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NALSAR UNIVERSITY OF LAW

Accredited in 'A++' grade with a score of 3.52 on a four point scale by NAAC in Cycle 2

Srijan Sandip Mandal

I am a historian, keen on researching and teaching legal history, the philosophy of history, and public history.

I developed my research interests over the nine years that I studied at the University of Hyderabad, where I received my M.A., M.Phil., and Ph.D. degrees in History as well as two awards – the Andhra Bank Medal for “having secured the first rank in the M.A. History examination” and the Dr. (Mrs.) Sheela Raj Memorial Medal for the “best Ph.D. thesis” of the year in History. I pursued my interest in the philosophy of history through my M.Phil. dissertation, which drew on the historiography of Tipu Sultan to demonstrate a Kantian epistemology of history. In the same way, I pursued my interest in legal history through my Ph.D. thesis, which demonstrated that the restrictions on the right to freedom of speech and expression in the Constitution of India were deliberately designed to preserve colonial laws criminalising speech and expression.

I developed a keen interest in public history at the University of Hyderabad as well, but it was only at the Centre for Public History in the Srishti Manipal Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bengaluru, where I was on the faculty for five-and-a-half years, that I learnt about the discipline of public history and began to research it. That is what led to my election to the Steering Committee of the International Federation for Public History, as its Secretary, for a four-year term in 2021.

I have presented my research on legal history to academic audiences in India (at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New Delhi, the University of Hyderabad, and the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai) and abroad (at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., the University of Aberdeen, the Université Paris Diderot, and the European Consortium of Political Research Joint Sessions of Workshops), and I am currently preparing a book proposal based on that research. And my research on public history, I have co-written about in an article for the journal Public History Review and in a chapter for the edited volume What is Public History Globally?

Beyond academic audiences, I have presented my research on legal history to lay audiences as well through articles in ThePrint and Seminar as well as through a conversational video bot named ‘Hukam Singh’ that I created as a Fellow of the Dara.network’s RadBots project. I have similarly presented my research on public history through my article in the quarterly Inter-Actions and through my heritage walks for Sahapedia at sites connected to Tipu Sultan in and around Bengaluru.

Doctor of Philosophy in History (University of Hyderabad, 2017)

  • Thesis: An “Illusory” Freedom? The Restrictions on Speech and Expression in the Constitution of India
  • Award: Dr. (Mrs.) Sheela Raj Memorial Medal for the “best Ph.D. thesis” in History of the year

 

Master of Philosophy in History (University of Hyderabad, 2012)

  • Title: Deconstructing Discourse: A Study of the “Primary” and “Secondary” Sources on Tipu Sultan

 

Master of Arts in History (University of Hyderabad, 2009)

  • Award: Andhra Bank Medal for “having secured the first rank in the M.A. History examination”

 

Bachelor of Science in Hospitality and Hotel Administration (Institute of Hotel Management, Catering Technology, and Applied Nutrition, Kolkata, 2006)

My research in history is focused on the following areas:

Legal History

  • Constitutional History

 

Philosophy of History

  • Historiography

 

Public History

  • Policy History

Academic

  • and Indira Chowdhury. “Public History in India: Towards a People’s Past.” In What is Public History Globally? Using the Past in the Present, edited by Paul Ashton and Alex Trapeznik, 79-92. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019.
  • and Indira Chowdhury. “East of the West: Repossessing the Past in India.” Public History Review 24 (2017): 22-37. https://doi.org/10.5130/phrj.v24i0.5763.
  • “A ‘World System’ Stretched? The Case of the ‘Eurasian and African World Systems’.” In Networks in the First Global Age, 1400-1800, edited by Rila Mukherjee, Indian Council of Historical Research Monograph Series 11, 377-86. New Delhi: ICHR/Primus Books, 2011.

 

Media

International

  • “Curating a Contemporary Archive: The Construction of the Published Record on Constitution-Making in India.” Paper presented at the international conference on Archiving the Contemporary: Memory, Technology and People, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, April 6-8, 2022.
  • “Unfree in the Ivory Tower: Academic Freedom in the Republic of India.” Paper presented in the workshop Shrinking Spaces: Limitations to Academic Freedom of Speech in a Transnational Perspective at the ECPR (European Consortium of Political Research) Joint Sessions of Workshops 2021, May 17-28, 2021.
  • “Criminalising Hate Speech or Chilling Free Speech? A Critique of the Proposed Law ‘Prohibiting Incitement to Hatred’ in the Republic of India.” Paper presented at the 2nd International Workshop on Hate Speech in Asia and Europe: A Comparative Approach, Université Paris Diderot, France, January 8-10, 2019.
  • “The Spectre of Secession: Decolonization and the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution of India.” Paper presented at the Decolonization Capstone Conference, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., July 5-7, 2016.
  • “Criminalising Secessionist Speech: The Radicalisation of Non-Violent Protest in the Republic of India.” Paper presented at the Workshop cum Ph.D. Summer School on Radical Protest in Constitutional Democracy. University of Aberdeen, Scotland, June 6-9, 2016.
  • “Choosing Continuity over Change: The Making of the Restrictions on the Freedom of Speech in the Constitution of India.” Paper presented at the Tenth International Seminar on Decolonization, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., July 6-31, 2015.

 

National

  • and Sreeparna Chattopadhyay. “Digital Misogyny as Hate Speech: Exploring Legal Implications.” Paper presented at the National Dialogue on Gender-Based Cyber Violence, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai, February 1-2, 2018.
  • “Protecting Religion, Restricting Speech: The Case of India’s Blasphemy Law.” Paper presented at the National Seminar on Thinking through Religion and Religious Institutions, University of Hyderabad, Telangana, October 25-26, 2013.
  • “Assembling Article 32? Towards an Interpretation of the Right to Constitutional Remedies.” Paper presented at the Course on Rethinking the Contemporary, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New Delhi, July 1 - August 31, 2012.

The courses that I currently teach at NALSAR are:

  • History II: Legal History of Modern India
  • The Roads Not Taken: Alternative Imaginaries of Constitution-Making

 

Some of the other courses that I have (co)designed and (co)taught before joining NALSAR are:

Postgraduate

  • History, Heritage, Memory
  • Museums in the Postcolonial World 
  • The Practice of Public History
  • Public History and the Politics of Inclusion

 

Undergraduate

  • Critical Citizenship
  • Interrogating Identities
  • Labour Rights and Industrial Realities
  • Thinking Historically

You can write to me at [email protected] or call me, during office hours, on +91 40 2349 8225.