeted…it is dangerous to speak up in India today.”

Angana Chatterji, Research Anthropologist and Co-chair of CRG’s Initiative on Political Conflict, Gender and People’s Rights, is quoted and profiled in aTimemagazine article about increasing threats to academic freedom under the Indian...

Legacies Of Conflict In South Asia: The Right To Heal

April 23, 2021

Blog originally posted on April 23, 2021, on the Stanford Libraries site, Special Collections Unbound by Laura Wilsey.

How many of us first developed an understanding of the Indian subcontinent and its peoples from the writings of Vikram Seth, Salman Rushdie or Rohinton Mistry? Their stories, A Suitable Boy, Midnight’s Children and A Fine Balance, introduced the rest of the world to the socio-political...

Under fire from Hindu nationalist groups, U.S.-based scholars of South Asia worry about academic freedom

October 3, 2021

A spokesperson for the Indian Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the matter.

For Chatterji, the consequences of her human rights work in India — from Kashmir’s mass graves to Assam’s citizenship tests — have been exacting. In 2010, under India’s Congress government, her spouse, Richard Shapiro, an anthropologist, was deported from the Delhi airport over what the government described as “...