Subject: Re: BASAS Annual Workshop 22nd Nov. 2006 |
Author:
y.thayani
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Date Posted: Thu, July 09 2009, 8:47:56-4
In reply to:
BASAS
's message, "BASAS Annual Workshop 22nd Nov. 2006" on Mon, October 09 2006, 7:04:38-4
>"Development and/in South Asia:
>Ideas, Policies, Practices"
>
>One-day workshop on Wednesday, 22 November 2006
>
>Centre For Development Studies (CDS)
>Department of Economics and International Development
>University of Bath, UK
>
>FULL (PROVISIONAL) PROGRAMME (also available as a pdf
>file.)
>
>0915 – 0945 Registration and tea and coffee
>
>0945 – 1115 Development in South Asia: The Local,
>the National and the Global (I)
>
>Haroon Rafique, International Policy Fellow, Hungary:
>‘Development: What Does it Mean in a Developing
>Country?’
>
>Palash Kamruzzaman, University of Liverpool: ‘Who
>cares about participation? All is needed another piece
>of paper to continue debts and loans.’
>
>Andrew Wyatt and M. Vijaybaskar, University of
>Bristol: ‘The World Bank, Knowledge and Development in
>India.’
>
>Syed Mohammad Ali, Open Society Institute, Budapest:
>‘Participation in Poverty Reduction in Pakistan.’
>
>1115 – 1130 Tea and Coffee
>
>1130 – 1215 Development in South Asia: The Local,
>the National and the Global (II)
>
>Nitya Rao and Amit Mitra, University of East Anglia:
>‘“Well Being or being well: What is the difference if
>my children are not happy” A subaltern view from
>Santhal Parganas, Jharkhand, India.’
>
>K.Chamundeeswari, Sheffield University: ‘The Right to
>Development and its Relevance to the South Asian
>Region: Is there Value in the Human Rights Approach to
>Development?
>
>1215 – 1330 Lunch
>
>1330 – 1400 Informal Session
>
>Talk by Prita Jha, activist.
>
>Talk on Development Studies in University of Bath.
>
>1400 – 1530 Gender and Development
>
>Carole Spary, University of Bristol: ‘Mapping Gendered
>Discourses of Development in Indian National Policy:
>1990s to present.’
>
>Yutaka Sato, Royal Halloway: ‘Community Participation,
>Gender and Urban Change: Evidence from the Slums of
>Ahmedabad, India.’
>
>Fazeeha Azmi, Norway: 'From Boiling Pot to Fire:
>Female Headed Households and their Struggles to Escape
>Poverty in the System of the Accelerated Mahaweli
>Development Project in Sri Lanka.’
>
>Radhika Govinda, University of Cambridge: ‘Dalit Women
>in Development Discourse and Praxis: a Grassroots
>Perspective from Uttar Pradesh, India.’
>
>1530 – 1545 Tea and Coffee
>
>1545 – 1645 Education and Development
>
>Mahruf C. Shohel and Andrew J. Howes, University of
>Manchester: ‘The Contribution of Nonformal Education
>to Development in Bangladesh.’
>
>Marie Lall, University of London: ‘Education Dilemmas
>in Pakistan- the current curriculum reform.’
>
>M. Niaz Asadullah, Oxford University: Paper on
>Incentive-based reform scheme of secondary madrassa
>education system in Bangladesh.
>
>REGISTRATION
>The workshop is free of charge. However, the room has
>a limited capacity so participants will need to
>register their attendance with Ipshita Basu at
>ib209@bath.ac.uk.
>
>The conference has limited funding and we would aim to
>cover the travel cost (within UK only) for speakers
>and discussants. Overseas speakers will be reimbursed
>the cost of within UK travel and will have to secure
>their own funding for travel to and from the UK.
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