February 15, 2013

    

 Mapping the Mela: Updates from Harvard's Trip to the Kumbh Mela

 

On the cyclical city, from Anthropology PhD student and GSD team member Namita Dharia: "The dance of regeneration of the city of Kumbh is performed in tandem with the waters of the Ganga. It responds to the cyclical movement of a river flooding and receding and the cyclic movements of a deep historical time: the drops of sacred elixir falling into the confluence of the Yamuna and Ganga and emerging every twelve years. The event reoccurs and reaffirms itself through the performance of ritual, the gathering of people, and through time established modes of production of space." Read more here. 

 

Tarun Khanna, Jorge Paulo Lemann Professor at Harvard Business School and Director of the South Asia Institute visited the Kumbh Mela. He met with religious and Kumbh Mela officials: please see photos below of his trip to the Kumbh Mela.  

 

We have posted photos and a press release from the trip here.   

Also, see the NY Times article on the public health work the Harvard team has done, here: Can Big Data From Epic Indian Pilgrimage Help Save Lives?  

   

Regional Focus: India
"A small-town wonder" - Dinyar Patel (former SAI Graduate Student Associate) reports on a recent conference celebrating the Meherjirana Library in Navsari, Gujarat

 

Navsari is a small, relatively sleepy town about 20 kilometers to the southwest of Surat. For the Parsi community, however, it has for centuries been a critically important center of Zoroastrian scholarship and priestly training, reverentially referred to as "dharamni tekri" or the summit of the religion. Today, it is home to the First Dastoor Meherjirana Library, one of the world's most important centers for research on Zoroastrianism and Parsi history. Along with a Harvard alumnus, Dan Sheffield (PhD NELC 2012), I helped organize a major conference on Zoroastrian studies that took place here between 12-15 January 2013. The conference brought scholars from the United States (including Sadaf Jaffer, a former GSA), Japan, Great Britain, Germany, Spain, and across India to Navsari -- the novelist Amitav Ghosh also joined us and spoke on the Parsi presence in Canton. Part of the attraction of being in Navsari is seeing the living Parsi tradition here. While the Parsi population in Navsari has diminished, there are still many families who live in ancestral homes, follow particular rituals and patterns of life that have disappeared elsewhere, and keep alive distinct Parsi traditions, be they in the form of food or textiles. In spite of being labeled as a mofusil outpost, Navsari has regularly punched above its weight. Three of the most important and influential Indians of the 19th century -- Jamsetji Tata, Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy, and Dadabhai Naoroji -- had their roots in the town, and their family houses still survive. More recently, organizations such as the Indian National Trust for National and Cultural Heritage (INTACH), the UNESCO Parsi Zoroastrian Project (Parzor), and the Sir Dorab Tata Trust have come to Navsari and invested in the Meherjirana Library's restoration and the repair of some of its most priceless documents. We hope that this conference helps keep up this tradition by giving the library and Navsari the attention in India and abroad that it deserves.

Read Dinyar's article in the Hindu, here.

SAI's Graduate Student Associates have done some pretty amazing things. Interested in becoming a GSA? The deadline to apply is March 1. Click here for more details. 
Upcoming Seminars

Monday, February 19 at 5 PM: Deruralization: The Modernist City in the Age of Globalization
Vikramaditya Prakash, Professor of Architecture, Adjunct Professor of Landscape Architecture, Adjunct Professor of Urban Design and Planning, and Director of Chandigarh Urban Lab, University of Washington will kick off the urbanization seminar series. Rahul Mehrotra, Professor of Urban Planning and Design and Chair of the Department of Urban Planning and Design at the Harvard Graduate School of Design will moderate the discussion. Click here for more details.

Wednesday, February 20 at 4:00 PM: Sexual Assault and Gender Violence in South Asia: What Can We Learn From the Delhi Rape Incident? A student panel featuring Nur Nasreen Ibrahim (Harvard College), Abbas Jaffer (GSAS), Mariam Chughtai (HGSE), Litcy Kurisinkal (HKS), and Sabrin Chowdhury (HKS) will be chaired by Jackie Bhabha, Jeremiah Smith, Jr. Lecturer on Law, Harvard Law School, University Advisor on Human Rights, University Advisor on Human Rights Education; Director of Research FXB Center Carr Center for Human Rights Policy. The event is co-sponsored by Harvard India Student Group; Harvard Pakistan Student Group; Harvard College South Asian Association; Harvard College Pakistan Student Association; Harvard Kennedy School South Asia Caucus; Harvard College South Asian Women's Collective, Harvard Women's Law Association, the Harvard Kennedy School and Harvard College Women's Center. Click here for more information. The event page also contains a list of relevant resources, updated regularly.

Thursday, February 21 at 4:30 PM: Child Health in South Asia. Jonathan Simon, Chair of International Health and Professor of International Health at Boston University School of Public Health and S. V. Subramanian, Professor of Population Health and Geography in the Department of Society, Human Development and Health at the Harvard School of Public Health will lead this discussion on problems and improvements in child health in South Asia. Learn more here.

Friday, February 22 at 4:00 PM: The Future of Water Security in the Indus River Basin: Risks and Opportunities.  The future of Pakistan is closely tied to the future of the Indus River.  Pakistan relies on the largest contiguous irrigation system in the world, the Indus Basin Irrigation System (IBIS) for its basic food security and water supply for all sectors of the economy. The agriculture sector supported by this system plays a critical role in the national economy and livelihoods of rural communities. Water security is thus critical to the future of Pakistan.  The Indus basin, like other complex river basins, faces a common set of institutional and policy challenges, including international treaty tensions over upstream development, sectoral conflicts across water, agriculture, environment, climate, and energy agencies at the national level, low water productivity in agriculture, and inter-provincial water competition.  Amid this context the basin faces a variable and potentially changing climate. The study uses a variety of methods to assess plausible futures for the Indus and Pakistan's hydro-economy.  This study will present a hydro-economic model of the Indus River within Pakistan that simulates river and canal flows, water use and economic activities with a distributed, partial equilibrium model of the local scale agro-economic activities in the basin. Results suggest that the current governance mechanisms have significant effects on the provinces' ability to adapt to changing climate conditions, inflicting different economic costs under both high and low flow conditions. Alternatively, a governance mechanism that prioritizes national scale water productivity over provincial and scale water allocation largely mitigates the effect of possible climate changes. Tradeoffs between the competing national and provincial scale are explored in the context of water governance mechanisms that facilitate adaptation to a changing climate. Casey Brown, Casey Brown, Assistant Professor, College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Massachusetts Amherst and Chair John Briscoe, Professor of the Practice of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health; Gordon McKay Professor of the Practice of Environmental Engineering, Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences will lead the seminar, which is co-sponsored with the Harvard University Center for the Environment. Learn more here.
 
We have a fantastic line up of seminars ahead - check our Events Page for more details!
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Apply for SAI's Post Doctoral Fellowship in South Asian Studies
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Read the details here.

Saturday, February 16: GBG Dhaka meet-up on "Education & Collaboration Online". Learn more here. RSVP here.

Monday, February 18: President's Day Gold Star Luncheon: Social Entrepreneurship in the Battle Against Human Trafficking & HIV/AIDS. With Ms. Hasina Kharbhih, Founder & President, Impulse NGO Network. Click here for the flier. Register here.

Saturday, April 13: International Seminar on the Relationship between the Environment and Sustainable Development. Invitation and Call for Papers! This event will explore how the development partners can more effectively assist countries like Bangladesh in their leap into the middle income status. Learn more here.

Jain Studies Program in South Asia: Fellowships Available. June 1-July 15, 2013. For more information, click here.

  
CGIS South Bldg, 1730 Cambridge St., Cambridge MA 02138
617-496-4862, sainit@fas.harvard.edu

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