India International Centre
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
START
Tue, Jan 7, 2020 at 06:00pm
END
Tue, Jan 7, 2020 at 08:00pm
VENUE
India International Centre
ADDRESS
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
Speaker: Naveen Bharathi, Mittal Institute Raghunathan Family Fellow, 2019-2020
Moderator: Satish Deshpande, Professor of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics
This presentation will show how residential caste-segregation is independent of city size, using the first-ever large-scale evidence of neighborhood-resolution data from 147 of the largest cities in contemporary India. Bharathi will discuss one of the central conundrums in Indian urbanism — the persistence of caste segregation across the country, and across cities of varying sizes. This finding punctures a hole in one of the central normative promises of India’s urbanization: the gradual withering of traditional caste-based segregation. The talk will provide further fine-grained evidence on the ghettoization of the most spatially marginalized groups in urban India: Muslims and Dalits.
START
Wed, Jun 5, 2019 at 06:30pm
END
Wed, Jun 5, 2019 at 08:00pm
VENUE
India International Centre
ADDRESS
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
In this talk, Roluahpuia, the Mittal Institute’s 2018-19 Raghunathan Family Fellow, will explore how and why politics among the Mizos continue to remain nationalistic in India and how to understand this phenomenon in contemporary India. This discussion will be moderated by Virginius Xaxa, Visiting Professor at the Institute for Human Development.
START
Thu, May 30, 2019 at 06:00pm
END
Thu, May 30, 2019 at 08:00pm
VENUE
India International Centre
ADDRESS
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
In the past decade, over 1.3 million people have been killed in road crashes in India. Ten times more have been left seriously injured or permanently disabled. The issue has emerged as the single biggest killer of young people in India (15-45 age group). Given the multiplicity of agencies and overlapping responsibilities, where should the accountability lie and who should own the issue to resolve it? Are there learnings from dealing with other epidemics that can be applied to road crashes?
This and more in our next India Seminar Series event with Piyush Tewari, Founder and CEO of SaveLIFE Foundation, a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader, and Former Mason Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School. Priyank Narayan, Director of the Centre for Entrepreneurship at Ashoka University will moderate the discussion.
The lecture will begin at 6.30 pm (High tea will be served at 6.00 pm).
START
Tue, Nov 27, 2018 at 06:00pm
END
Tue, Nov 27, 2018 at 08:30pm
VENUE
India International Centre
ADDRESS
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
VENUE
Kamala Devi Complex
How should societies identify and promote merit? Enabling all people to fulfill their full potential and ensuring that competent and capable leaders are selected to govern are central challenges for any society. Failure to meet these challenges can have enormous costs, for individuals and for societies as a whole. The richness of China’s historical experience and its distinctive current practices offer useful tools for reflection and comparative analysis. Does the case of China offer any lessons – positive or negative – for India to consider?
START
Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 06:00pm
END
Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 07:30pm
VENUE
India International Centre
ADDRESS
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
VENUE
Kamala Devi Complex
VENUE
Seminar Hall 3
Ziipao posits that road building has always been an act of power, which has at different times been leveraged to smooth relationships, securing borders, (dis)connecting people, enabling trade, creating spaces of contestation, or diluting boundaries between varied ethnic groups. Read Raile’s recent blog on the People’s Road.
Presented by Raile Rocky Ziipao
Arvind Raghunathan and Sribala Subramanian South Asia Fellow
Moderated by Nitin A. Gokhale
Journalist and Defence Analyst
START
Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 07:00pm
END
Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 10:00pm
VENUE
India International Centre
ADDRESS
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
Special Event
The Harvard Club of India, SAI and the Harvard India Student Group invite you to attend this mixer event in New Delhi. This mixer is open to all incoming students, alumni and other Harvard community members and intends to serve as a great networking opportunity.
START
Wed, Jul 22, 2015 at 07:00pm
END
Wed, Jul 22, 2015
VENUE
India International Centre
ADDRESS
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
Join the Harvard community: Incoming students, current students, alumni and affiliates for a night of socializing and networking.
Fee: INR 1,000 (HCI members); INR 1,200 (Non-HCI members, affiliates and guests); Free for all incoming and current students (please carry your IDs).
Cosponsored with the Harvard India Student Group and the Harvard Club of India.
START
Thu, Jul 18, 2013 at 07:45pm
END
Thu, Jul 18, 2013 at 10:00pm
VENUE
India International Centre
ADDRESS
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
Join current Harvard students and alumni for a night of socializing and networking. Open to Harvard students and alumni.
START
Fri, Jul 12, 2013 at 05:00pm
END
Sat, Jul 13, 2013 at 05:00pm
VENUE
India International Centre
ADDRESS
India International Centre
#40, Max Mueller Marg, Lodhi Estate
Delhi, India
This conference will be the first step in convening a group of stakeholders from the public and private sectors, the academy, service providers and NGOs. The meeting will provide an opportunity for information exchange and discussion across a range of issues – legislative, educational, policy and service oriented – relevant to sexual assault and gender violence in India and, more generally, South Asia.