Event
Citizenship in Crisis? A Panel Discussion on India and Myanmar
The Center for the Advanced Study of India and the Andrea Mitchell Center for the Study of Democracy present:
- Niraja Gopal Jayal, Professor, Centre for the Study of Law and Governance, JNU and Professor, Department of Gender Studies, London School of Economics and Political Science
- Aman Wadud, Lawyer, Justice and Liberty Initiative for those who have been deprived of citizenship in Assam
- Elliott Prasse-Freeman, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, National University of Singapore
- Syantani Chatterjee, Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Pennsylvania
This panel will focus on citizenship laws as instruments of exclusion, putting the two cases of India and Myanmar in conversation with each other. What are the reasons for and repercussions of modifying citizenship laws to exclude long-dwelling populations? What are the histories of nation-making in both the former British colonies that prompted these demographic tensions? Since religion has played such a critical role in both these instances, we will also question the particular ways in which religious rhetoric lends itself to bolstering these policies. Further, we seek to understand the overlap in technologies of persecution that are being used by the two states to strip individuals down to their "bare life" and visit violence upon them with impunity. These technologies include internment in "camps" across both nations, with Myanmar extending the persecution to include mass expulsion. By mapping out the conceptual terrain underlying these phenomena, this panel will afford us various ways of thinking through these policies and their effects upon the peoples of India and Myanmar.
The Andrea Mitchell Center for the Study of Democracy aims not just to promote, but to understand, democracy. Global in its outlook, multifaceted in its purposes, the Mitchell Center seeks to contribute to the ongoing quest for democratic values, ideas, and institutions throughout the world. In addition to hosting speakers from the fields of academia, journalism, politics, and public policy, the Mitchell Center supports undergraduate, graduate, and postdoctoral research. It continues the legacy of the Penn Program for Democracy, Citizenship, and Constitutionalism, which fostered interdisciplinary scholarship from 2007 to 2017.