Mahanirban Calcutta Research group

 

Previous Workshops & Symposia

 An Orientation Programme on Globalization, Crisis and Public Policy

Introduction: Calcutta Research Group in collaboration with Rabindra Bharati University is planning to organize a one-week course on the theme ‘Globalization, Crisis and Public Policy’ during November 23-29, 2015 in Kolkata, India. The proposed course is intended to understand the nitty-gritty of neoliberal globalization including the periodic crises in the market economy all over the world vis-à-vis concerned public policies across the globe including India. It is intended to take up an exploration into socio-economic crisis along the axes of both theoretical nuances and practical implications.

The course will be open to the doctoral students and teachers of various colleges and universities, and researchers from diverse disciplinary backgrounds. We especially welcome participants from the North-Eastern states of the country. Participants from the various vulnerable communities (Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and others) which are most affected by the implications of globalization are especially welcome.

Objectives: This course will start with addressing the issues related to the idea of neoliberal globalization and its effects on designing the edicts of public policy. The basic worldview of neoliberal globalization is centred around the economic space of any society as if all sorts of social distortions or ills afflicting the society in general can be taken care of with the aid of a set of public policies inspired by the principles of neoclassical economics – the entry points of which being individual economic/material preferences, technology and natural endowments. And in that sense, this worldview, almost like the orthodox Marxist thought, upholds the space of ‘economy’ as the only space of political struggle and negotiations. Here one needs to keep in mind that the basic worldview of neoliberal globalization is focused around money-using free (competitive) market economy with the belief that Adam Smith’s idea of invisible hand which is presumed to always keep the money-using market in harmony and deliver the goods to all automatically. It also prescribes that the state’s public policy should facilitate free and uninterrupted growth of this money-using competitive market where lies the panacea of all socio-economic ills. There must also be apparently beneficial policies for those who are still outside the purview of this market in order to bring them inside the market (the other name of which is mainstreaming). In this worldview what is targeted is the improvement in the quality of life of an individual as a consumer and once that is accomplished everything of him/her will be taken care of automatically.

The principal objectives of the proposed course are delineated below:

i) To make a theoretical and empirical understanding of globalization characterizing almost every money-using market economy today across the globe;
ii) To make a critical probe into the socio-economic crises which from time to time have hit the market-economies of the world since the inception of the present day globalization nearly four decades ago; and,
iii) To have an understanding of public policies in every nook and corner of the globe in connection with the globalization and also, to make a normative assessment of these policies so as to deal as well as cope with the periodic crises which do afflict the money-using market economies all over the world.

Themes of the Course: The proposed course is devised with three major themes in mind:

A) Interrogating Globalization and Periodic Market-Economy Crises: Economic and Non-Economic Aspects of Globalization: A critical appraisal of the idea of neoliberal globalization which upholds economy as the base of the society. In this framework, an individual is expected be a rational economic agent. This individual must be capable of taking care of all of her desires including security for herself in all respects. The very idea of neoliberal globalization following the mainstream neoclassical economics forecloses the spaces of gender, class, caste, ethnicity, religion and likes so as to forge a belief that the space of economy is ahistorical and it is only the hegemony of the economy which matters in real life. This course will explore various forms of entanglements between these different sites of socialization and throw light on the exclusivist agenda of the economy-centric approach often adopted to study neoliberal globalization. It is also now well-known that the neoliberal space of capitalism is not without periodic crisis. The question is if the state or any other agency in the current time can truly play any effective role to prevent the crisis or it is something which is inherent in the capitalist economic system world over. The point to note is that capitalism has gone through different phases of crisis and it is still going through some of them. However, capitalism has somehow managed to save itself from these crises (either through Keynesian measures or in terms of different forms of state-capitalism). But in recent time what we are witnessing is a demand for a stronger programme of neoliberal reform at the face of economic crises except some state-aided rescue programmes when these crises erupt. Once again there is a need to understand this aspect of neoliberalism and explore how the classical political economists understood inherent crisis of capitalism and whether some alternative thinking in terms of social transformation can be thought from some non-mainstream social scientists’ viewpoints or not.

B) Classical Political Economy Revisited: In this context, one of the objectives of the course is to make an interface with classical political economy starting with Adam Smith where the economy is portrayed as one of the sites of the society – an insight missing today in the very understanding of economy in mainstream neoclassical economics. A major part of this course will cover theories and doctrines of classical political economy and introduce the attendees to a world of thinking which is still relevant to devise resistance to the orthodoxy of neoliberal economics. In this context, it is also important to recognize and study in detail how the later developments in the discipline in the form of neoclassical economics have separated the domains of theory and application in order to give the discipline the status of a proto-science. This status is often invoked while designing public policies and recommendations. A careful review of the classic texts of political economy will reveal this politics of knowledge production and how it affects our everyday life intermixed in the dynamics of economic fundamentalism and social struggle. This course’s call for ‘Return to the Classics’ will not only expose and explicate the global hegemony of economic thinking, but will also interrogate the so-called old doctrines to the effect of exhuming the conflicted narratives of the discipline’s formative principles and their devastating implications.

C) Classical Political Economy Revisited: In this context, one of the objectives of the course is to make an interface with classical political economy starting with Adam Smith where the economy is portrayed as one of the sites of the society – an insight missing today in the very understanding of economy in mainstream neoclassical economics. A major part of this course will cover theories and doctrines of classical political economy and introduce the attendees to a world of thinking which is still relevant to devise resistance to the orthodoxy of neoliberal economics. In this context, it is also important to recognize and study in detail how the later developments in the discipline in the form of neoclassical economics have separated the domains of theory and application in order to give the discipline the status of a proto-science. This status is often invoked while designing public policies and recommendations. A careful review of the classic texts of political economy will reveal this politics of knowledge production and how it affects our everyday life intermixed in the dynamics of economic fundamentalism and social struggle. This course’s call for ‘Return to the Classics’ will not only expose and explicate the global hegemony of economic thinking, but will also interrogate the so-called old doctrines to the effect of exhuming the conflicted narratives of the discipline’s formative principles and their devastating implications.

During the week-long course, stress will be on the above three themes pertaining to Globalization, Crisis and Public Policy which will be discussed by economists, historians, political scientists, geographers, and social scientists from other disciplines from various national and foreign universities and research institutes.

Structure:

  • The course will have six days of lectures, discussions, presentations by the participants, book review sessions and field visits. Each day will have six hours of academic activities (36 hours in total). There will be 4 hours of evaluation/interactive/valedictory sessions on the 7th day (November 29). With 40 hours of activities in total, this will be equivalent to a semester course.

  • The course will cover both general epistemic frameworks and politics of knowledge formation as well as policy issues specific to the Indian context.

  • A special session is also planned to initiate a comparative discussion of the Chinese economy and its model of growth vis-à-vis the Indian economy.

  • On the whole, this course promises to contribute a fresh and critical perspective to the ongoing debates on the interfaces among the ideals of neoliberalism, processes of globalization, and mechanisms of crisis management in a postcolonial economy such as ours.

  • Each day of the orientation programme will begin with a key note, and will be followed by discussions on assignments by participants, classes, and interactive sessions.

  • Lectures will constitute about 55-60 percent of the total time, and the rest of the time will be devoted to interactive sessions, reading sessions, participants’ seminars.

  • Apart from the regular presentation of their own works, participants will also be asked to read, review and discuss few specific texts relevant to the theme.

  • The course will also extend the possibility of offering extensive field visits to the tannery hub at Bantala near Kolkata and/or the Calcutta Port to gauge in detail the connections between policy implications infused in economic rationalism and logistical implementations governed by practical conditions and impediments in this era of globalization.

  • The reading materials for the course will be circulated among the selected participants beforehand and they will be required to submit writing assignments before the actual course starts in November.

Organization: There will be registration fee for the participants. Outstation participants will have to cover their own travel and accommodation. Last day of application will be 23 August 2015. Application will have to be accompanied with bio details, a letter of intent, and details of research interest, and one reference letter. Inquiries may be addressed to Dr. Iman Mitra (iman@mcrg.ac.in), Research Associate, Calcutta Research Group. Professor Byasdeb Dasgupta, Professor of Economics of University of Kalyani and also, a member of the Governing Body, Calcutta Research Group, and Dr. Iman Mitra are the joint coordinators of the course. The course will be jointly organized with Rabindra Bharati University which will provide the necessary resources to run the course successfully.

Certification: This course will be a six credit course. Those who will successfully participate in the course will get certificates and grades according to their performance as per present norms. The said certificate will be jointly issued by Calcutta Research Group and Rabindra Bharati University.

Output: Selected papers from the course will be published in the respective journals of University of Kalyani, Rabindra Bharati University and Calcutta Research Group. And also, a plan is there to publish the course materials in book form – the major initiative of which will be undertaken by the Calcutta Research Group.

Annexure 1- Registration Form

Annexure 2- Programme Schedule

Annexure 3- Resources Persons

Annexure 4- Report

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 A Two day Workshop on Digitization of Identity and its Impact on the Migrant Masses

Organized by : Calcutta Research Group in collaboration with the CSCS, Bangalore, on 29-30 June, 2012

1. In an official site dedicated exclusively to the subject, the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) defines the contours of the Unique Identification (UID) project or ‘Aadhaar’, to use the official brand name: “The UIDAI’s mandate is to issue every resident a unique identification number linked to the resident’s demographic and biometric information, which they can use to identify themselves anywhere in India, and to access a host of benefits and services.”[1] The tone of the governmental expatiation on the subject is in the language of welfare. It speaks in terms of the benefits and advantages that would accrue to the people once they enrol themselves. 

2. This description stokes three broad causes of anxiety. First, the citizen or ‘resident’, to use the official site’s stated category, may fear an erosion of the right to privacy, and resist what he or she may believe to be intrusive surveillance. This aspect has been detailed by perceptive observers.[2] Second, people may find the Aadhaar project disabling, in that it tries to reduce plural identities to a statist mono-dimensionality. Third, the tax-paying homo oeconomicus may find the cost such a project would necessarily entail forbidding. Besides these three misgivings, there is also the anxiety, namely, that in order for the project to expeditiously draw the entire nation into its net it would require tremendous governmental will and bureaucratic alacrity, which, even the most conformist member of the citizenry would concede, is a dubious proposition, given India’s underwhelming track record, and hence the project may become in future one more in the long line of India’s half or poorly finished, or bungled and aborted, projects. 

3. But, this is only one half of the problem that the UID project engenders; for beyond the ambit of citizenship, lurks the figure of the non-citizen, who is often the alien or the migrant, or the victim condemned for AIDS (similar to the leper in the past ages), or the person once suspected of terrorism and thus condemned forever. The UID debate therefore needs to consider the possible impact it would have on non-citizen residents. They make up, though a minority in terms of numbers, a significant cross-section of the resident population in India and find themselves in a society and polity that displays unique features in terms of how it regulates the presence and exit of foreigners in its territory, which is often configured and visualized in terms of circles. Thus one may be a migrant in one part of the territory, in another part not. One may be allowed to visit or settle in one area, in another not. Further, the incoherence of the legal and administrative mechanism regulating asylum seekers, refugees, and stateless persons in India has the potential to translate the lack of, or precarious, legal identities in social life of these individuals in ways that may negatively impact them. 

4. At the same time, it would be worth thinking aloud whether, on the contrary, the UID project would benefit migrants — labouring and non-labouring — in the Indian context given that their limited rights are not translated in reality into the existing social, economic, and political institutional set up. Questions of identity, surveillance, protection rights, and humanitarian considerations with regard to refugees/ stateless /asylum seekers are all the more relevant given the anxieties displayed by the Indian state in relation to them. It is in this specific context of resident non-citizens that this proposal for a workshop intends to comprehend the complexities of this project. The proposal also has in mind the fact that internal migrants may also suffer from some of the disabilities from which the immigrant or the resident non-citizen may suffer. 

5. The UID of course claims that welfare considerations are uppermost in the government’s mind in this project, as it says, “A crucial factor that determines an individual’s well-being in a country is whether their identity is recognized in the eyes of the government. Weak identity limits the power of the country’s residents when it comes to claiming basic political and economic rights. The lack of identity is especially detrimental for the poor and the underprivileged, the people who live in India’s ‘social, political and economic periphery’. Agencies in both the public and private sector in India usually require a clear proof of identity to provide services. Since the poor often lack such documentation, they face enormous barriers in accessing benefits and subsidies”.[3] Yet, it has been argued that even though the measure is silent and denies either profiling or centralizing information, “convergence is a predictable and inevitable consequence of the UID project”.[4] The convergence of UID with other initiatives such as the National Intelligence Grid (Natgrid) makes it clear beyond doubt that surveillance is one of the key objectives of the project.[5]  

6. As we have already noted, refugees, asylum seekers, stateless persons, and other immigrants form a broad category of residents with fluid identity in India. A large majority of them share some form of ties with India – historical, religious, ethnic, linguistic. The legal basis for their stay is varied. For instance, Nepali nationals are allowed to live, own property and carry out economic activities under the Indo-Nepal Treaty of Peace and Friendship, 1950.[6] Refugees and asylum seekers usually have some form of identification[7] and are considered to live legally in India. This category includes nationals from the African continent (Somalis, Sudanese, Congolese, Ethiopians), those from within the South Asian region, including the Burmese, Sri Lankan Tamils and Sinhalese, Bangladeshis, Pakistanis, Afghans, and Tibetans and lastly others from outside of South Asia including the Palestinians, Iranians, and Iraqis. It is impossible to say with accuracy, at least in case of those who share common ties with those of the North East India for instance, whether they are foreigners or part of Assam, Manipur, Mizoram or Arunachal. Some others such as the stateless (for instance the Nepalis of Bhutanese origin who are unable to go back to Bhutan and are not recognized in India) and the refugees who do not submit a claim for protection to UNHCR in New Delhi are “illegal foreigners” and if detected, are subject to deportation. Most, if not all, immigrants falling within this category share some similarities with the local host population, as in case of Bangladeshis, the Burmese, Nepalis, Sri Lankan Tamils and Pakistanis. Immigration and immigration management is complex because under the broad framework of the Constitution and the laws applying to foreigners and citizens is a combination of mostly ad-hoc administrative policies, agreements and practices that reflect the nature of migration, the nationality of immigrants, India’s foreign policy and the political relations between the two countries. While immigration control policy in such background has already assumed gigantic proportions, the issue is: What bearing will this project of UID have on the practices of care given that even factors such as geographic location or national identity of refugees/ asylum seekers/ stateless persons also assumes an important role and determines the response of various administrative bodies (for instance, recognized Somali refugees living in Delhi and those living in Hyderabad get treated differently, or Tibetans and the Chins are differently treated)? Even the supervisory and monitoring agencies are varied.  

7. To discuss the issue of identity and identification, we need of course a historical perspective. To be sure, technologies of surveillance are not novel to the modern state, in particular a neoliberal state. Methods of imposing state-sponsored identity on individuals by way of documentation, or even by the direct inscription of such identity on bodies, thereby making them legible to the statist optic, are legion. And this is not by any means new or futuristic, as the standard Hollywood sci-fi fare, dishing out techno-babble, uchronia and insertion of microchips into the brainstem, would have us believe. It could be the chehra and dagh system — keeping detailed description of each soldier and each horse — of Alauddin Khalji, which, once introduced, became the standard procedure of military administration for all the Sultans and the Mughals later[8]; it could also be the colonial methods of identifying, cataloguing and monitoring criminal tribes, sometimes through the use of the notorious penal tattoo or godna, also through the development and deployment of “scientific means for the detection of the habitual criminal, and specialized police departments for record and identification.”[9] From the 1890s, such ‘scientific means’ included anthropometric record as well as fingerprint identification. Apart from these, for the people in general there were always the standard colonial tool of demographic surveillance (the census) and geographic definition (cartography). 

8. To understand what is ‘new’ about the neoliberal political motivation driving the UID project, or to flag the difference between the pre/colonial and postcolonial regimes of supervisory documentation, one needs to look at the issue from two perspectives. First, viewed as a matter of extent and intensity, it has to be admitted that the earlier regimes came nowhere close to the present postcolonial state in terms of penetration and coverage insofar as surveying its population is concerned. The transition from the colonial to the postcolonial nation-state, in fact, witnessed a hardening of supervisory will and the decades thereafter have seen the snowballing of state-sponsored monitoring. This has been aided above all by digital technology — the preponderance of electronic identity markers, be it the passport, the Electoral Photo Identity Card (Epic), Permanent Account Number (PAN), or now, the incipient UID. Second, while emphasizing the comparatively limited character of the colonial state, one must not make the mistake of assuming that it was in any way weak; it could administer relatively arbitrarily because it did not have to seek legitimacy from the people it sought to govern. The modern nation-state, of course, is answerable to the electorate and to the somewhat fickle public opinion, which has become undeniably more aware and informed due to the explosive growth of the media, print and audiovisual. This is somewhat paradoxical, since the very technology which allows the neoliberal state more penetration and coverage also imposes a check on statist arbitrariness by keeping the ‘public’ at large posted. However, the point to make here is that, given the exposure and accountability, the nation-state cannot simply talk in terms of security and foist intrusive surveillance on the people. It has to window-dress its agenda of securitization with the rhetoric of welfare. Or, to put it somewhat differently, the state professed commitment to ensure provisions of security of life and welfare leads inexorably to the securitization of the state and the polity. In the case of UID, too, the central government has resorted to such combination of argument (or, rhetoric if you like) of welfare and hard security thinking. The state wants to give an impression that welfarist objectives animate the project; however given the scale, costs and what it seeks to achieve in reality, it would be naïve to assume that such a system would leave non-citizens and migrants untouched, especially in the context of the high degree of anxiety over issues of both internal and external national insecurity. 

9. Such technologies of surveillance — and the regime of digitized identities produced through these technologies — will inevitably force doctrinaire simplification of groups and individuals, totally at a remove from the real-life palimpsest-like textures of group and individual identities. This is likely to be most acutely felt by marginal and migrant groups, owing to their already-endemic precariousness. This has historically not seemed to bother the powers that be, insofar as supervisory technologies successfully render more visible the population at large and enable its harnessing to the logic of accumulation — be it colonial capital or finance capital of various types.  

10. But, this is merely what the state-capital-security complex (somewhat like what John Kenneth Galbraith termed as, “military-industrial complex”) wills. While it is true that such a regime of digitized identities aims at mapping and monitoring individuals totally, it is also true that the grand plan of state-sponsored surveillance is often resisted on the ground by individual actors who resist the logic of docile production and work out innovative techniques of self-making and survival. The conflictive, yet the mutually constitutive relation between on one hand statist technologies of control cum surveillance, and on the other hand the subjective techniques of self-making and survival, finds an experientially rich and politically-economically dynamic manifestation in the liminal figure of the migrant, always-already marginal yet at the core of the statist anxiety about the ungovernable ‘foreigner’. 

11. All these issues need to be debated with regard to the welfarist claims of not only the UID for migrant population groups within the country but also for many such identificatory initiatives taken and operationalized by the states over time. Instances of discrimination are galore: A Bihari worker is shot dead in Mumbai. A Tamil worker is harassed in Karnataka. A Muslim Bengalee worker in the diamond-polishing industry is hounded out of Mumbai. Or, a Bihari farm worker is killed in Jammu and Kashmir, or Punjab, or a brick kiln worker from Eastern Uttar Pradesh is shot dead in Manipur or Assam. In many places migrant workers are discriminated in regard to local rights or social security considerations. How will a unique number or other state-sponsored schemes help migrant labour groups, existing as they are in a state of nearly complete disenfranchisement?  

12. In the light of the observations made above, the proposed two-day workshop will move along four distinct, but intertwined, trajectories: 

·           The workshop will look at the historical experiences of surveillance and how they have intensified  over time. The role played by the introduction of digital technology in the late twentieth century will be traced.

·           Narrowing the field of inquiry, the workshop will, at another level, look at the UID project and the governmental aims underlining it. How dependable is the welfarist tenor of the state? What are the security concerns that under gird such tenor? Is security the only real issue and welfare is but empty     shibboleth? Or is it possible, after all and from the migrants’ point of view, to secure some amount of social security (as distinct from welfarist hyperbole) for the migrant through digitization of his/her identity?

·           At a third level, the link between the UID project, migrant groups and their experiences of the  project will be established through ethnographic reports. The possible impact of the project on migrants   — labouring and non-labouring — will be assessed, not only in terms of what the state extracts or inflicts upon them but also by way of understanding how these people negotiate with, strategize against, submit to, and overwhelm the UID design.

·           Finally, and through all these, the workshop will try to understand what it means to delineate the   identity of a migrant in the framework of a state that runs on fixed notions of population, territory, loyalty, citizenship, etc., while the migrant represents a situation of transit in the process of   accumulation of capital.   

13. As the mechanism and institutional structures to implement the UID Project have been put in place recently and only few reports evaluating the pilot projects are available[10], this workshop would arguably run the risk of speculation vis-à-vis the impact it would have on “foreigners”. This workshop will seek to address this lacuna by juxtaposing historical lessons, analysis of stated political and governance imperatives, and ethnographic reports. Also it will be crucial to take note of local reports on various kinds of responses relating to documenting the migrants under the UID scheme. 

14. Under the rubric of the UID project, other state-sponsored identificatory measures and the assessment of their impact on migrants in India, this workshop will aim at identifying the process whereby the language of welfare is inserted by states in their securitization plans, how digitization and surveillance have intertwined to etch new lineaments of a penetrative supervisory regime, and how this intertwining affects, distorts and morphs the way marginal individuals — the migrants, in this case — view themselves and their location in the polity and, how these men and women, faced with the ever-renewing series of dispossession, work out their own strategies of survival.  

Notes

[1]UIDAI, Planning Commission, Government of India http://uidai.gov.in/index.php/aadhaar.html [Accessed on April 09, 2012][2] See for instance Usha Ramanathan, “A Unique Identity Bill”, Economic and Political Weekly, vol. XLV, no. 30, July 24, 2010, pp. 10-14, Taha Mehmood, “The Fuzzy Logic of National Frontiers or a Frontier Nation: Reflections on the Multi-Purpose National Identity Card Scheme in India” in Sarai Reader07 Frontiers, New Delhi: Impress, 2007, pp. 144-158.
[3] Ibid. p.10.
[4] Usha Ramanathan, A Unique Identity Bill, 24 July 2010, Vol XLV, No. 30, Economic and Political Weekly, pp. 10-14, at p.11.
[5] ibid.
[6] Article 6 and 7 of the India Nepal Treaty of Peace and Friendship, 1950 are relevant.
Article 6 states, “Each government undertakes, in token of the neighbourly friendship between India and Nepal, to give to the nationals of the other, in its territory, national treatment with regard to participation in industrial and economic development of such territory and to the grant of concessions and contracts relating to such development”.
Article 7 states, “The Governments of India and Nepal agree to grant, on a reciprocal basis, to the nationals of one country in the territories of the other the same privileges in the matter of residence, ownership of property, participation in trade and commerce, movement and other privileges of a similar nature.” http://untreaty.un.org/unts/1_60000/3/9/00004432.pdf (accessed 23 August 2010)

[7] They are required to register with UNHCR in Delhi and hold at least an Under Consideration Certificate, which is made infructuous until the decision on their refugee claim is made final.
[8] Ghulam Sarwar Khan Niazi, The Life and Works of Sultan Alauddin Khalji, New Delhi: Mehra Offset Press, 1992, pp. 45-70; For the Mughal practice of dagh-o-tashih and chehra navisi, see Banarsi Prasad Saksena, History of Shahjahan of Dihli, New Delhi: Central Book Depot, 1958, p. 284.
[9] Radhika Singha, “Settle, Mobilize, Verify: Identification Practices in Colonial India”, Studies in History, vol. 16, no. 2, August 2000, p. 14; for an exhaustive account, also see, Clare Anderson, Legible Bodies: Race, Criminality, and Colonialism in South Asia, Oxford: Berg, 2004, in passim.
[10] Surojit Mahalanobis, “People count gaining smooth momentum”, Times of India, July 23, 2004, http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/788272.cms (accessed August 21, 2010); Dipak Mishra, “Bihar government refuses to implement ID-Card Plan”, Times of India, February 13, 2003, http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/37306745.cms (accessed August 21, 2010); Tusha Mittal, “Falling between the barcodes, Tehelka, vol.6, issue 33, August 22, 2009, http://www.tehelka.com/story_main42.asp?filename=Ne220809falling_between.asp (accessed August 23, 2010)

Annexure 1- Registration Form

Annexure 2- Programme Schedule

Annexure 3- Report

Report on the Report Release From Responsibility to Response: Assessing National Approaches to Internal Displacement by Elizabeth Ferris, Erin Mooney and Chareen Stark

Organized by : Calcutta Research Group

The Calcutta Research Group organized a report release programme of From Responsibility to Response: Assessing National Approaches to Internal Displacement by Elizabeth Ferris, Erin Mooney and Chareen Stark. The event was organized at Academy of Fine Arts, Kolkata on 5 April 2012. The report was released by Walter Fernandes, Director, North Eastern Social Research Centre, Guwahati. The Programme was followed by a panel discussion  on The National Approaches of Countries of South Asia on Internal Displacement. The panelists are Ameena Mohsin, Department of International Relations, Dhaka University, Bangladesh; Subodh Raj Pyakurel, Chairperson, INSEC, Nepal; I.A.Rehman, Director, Human Rights Commission of Pakistan; Jeevan Thyagaraja, Director, Consortium of Humanitarian Agencies, Sri Lanka; and Paula Banerjee, CRG and Department of South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Calcutta.

Annexure 1- Report

Report on the book launch of Does the Elephant Dance?: Contemporary Indian Foreign Policy by David M Malone

Organized by : Calcutta Research Group in collaboration with the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and Oxford University Press

The Calcutta Research Group in collaboration with the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and Oxford University Press organized the book launch of Does the Elephant Dance?: Contemporary Indian Foreign Policy by David M Malone. The event was organized at The Oberoi Grand on May 11, 2011. The book was released by His Excellency M K Narayanan, Honorable Governor of West Bengal.

Annexure 1- Report
 

The Workshop on Women and Peace: Moving towards UNSCR (1325) and National Action Plan (India) dated 13-14 March 2011

Organized by : Sansristi and PIPFPD (Odhisa)

A workshop held in Bhubaneswar on women and peace which focused on the United Nation Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) and National Action plan (India).on March 13th & 14th 2011 .It was organized by Sansristi and PIPFPD (Odhisa Chapter).

Annexure 1- Report
 

The Workshop on Media and Forced Migration Gangtok, Sikkim dated 21-23 January 2011

Eviction from one’s homeland occurs because of various causes, including conflict, natural or manmade disasters and the so-called development drives. As a result, people are forced to migrate and relocate often amid poor living conditions, uncertainty and insecurity. This problem is encountered in many parts of the world, and the North-east is one of the hotspots today. However, it often does not get due coverage in the media, and many journalists feel that the resources, tools and skills to cover this issue at their disposal is inadequate. The Gangtok media workshop sought to address this issue. Its purpose was to discuss and prepare a toolkit and reader for media persons in the North-east on forced migration.

Annexure 1- List of Participants
Annexure 2-
Report

 

Orientation Workshop on ‘Care and Protection of Refugees and IDPs in Nepal’ – Kathmandu, Nepal, 21 to 23 November 2010

The Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group (CRG) every year in Kolkatta organises the Annual Winter Course on Forced Migration –A Program on Protection of Refugees, the Internally Displaced and other victims of Forced Migration”. The Winter Course is a product of CRG’s research, dialogues, and advocacy work on autonomy, human rights, issues of forced displacement and migration, forced migration, peace and conflict resolution, citizenship, borders and border-conflicts, and other issues originating from the conflicts around what may be called the “sacred geographies” of the nation-states in South Asia .  

This year (2010), the CRG is organizing a similar workshop in Nepal from 21 to 23 November. The workshop is intended for academics, refugee rights activists and others working in the field of human rights and humanitarian assistance for victims of forced displacement. The workshop will deal with issues relating to refugee flows in South Asia with special reference to Nepal, violence, conflicts, and forced migration, national and international regime of protection, regional trends in forced migration, internal displacement, gendered nature of forced migration and protection framework, and environmental displacement.

The workshop will emphasise the experiences of displacement and refugee life, camp experiences, critical legal and policy analysis, and analysis of relevant notions such as vulnerability, care, risk, protection, return and re-settlement.

Annexure 1 – Concept Note
Annexure 2 –
Programme Schedule

Annexure 3-
List of Participants
Annexure 4 –
Reading List
Annexure 5 –
Assignment

 

 Two day Workshop On State of Research on Forced Migration in the East and Northeast Jointly organized by Indian Institute of Advanced Study (IIAS), Shimla, Panos South Asia and Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group (CRG) || Date: 12-13 February, 2010 || Venue: Hotel Pragoti Manor, Guwahati

The two day research workshop  on  “State of Research on Forced Migration in the East and Northeast jointly organized by Indian Institute of Advanced Study (IIAS), Shimla, Panos South Asia and Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group (CRG) in Hotel Pragoti Manor, Guwahati from 12-13 February 2010 explored the possibilities for newer research agendas through a stock taking exercise of ongoing and previous research on resource politics, conflict, militarization and disasters that led to forced migration and displacement in India’s east and north east. The workshop was attended by scholars from various academic institutions in east and north east India; activists; and media persons.

Annexure 1 – Concept Note
Annexure 2 –
Programme Schedule

Annexure 3-
List of Participants
Annexure 4 –
Reading List
Annexure 5 –
Report

Dialogue on Protection Strategies for People in Situations of Forced Migration in Collaboration with UNHCR Kolkata, 14-15 December 2008

The history of forced migration has presently been recognized as a history of mixed and massive flows of people, which have rendered, to a considerable extent, the older forms of protection inadequate. These early signs of new kinds of flows on the map of forced migration have led governments and humanitarian agencies to adopt newer strategies to cope with massive displacements and unrest. In this context - of massive and mixed flows of forced migration and the need for newer strategies to handle such migrations - Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group (CRG) proposed to UNHCR to hold a dialogue that would focus on the relevant experiences of South Asia. The UNHCR graciously accepted this proposal in the spirit of collegiality and the idea emerged that the Sixth Annual Winter Course on Forced Migration could have a special segment on protection strategies in the wake of the emerging situation of forced migration in form of mixed and massive flows, where experts from all over South Asia along with key UNHCR personnel, engaged with the South Asian situation, could participate and deliberate on possibilities of new protection strategies.
Annexure 1 –
Recommendation
Annexure 2 –
Programme Schedule

Annexure 3-
Report on the Dialogue

 

   

Two-Day Consultative Meeting on Development, Democracy, and Governance: Broad Lessons from Post-Colonial Experiences of India Bhubaneswar, 24-26 May 2008

In 2003 the Calcutta Research Group (CRG) with assistance of the Ford Foundation embarked on a research programme on some of the critical questions facing post-colonial democracies, such as India. Since then CRG has conducted collective research into issues of autonomy and social justice. The research and the dialogues on the theme of autonomy, and the significant case studies it undertook led to further work – this time on the theme of justice, in particular on social justice. Researchers and members who participated in the numerous dialogues on autonomy repeatedly came up with the issue of governmentalised forms of autonomy as against the demands and ideas of autonomies that sought to address the incipient demands for justice. The constitutional, legal, financial, resource-centred, administrative, gender-just – various forms of autonomies were investigated and discussed, in as much were discussed the philosophical-political-historical issues related to the issue of autonomy. There were public lectures on “autonomous voices”. Several research reports were published, and three volumes came out of the programme, namely, The Politics of Autonomy, Indian Autonomy – Keywords and Key Texts, and Autonomy – Beyond Kant and Hermeneutics. The CRG website and its small archive contain resources on this theme and related issues for the benefit of further research in this area.  

Annexure 1 – Concept Note
Annexure 2 –
Brief Summary

   

Two-Day National Conference on the Resettlement & Rehabilitation of the Displaced Persons organized by the National Human Rights Commission in Delhi on 24 and 25 March 2008 

Prof. Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chowdhury participated in the Two-Day National Conference on the Resettlement And Rehabilitation of the Displaced Persons organised by the National Human Rights Commission in Delhi on 24 and 25 March 2008 on behalf of Calcutta Research Group. CRG’s participation has been quite useful in the proceedings of the conference. It is to CRG’s credit that few of its recommendations have been duly incorporated in the draft recommendations meant for the Parliamentary Standing Committee dealing with the Land Acquisition Bill 2007, Resettlement and Rehabilitation Bill 2007 and Resettlement and Rehabilitation Policy 2007. The role of CRG in this field has also been appreciated by the Chairman and other representatives of NHRC during formal and informal discussions. On belaf of CRG, Prof. Basu Ray Chowdhury extended an invitation to Justice S. Rajendra Babu, Chairman, NHRC for his presence in the forthcoming Sixth Winter Course on Forced Migration.
 

   

Two-Day Indo-French Seminar on ‘State Formation, Citizenship and Gender’ Organized by Calcutta Research Group in collaboration with Indian Council of Social Science Research (Eastern Regional Centre) and University of Calcutta, 13-14 March 2008

Calcutta Research Group in collaboration with Indian Council of Social Science Research (Eastern Regional Centre) and University of Calcutta organized two day Indo-French Seminar on State Formation, Citizenship, and Gender. The details concept note, schedule and report are attached.
Annexure 1 –
Concept Note
Annexure 2 –
Report and Schedule

   

Responsibility to Protect'(R2P)  Conference at Bangkok, 20-21 February 2008

Subir Bhaumik, member of CRG, attended the ‘Responsibility to Protect’ (R2P) Conference at Bangkok, 20-21 February 2008. Subir Bhaumik presented his views on behalf of CRG, the details of which are given below: 
“ My organization, the Calcutta Research Group, is aware of the R2P resolution adopted at the 2005 World Summit and values its worth as a human security instrument for prevention and tackling situation of genocide, ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity. But it is the considered opinion of the CRG that the R2P regime should be extended to address issues of mass displacement created by both ethnic and class conflict and by the forces of economic liberalization and globalization. Large scale displacement, as evidenced from our studies in various parts of South Asia, creates situations of immense conflict that could lead to bloodshed. Since this conference has discussed in some detail the need for "early warning systems" about possible genocides and crimes against humanity, the CRG feels that the R2P regime will be effective only if it is redesigned to address issues of mass displacement caused both by conflict or by economic forces.
I also asked the funding organizations like Austcare and R2P Secretariat for Asia (newly formed during the Conference) to consider studies on ethnic conflicts creating situations of ethnic cleansing (which is in the core agenda of the R2P) in northeastern India, Kashmir and elsewhere in the sub-continent noting that CRG has already carried out studies in these areas. “

   

Societies, States, “Terror” and “Terrorism” - A Historical and Philosophical Perspective

Thu 2 nov (9AM-6PM)
Room 214 (2nd floor left), Maison des Sciences de l'Homme , 54 bd Raspail, 75006 Paris
Fri 3 nov (9AM-7PM)
Maison de l'Europe, 35 rue des Francs-Bourgeois, 75004 Paris.
Sat 4 nov (9:30AM-4PM)
Room ground floor, Agence universitaire de la Francophonie (A.U.F.), 4 place de la Sorbonne, 75005 Paris

Coordinated by Rada IVEKOVIć and Ranabir SAMADDAR. 

Conference co-organized with the Calcutta Research Group (MCRG) and with the support of the Maison des Sciences de l’Homme (Paris), of the Maison de l’Europe de Paris, of the French Ministère de l’Éducation nationale, of the Services de Coopération et d'Action Culturelle of the French Embassies in India and in Tunisia, of the Centre Culturel Français d'Alger, of the Columbia University in Paris, Reid Hall, of the Global Fund for Women, and of the Universidade de São Paulo. 

The end of the Cold War has brought wars on a big scale back. While there is no balance of power and no possible consensus between opposite political options in international relations, the mainstream discourse on Human Rights, Democracy, Security, Globalisation and “War on terror” takes part in a general desemantisation and depoliticisation. Most (all?) histories have had their ages of terror, whether nominally described or not; yet it is an important question as to why, when, and which times are subsequently called the times of terror. We cannot ignore either the singularity of these times, or their generalities. The “universal” description of some “terrorism” supposed to be essential or exemplary, supposed to be a case study of terrorism, is used in order to erase some terrors, while generalising others. It is in the name of effacing terrorism for good that the worst terror is being practiced. Under theses conditions, both “terror” and “terrorism” (can) become normative concepts. Are philosophy and social sciences capable of making sense of the claims about what are termed unique events of terror? Beyond the historic condition, it would mean grasping the political (le politique; not la politique) at its root. The conference will be the occasion to address these problems through different approaches: philosophy, history, law, sociology, the study of gender or feminist studies, political sciences, literature as well as field work. A general discourse on terrorism raises the following questions: terror as historic event; terror as political discourse or generalised ideology; terror, war on terror and the need for legitimating; historic and discursive relations between democracy and terror; terror as an extension of violence, as “extreme violence”; race, difference and instruments of colonial and postcolonial terror; post-communism, societies and terror; the cold war and the “war on terror”.

Annexure 1 – Programme Schedule
Annexure 2-
Report on the Conference

   

Workshop on the IDPs in India's Northeast 24-26, 2006, Kohima, Nagaland
The Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group (MCRG) in collaboration with the Naga Peoples’ Movement for Human Rights (NPMHR) organised a three-day workshop on the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in India’s Northeast at Hotel Japfu in Kohima, Nagaland during August 24-26, 2006. Academics, human rights activists and media-persons from different parts of India’s East and Northeast participated in this workshop.
In the inaugural session on 24 August, Samir Kumar Das, Research Coordinator, MCRG made some introductory comments indicating the justification of organising such a workshop in Kohima. He also referred to the previous work done by the MCRG in this context. Nepuni, General Secretary, NPMHR, welcomed all the participants. Dr. Monirul Hussain, Professor, Department of Political Science, Gauhati University presented a status report on the IDP Situation in Northeast India and this report was subsequently discussed in the workshop. In fact, Dr. Hussain’s presentation acted as the keynote address to the workshop. Apart from a concept note and Monirul Hussain’s keynote address, copies of an article entitled “Nobody’s People in No-man’s Land” by Subir Bhaumik [in Paula Banerjee, Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury and Samir Kumar Das (eds.), Internal Displacement in South Asia, (Sage: 2005)] and another one entitled “Population Displacement in India: A Critical Review” by Samir Kumar Das and Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury (published in Refugee Watch) were circulated among the participants as reference points for discussion in the workshop. Walter Fernandes, Director, North Eastern Social Research Centre, chaired this session. Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury, Secretary, MCRG, proposed a formal vote of thanks at the end of the session.
More Details
CLICK HERE

 

   

Conference on Conflicts, Law and Constitutionalism

Jointly organised by Maison Des Sciences De L 'Homme & CRG, Paris (16-18 February, 2005) 
Programme Inde et Asie du Sud / South Asia Programme
Séminaire international du 16 au 18 février 2005
Salle 214
, Maison des Sciences de L’homme
54 Boulevard Raspail, Paris 6e (métro Sèvres-Babylone)

Annexure 1 – Programme Schedule

   

Civil Society Dialogues

1. Till date three (3) dialogues have been held on specific issues of peace and human rights in the east and the Northeast. These have drawn on the themes of culture of peace, reconciliation, justice, and democracy: These dialogues have produced a functioning network of cooperation on various peace activities. Northeast is the theatre of the longest state versus community conflict in South Asia and as such occupies a singular position in Indian politics. Different ethnic groups living in this region have been for years pressing either for independence, or separate statehood on the basis of political and linguistic-cultural identities or for special constitutional safeguards of their respective existences.  But what is forgotten often is that while these conflicts have created frontiers and boundaries dividing and re-dividing territory, peoples, and communities, they are not the only feature of the situation. Surviving connections, relations, friendships, and continuing dialogues on the basis of fairness, accommodation, and mutual recognition of claims also mark such a situation. It seems that dialogues and efforts at accommodations and understandings have complimented war, conflicts, and threatened peace. It is with that realization that the dialogue programme was planned. It aims to institute conversations of peace and human rights activists, gender sensitive artists, novelists, painters, litterateurs, students, and youth from the region of Northeast and East.

2. The first dialogue (2001) held in Calcutta engaged with the inquiry: how are we to connect the issue of democracy with peace in a conflict-ridden region and a war-ravaged situation? While it is important to link human rights and peace, in what way can this link be deepened and made specific with ideas of justice, in particular gender justice, cultural democracy, decentralization, and a dialogic culture? It is from such an inquiry and the related realisation, that the first civil society dialogue on human rights and peace in the east and northeast was held. The participants were human rights and peace activists from diverse parts of the east and the Northeast. Its report has been published.

3. The second dialogue (2002) held in Shantiniketan carried forward the inquiry by bringing in notions of cultural democracy and justice, in particular gender justice. The dialogue probed the assertions of identity, abuse of human rights, and increasing violence against women in the entire region. From rape as a symbol of conquered terrain to identifying women as reproducers of identities, gender appears to be a key dimension in many of these conflicts and it is clear that belligerents including the state take gender seriously.  Yet, as the dialogue found, male-centric analysis of identity conflict still tries to disregard the category of gender. These events prompted extensive conversations among human rights activists, grassroots women activists for democracy, and scholars on relevant issues. The report is available.

4. The third dialogue (2003) held in Shillong took up the issue of autonomy, and deliberated on the question of whether autonomy in the northeast and in the Darjeeling area of West Bengal has advanced democracy or has been mainly tool of governing. It also discussed the issue of autonomy within – that is, how much women or minorities within an autonomous area enjoy autonomy and enjoy the fruits of self-government? Various cases were discussed; the international law on minorities and on autonomy was discussed; international experiences were deliberated upon. The report will come out soon.