Book Talk | ‘Women and Colonial Law: A Feminist Social History’ by Prof. Janaki Nair
Allen & Overy Hall, Training Centre, NLSIU
Wednesday, September 3, 2025, 5:15 pm
Open only to the NLS community.
The NLS Law and Society Archives, in collaboration with the NLS Feminist Alliance (NLSFA), Socio Legal Review (SLR), and the Law and Society Collective (Law Soc), is organising a book talk with Professor Janaki Nair on the revised edition of her book, ‘Women and Colonial Law: A Feminist Social History‘ (Cambridge University Press, 2025), on September 3, 2025. This important work was originally published in 1996 by Kali for Women in collaboration with NLSIU. We are delighted to welcome it “home,” so to speak! Three panellists from NLS will join Prof. Nair in conversation on the book, pedagogy, and feminist studies in India over the past three decades.
Discussants:
- Dr. V. S. Elizabeth, Professor of History, NLSIU
- Dr. Aparna Chandra, Professor of Law, NLSIU
- Jyotika Tomar, Student Member, Socio-Legal Review (SLR) Board
About the Book
This book introduces students of law and history to key colonial moments that have shaped women’s legal status up to the present day. It introduces students and general readers to the critical events and legal decisions that determined the place of women under law. It also introduces readers to terms that are critical to understanding women’s legal status in India today. In addition to bringing together the latest developments in Indian historical research with advances in feminist legal studies, it tracks the shifts and changes that have occurred, especially over the last 30 years, to feminist standpoints on women and law. Using examples and cases from different regions of India, the book also weaves together a complex and nuanced account of colonial social history more generally. This title is available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
About the Author
Janaki Nair was Professor of History at the Centre for Historical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), Delhi until retirement in 2020. Her books include Women and Law in Colonial India (1996, Second Revised and Updated Edition, 2025), Miners and Millhands: Work Culture and Politics in Princely Mysore (1998), and The Promise of the Metropolis: Bangalore’s Twentieth Century (2005, which won the New India Foundation Book Prize) and Mysore Modern: Rethinking the Region under Princely Rule (2011/2012). She has published widely in national and international journals and has served on the editorial boards of the Journal of Women’s History and Urban History. She also writes for newspapers and journals on contemporary developments in Karnataka. She has held Visiting Appointments at the University of California, Berkeley; University of Wuerzburg, Germany; German Historical Institute, London; National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka, and Azim Premji University, Bengaluru. She currently serves on the Advisory Committee of the Karnataka State Education Commission and is a member of the Kerala Urban Policy Commission.