Image: Courtesy of Dev N. Pathak, Sociology, SAU.
About The Department - Vision and Beyond



Over the last half century or so, a vast body of knowledge(s) on the region has evolved within South Asia that mostly remain within the countries of their origin due to a number of reasons. In this specific context, there is a crucial need to share some of this knowledge in contemporary times when, despite assertions of localisations and mini-narratives, the universal does retain its emphasis through a constant dialectics of the two. The debate between the local and universal or mini-narratives and meta-narratives continue to rage, and is more clearly visible in the context of South Asian context. Even so, we are acutely aware of the non-existence of regular and serious forums for South Asian scholarship in social sciences to showcase our own research and thinking. We are also quite conscious of the fact that the process of establishing sociology in the region has created its own peculiarities which has established close inter-relationships between sociology and social anthropology, history, cultural studies, archeology and other related disciplines. We consider the porousness of South Asian sociology one of its most enduring strengths. On the other hand, we are not unaware of the unfortunate regressions sociology has experienced in different South Asian contexts over the last 30 years or so marked by numerous institutional failures.



It is within the context(s) outlined above that the Department of Sociology at South Asian university, initiated in 2011 witihn the Faculty of Social Sciences contributes to teaching, training and knowledge production. It is not intended to be a mere forum for the production of cutting-edge intellectual knowledge and exchange of that knowledge traversing across national borders in South Asia and beyond. Our expectation is that this knowledge would dislocate the persistence of an imposed framework emanating from the colonisation process and postcolonial politics of knowledge. Despite the passage of over fifty years since the process of official decolonization began in the region, much of the analyses of our problems, situations, histories and dynamics emanate from Euro American academia; this is certainly the case when it comes to conceptual formulations and theoretical approaches that are being employed in exploring the region’s social and cultural complexities often without much self-reflection.



The Department of Sociology strongly believes in the need to reformulate this situation by effectively centering South Asia without naively shunning thought from these established centers of knowledge be they in Europe or North America. We believe in an active and robust engagement with these issues within South Asia. In this context, through the work of its faculty and the research of graduate students, the Department would bring forward the newer forms of knowledge that comprehends and represents the South Asian context with a more authoritative and nuanced voice. We strongly believe in the need to actively intervene in the process of knowledge formation through a constant sharing of knowledge that the region produces as well as through interaction with the world beyond the region.



The courses taught in the Department as well as the research carried out by its faculty members reflect this overall vision and our collective commitment towards innovation, move beyond untenable stereotypes, and explore a new world of knowledge within the discipline of Sociology.


Class of 2011, Department of Sociology, South Asian University; Image: Courtesy of Dev N. Pathak, Sociology, SAU.

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Faculty Essay


In Search of a Humanistic South Asia
From Creating Humanistic Borders to Ending Crypto-colonial Aid, SAARC has to offer a  new vision for the world

Mallika Shakya
Department of Sociology
South Asian University
New Delhi

SAARC is thirty years young and I am about a decade older – about the age when a mid-life crisis is permissible. Mine came in the form of a search for a place called home. It ended, for now, in South Asian University in Delhi.

I was born and brought up entirely in Kathmandu, in Nepali medium schools and government colleges. But my only Nepali employer was my mother who ran a small crockery-cutlery shop in Patan. Since nineteen, I have been on the paychecks of the aid industry, home and abroad. That changed when I made a concerted decision to quit aid industry and take up jobs in Oxford and Pretoria.

My current employer South Asian University (SAU) is partly Nepali. The class I teach at SAU is also partly Nepali, but more importantly, it is only partly Indian, while being also partly Afghan, Bangladeshi, Bhutani, Maldivian and Sri Lankan. I am a lot more at home with this class than I would have been if it was just one of any of these nationalities.

SAARC does not control what I do at SAU but the idea of pan-national regionalism in South Asia is common for us both. We at university are busy trying to figure out what all is this ‘regionalism’ that dominates the SAARC talk. But first its political cousin, or flip side of the coin, ‘nationalism.’ In Latin, the word nation referred to a group of foreign students, congregating in a cosmopolitan university from faraway regions. By extension, the word referred to a community of opinion and purpose. Eventually, however, the word nation came to mean a body of a people, bound by passports and flags, and at times unleashed as mobs to keep what it considers ‘others’ out.


The death of humanistic nations


There was probably a time when nations seamlessly spilled into regions in South Asia through flexible borders and humanistic regimes. Ashis Nandy is one of many who claimed that aggressive nationalism crept into South Asia, piggybacking first on colonial hegemony and then on anti-colonial movements. Rabindranath Tagore, an ardent pan-nationalist visionary who lived a century before European scholars coined the term post-nationalism, warned Japan not to follow the Western suit on narrow nationalism. But it seems, his own home region willingly traded humanist borders with Westphalian, soon after it got its own independent nation. Wagah between India and Pakistan is the epitome of Westphalian border psyche. Wars might have given rise to the self-defeating logic behind this hyper-masculine choreography of national muscle-power between India and Pakistan, but the Wagah syndrome now dominates state policies and talks on many other frontiers where India has never officially been at war.

Hyper-masculine nationalism is exactly what is problematic about the choreographed expressions of stately love like those of the SAARC summits. Instead of moderating individual egos to make room for a collective Southasia, summits end up triggering rivalries of nations -- be it about bulletproof cars or paranoiac security arrangements. The idea of South Asia then gets reduced to a mathematical summation of nations when it should have nurtured a common sensibility and belonging for all Southasians.


Let Africa inspire


Let us dig the history of regionalism elsewhere, especially from within the Global South. Let me be provocative and suggest that vision and leadership for this alter-national regionalism need not come only from big and rich nations, but from the tiniest and poorest. Take for example, Aime Cesaire and Franz Fanon – a teacher-student duo who launched the pan-Africanist canon as we know it today, who were both from Martinique, a small Caribbean island with a land area of about one thousand square kilometres and a population of 386,000 inhabitants. In fact, an entire generation of pan-African movement came from the small islands of the Caribbean, including George Padmore and CLR James, who mentored Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana to lead the African independence movement against the European colonization.

African regionalism did not dwell on the statuses of GNP per capita or growth rates, let alone the sizes of army and headcounts of nuclear missiles. Pan-Africanism flourished in the understanding that a community belongs together if they have suffered a common injustice and have risen against it together. It took roots in anti-slavery movement and eventually culminated in an anti-colonial movement. It would not be far fetched to claim that Gandhi fed indirectly off these movements during his two decades in South Africa. Yes, Africa today has many problems including political violence between each other, but it still sets the standard on regionalism for the world. The first pan-national regional unit was not European Union, it was the South African Customs Union which was achieved 1889 and has stayed in place throughout Africa’s colonial and postcolonial turmoil.

Coming back to South Asia, there is nothing bitter about statesmen wining and dining to sign joint declarations, but SAARC will mean much only if it can influence the global order in a meaningful way. Can the world be made more just and democratic, not only for Southasians but for everybody else who has been disenfranchised by colonial history and its postcolonial residues? This and the next generation of Southasians must concern themselves with this central problem, than endless petty bargaining about aid, hydropower and ego-massaging.


Problem of our century 


Aid is a gone game. Half a century long bikas only made Nepal more desperate; the definition of bikas itself needs to be fundamentally altered for any hope to follow for things to improve on the ground.

The main event of the twentieth century was the anti-colonial revolution, but the twenty-first century world remains marred in deeply flawed systems of international development. First of all I want to emphasise that ‘development’ is not a neutral word. Although a dictionary may define it in a certain way, its uses and interpretations are pervasive, and it has come to acquire a political meaning that is clearly hegemonic. It is in this political meaning that ‘development’ or ‘bikas’ of the twentieth century is different from the ‘industrial revolution’ of the century before and ‘enlightenment’ even earlier.

It would be fair to say that, just after WWII, developmentalism replaced colonialism in giving rise to a new global order. When the ‘new states’ in Asia and Africa became independent, development came to be considered the new common goal and aspiration for humanity. There was clearly a great deal of enthusiasm at the time for this. Over time, modalities of development changed, starting from ‘two-sector’ model to a ‘take-off’ model to ‘protectionism’ to ‘economic liberalization’ of the 1990s. Regrettably, however, enthusiasm has died along the way. Scholars like James Ferguson have called today’s aid industry an ‘anti-politics machine’ because it concerns only with technical-managerial projects that carve out jobs for elites and technocrats while distancing itself from the big question of social and political justice.

The reason cynicism took over enthusiasm about development has a lot to do with the fact that this idea came from the West and remained Western, as we see in the current ownership pattern of largest aid organisations and the values they prescribe. Despite calls that the aid industry must put meritocracy over citizenry superiority, the West has stuck with the unwritten tradition that the head of the World Bank is always an American whereas the head of the IMF is always an European. Bilateral donors operate with an implicit two-tier membership. The broader aid community remains bifurcated between ‘local’ NGOs and ‘international.’ In other words, the aid world continues to operate with the logic that donors are always right and poverty is the fault of the poor, in much the same logic that gave rise to a situation where Mt Everest could only be climbed by a white mountaineer and an America could only be discovered by a white explorer.

Does SAARC have a vision to offer to counter this? Does it even care? Or is it just another Queen Victoria in a new garb? Nepal’s new collaboration with anybody, starting with neighbours as we talk of SAARC in this summit, should revolve around efforts that can alter the rules of the game on how to liberate itself and the world from the shackles of crypto-colonial aid.

This essay was originally published in The Record, Nepal (http://recordnepal.com/perspective/search-humanistic-south-asia)

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Contributions to Contemporary Knowledge Lecture Series - 2015

Faculty of Social Sciences at South Asian University
In collaboration with the Department of Sociology

Present

Contributions to Contemporary Knowledge - 2015

Gandhi as a Global Thinker:
Legacies of the Anti-Colonial Revolution

By

Keith Hart

Centennial Professor of Economic Anthropology
Department of International Development
London School of Economics
And
International Director
Human Economy Program
University of Pretoria, South Africa


Date and Time:
Thursday, 29 January 2015; 06.00 PM

Venue:
Multipurpose Hall
India International Centre (IIC), New Delhi

Abstract of lecture: The new human universal is not an idea; it is 7 billion of us searching for ways of living together on this planet. In order to do so we must be able to conceptualise world society as something that each of us can relate to meaningfully. Global thinking is in short supply and I look for it in key moments of world society’s formation.

Europeans launched world society in the nineteenth century when they coerced the peoples of the planet into joining their colonial empires. As a result, by 1900 Europeans controlled 80% of the inhabited land. The main event of the twentieth century was the anti-colonial revolution, when colonised peoples sought to establish their own independent relationship to world society. 

Hart takes two main sources as exemplary of this movement: three New World Panafricanists (W E B Dubois, C L R James and Frantz Fanon) and Mohandas K Gandhi. In the early twentieth century, Panafricanism, fuelled by resistance to racism and was the most inclusive political movement in the world. Gandhi fed indirectly off these currents during his two decades in South Africa.

Kant claimed for himself a Copernican revolution in metaphysics. “Hitherto it has been assumed that all our knowledge must conform to objects… (but what) if we suppose that objects must conform to our knowledge?” Understanding must begin not with the empirical existence of objects, but with the reasoning embedded in all the judgments each of us has made. So the world is inside each of us as much as it is out there. One definition of ‘world’ is ‘all that relates to or affects the life of a person’. Our task is to bring the two poles together as subjective individuals who share the object world in common with the rest of humanity.

Gandhi’s critique of the modern state was devastating. He held that it disabled its citizens, subjecting mind and body to the control of professional experts, when the purpose of a civilization should be to enhance its members’ self-reliance. He proposed an anthropology based on two universal postulates: that every human being is a unique personality and as such participates with the rest of humanity in an encompassing whole. Between these extremes lie a great variety of associations. Gandhi settled on the village as the most appropriate social vehicle for human development.

The problem Gandhi confronted is crucial. If the world is devoid of meaning, then, being governed by remote impersonal forces known only to specially trained experts, leaves each of us feeling small, isolated and vulnerable. Yet, modern cultures tell us that we have significant personalities. In this context, how does one  bridge the gap between a vast, unknowable world, which we experience as an external object, and a puny self, endowed with the subjective capacity to act alone or with others? 

We must scale down the world, scale up the self or a combination of both. Traditionally this task was performed by religion, notably through prayer. Gandhi chose the village as the site of India’s renaissance because it had a social scale appropriate to self-respecting members of the civilization. Moreover, he devoted a large part of his philosophy and practice to building up the personal resources of individuals, not least his own. One aim of the lecture is to bring this project up to date.

About the speaker:  Keith Hart is Centennial Professor of Economic Anthropology in the Department of International Development at the London School of Economics and International Director of the Human Economy Program at the University of Pretoria. He is an anthropologist by training and a self-taught economist who lives in Paris with his family. He also has a home in Durban, South Africa.

Hart studied classics and went on to explore the African diaspora in West Africa, North America, the Caribbean, Britain, France and South Africa. He has taught for a long time in Cambridge University, where he was Director of the African Studies Centre. 

His interests include building a human economy; economic anthropology; money and finance; informal economy; African development; migration; national capitalism; the digital revolution in communications; social media; intellectual property and its discontents; the emergence of world society; world citizenship.

His recent books include Market and Society: The Great Transformation Today (2009), The Human Economy: A Citizen’s Guide (2010) and People, Money and Power in the Economic Crisis: Perspectives from the Global South (Vol. 1 in Berghahn’s Human Economy series), all co-edited volumes. He wrote Economic Anthropology (2011) with Chris Hann. He authored The Memory Bank: Money in an Unequal World (2000) and numerous papers. His next book, about African development in the twenty-first century, will be Africa: The Coming Revolution.

Invitations: If you would like to have an invitation to the lecture, please send a request with your name, postal address, email addresses to the following email addresses: sociology@sau.ac.in; mallika@sau.ac.in
For more information, please contact:

Mallika Shakya, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology
Samson George, Personal Secretary to the Dean, Faculty of Social Sciences
Telephone: +91-11-24122512-14; +91-11-24195000

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Entrapment, Transparency and Technologies of Truth

Department of Sociology Seminar SeriesFaculty of Social Sciences
Monsoon Semester - 2014-15

Entrapment, Transparency and
Technologies of Truth

By Prof. Ravi Sundaram
Centre for the Study of Developing Societies
New Delhi

Abstract: The last decade in India has witnessed a growing number of entrapment events or media 'stings.' Aided by the rapid spread of technological modernity and low-cost media gadgets like mobile phones, the media sting has been carried out by print, TV and new media, transparency campaigners, NGO's, political parties, social movements, and ordinary individuals. This mode of rendering public comes in the background of the controversial Aadhaar programme by the government. As entrapment expands from a police technique to a generalised technology of transparency, it has produced great strains in existing control systems and traumatic disruptions at all levels. I use legal and media archives to reflect on the implications of these new truth strategies for a theory of the contemporary.

Prof. Ravi Sundaram’s work rests at the intersection of the post-colonial city and contemporary media experiences. He was one of the initiators of the Sarai programme which he co-directs. He has co-edited the critically acclaimed Sarai Reader series: The Public Domain (2001), The Cities of Everyday Life (2002), Shaping Technologies (2003), Crisis Media (2004), and Turbulence (2006). His other publications include Pirate Modernity: Media Urbanism in Delhi (2009). Two of his other volumes are No Limits: Media Studies from India (Oxford University Press, 2012) and Delhi’s Twentieth Century (forthcoming OUP).

Date: 12 November 2014, Wednesday

Time: 02.30 PM

FSI HALL, South Asian University, 
Akbar Bhawan, Chanakyapuri,
New Delhi 110021

ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED