‘Crafting Careers’ – Conversation Series | Session with Ms. Astha Kapoor, Co-founder and Director, Aapti Institute

NLSIU recently launched a new conversation series by eminent speakers titled ‘Crafting Careers’.  our next session in this series features Ms. Astha Kapoor, Co-founder and Director, Aapti Institute
on January 7, 2026, from 5 pm to 6 pm at the NLS campus.

Crafting Careers

Crafting Careers is a new conversation series at the University under the NLS BA (Hons) programme, designed to help students navigate the world of work. Each session in the series brings leading professionals from fields such as media, government, public policy, business, finance, and the creative arts to campus for candid conversations about their journeys. These experts will share insights and advice from their professional experiences and offer reflections on how social science majors may relate to different career pathways. These dialogues will offer students a chance to learn from diverse experiences, gain practical insights, and reflect on how to build careers that align with their own interests, skills, and values.

About the Speaker

Astha has over a decade of public policy and strategy consulting experience, with a focus on the use of technology for welfare. At Aapti, Astha leads the Data Economy Lab, a vertical established to research and test new methods of data sharing, data stewardship and governance. Her recent work is focused on participative governance of data, and its use for building collaborative AI, through collective governance methods such as cooperatives. She serves on the advisory boards of the Data Trust Initiative (Cambridge University) and Indian Urban Data Exchange (IUDEX). Prior to Aapti, Astha worked with Future State, Azim Premji’s Philanthropic Initiatives, Dalberg Global Development Advisors, the Planning Commission, the Government of India and the Self-Employed Women’s Association. She’s a visiting fellow at the Ostrom Workshop (Indiana University), a two-time TEDx speaker, and a Global Governance Futures Fellow 2018-19. Astha’s writing has been published in the Mint, Hindu, and Deccan Herald among others.

Related Video – Watch the Crafting Careers Session with Mr. Vikram Bhat, Director, BIC, here: 

 

The NLS Public Lecture Series | ‘The Art and Litigious Life of K. Venkatappa’ | By Pushpamala N and Deeptha Achar

The National Law School of India University (NLSIU) is delighted to host artist Pushpamala N and scholar Deeptha Achar on January 7, 2026 as part of our Public Lectures series.

About the Lecture

‘Looking at Karnataka’s First Modern Artist K. Venkatappa’ by Pushpamala N

In an illustrated lecture, Pushpamala will introduce the art and dilemmas of  K. Venkatappa ( 1886- 1965), one of the earliest students of Abanindranath Tagore and the first modern artist of Karnataka, a seminal figure who has been strangely neglected by dominant art history. Much of his work is housed in the state art gallery — the Venkatappa Art Gallery in Bangalore — named after him, recently renovated after a long public protest by the art community. She will take the audience through his body of work, situating it in the artistic, social and political milieu of his times and his relevance today.

National Art, Regional Modernity, and the Litigious Life of K. Venkatappa by Deeptha Achar

K. Venkatappa, painter, sculptor, musician (1886-1965) has been, in twentieth century accounts of early modern Indian art, often considered a maverick, a minor footnote, a regional figure carrying back to princely Mysore nationalist impulses learned at Calcutta. Nation, Region, Modernity: The Art of K. Venkatappa (Achar and Pushpamala, eds.) has not intended to restore him to an imagined ‘rightful place’, rather it tries to examine what kind of entry points a figure like Venkatappa can offer to an understanding of Indian modernity. The trajectory of Venkatappa’s life allows us to engage the question of modernity in relation to the cultural politics that shaped colonialism in princely states as well as in those areas of direct British control, and then again as colonial authority ceded power to a newly independent nation. His journey from Mysore to Calcutta back to Mysore and finally Bangalore could be read as a crossing through the heterogeneous terrain of colonial India at a moment when a nationalist imagination was in the making.  This presentation will focus on Venkatappa’s frequent appeals to law in the context of his artistic life, and will try to unpack the implications of this intersection between law and art. What are the lessons it holds for an understanding of citizenship?

About the Speakers

Pushpamala N

Pushpamala N has been called “the most entertaining artist-iconoclast of contemporary Indian art”. In her sharp and witty work as a photo- and video-performance artist, sculptor, writer, and curator, and in her collaborations with writers, theatre directors and filmmakers, she seeks to subvert the dominant discourse. She is known for her strong feminist work, informed by cultural theory, feminist studies and social science. Her work is shown worldwide and is in the collections of major museums like the Museum of Modern Art New York, Tate Modern London, Centre Charles Pompidou Paris, Art Gallery of New South Wales Sydney, NGMA and KNMA Delhi and MAP Bangalore. She created a fictional platform for discourse, ‘Somberikatte’ (Idler’s Platform) in 1996 through which she organises talks and conferences. To celebrate 20 years of Somberikatte, she organised an international conference of the early modern artist K Venkatappa in Bangalore in 2016. Based on the papers presented at this conference, her co-edited volume: Nation, Region, Modernity: The Art of K. Venkatappa has been published by Routledge ( 2025). She was the Artistic Director of the Chennai Photo Biennale , ‘Fauna Of Mirrors’ , for which she also organised an international conference on photography, Light Writing (2019). Recently she curated the print retrospective exhibition of Gulammohammed Sheikh: ‘Hand Prints/ Mind Prints’ and is now working on the book. She lives and works in Bangalore.

Deeptha Achar

Deeptha Achar has just retired as Professor, Department of English, Faculty of Arts, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Gujarat. Among the books she has co-edited are Towards New Art History: Studies in Indian Art (2003), and Articulating Resistance: Art and Activism (2012) apart from catalogue essays. Her most recent co-edited volume is Nation, Region, Modernity: The Art of K. Venkatappa (2025). She is the series editor of the Different Tales, a multilanguage series of illustrated children’s books that thematise marginalised childhoods. She has co-curated an archival show entitled Enlightenment from an Unlikely Envelope: Archives of Adil Jussawalla currently running at the Kerala Museum, Kochi. Her research interests include visual culture studies and childhood studies.

MEA Distinguished Lecture Series | Evolution and the Future of the Indo–US Strategic Partnership | By Ambassador Ashok Sajjanhar

We are delighted to host Ambassador Ashok Sajjanhar, IFS (Retd), Former Ambassador of India to Kazakhstan, Sweden, and Latvia, at the NLS campus on January 6, 2026. Ambassador Sajjanhar will be delivering a talk as part of the ‘MEA Distinguished Lecture Series’ by the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India.

His talk, titled ‘Evolution and the Future of the Indo–US Strategic Partnership: With Emphasis on Trade Policy and Geopolitics in the Indo-Pacific Region,’ will be held from 4:30 pm  – 6:30 pm at the Conference Hall, Training Centre.

Abstract

Relations between India and USA have experienced many ups and downs since India’s independence 78 years ago. Relations sank to their nadir in 1971 and 1998. However, ties between the two countries witnessed a steady upward trend since 2000. Addressing the Joint Session of the US Congress in 2016, PM Narendra Modi declared that India ‘’has overcome the hesitations of history.’’ In 2022, speaking with the then US President Joe Biden, PM Modi stated that India-US partnership is based on ‘’trust.’’ This trust received a huge jolt in 2025 with the assumption of power by Donald Trump as the President of USA. This is evident not only in the area of trade in which US actions are totally violative of International Trade Rules as enshrined in the WTO but also in areas of political, security and strategic affairs. What is likely to be the future state of India-US relations? Can the Mutual Trust be restored or will the relations revert back to the period of the Cold War?

About the Speaker

Ambassador Ashok Sajjanhar, is Executive Council Member, Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses; President, Institute of Global Studies; Distinguished Fellow, Ananta Aspen Centre; and Former Ambassador of India to Kazakhstan, Sweden & Latvia. 

Ambassador Ashok Sajjanhar discharged his responsibilities in the Indian Foreign Service for 34 years.

He was Ambassador of India to Kazakhstan, Sweden and Latvia and has worked in senior diplomatic positions in Indian Embassies/Missions in Washington DC, Brussels, Moscow, Geneva, Tehran, Dhaka and Bangkok, and also at Headquarters in India. He negotiated for India in the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations and in India-EU, India-ASEAN and India-Thailand Free Trade Agreements. He contributed significantly to strengthening strategic and economic ties and promoting cultural cooperation between India and USA, EU, Russia and other countries.

Ambassador Sajjanhar worked as head of the National Foundation for Communal Harmony to promote amity and understanding between different religions, faiths and beliefs. He has been decorated by Governments of Kazakhstan and Latvia with their National Awards and by Universal Peace Federation, New York (a body in special, consultative status with the United Nations) with Title of ”Ambassador of Peace.”

He writes, travels and speaks extensively on issues relating to international relations, foreign policy and themes of contemporary relevance and significance.

 

The Third SLR Annual Workshop | By Socio-Legal Review (SLR)

The Socio-Legal Review is delighted to announce the Third Annual SLR Workshop. Through this initiative, SLR hopes to further the understanding of its aims and scope, and more broadly the meaning of “socio-legal” scholarship. The workshop will also provide practical and useful guidance on how one may contribute to the SLR Journal or Forum, or socio-legal academic spaces in general.

SLR is a peer-reviewed, bi-annual journal that encourages interdisciplinary research at the intersection of law and social sciences. It is open-access and student-run, published by the National Law School of India University (NLSIU), Bengaluru.

About the Keynote Speaker

The keynote speaker for the workshop is Dr. Anindita Adhikari, Assistant Professor, Social Sciences at the National Law School of India University, Bengaluru. Her research interests include social movements, bureaucracies, the politics of welfare provisioning and democratic deepening. She has been associated with the Right to Work, Right to Information, and Right to Food campaigns. She has previously worked with the Government of Bihar and the Ministry of Rural Development on employment, social security, and land issues. She co-founded the  organization ‘Social Accountability Forum for Action and Research’ (SAFAR) in 2022 that works on strengthening transparency and accountability in public service delivery in collaboration with state and national governments and civil society. Her book project ‘from Shikayat to Jawaabdehi’ examines the effects of rights-based welfare expansion and its effects on local governance and civic action through a comparison between two institutionalized accountability systems in Bihar.

About the Workshop

The workshop will begin with a discussion on the scope of socio-legal scholarship generally, its role in the current moment and its place within the larger movement of legal scholarship in India. The keynote speaker will present some of her ongoing research and specifically address the audience on the question of positionality in doing socio-legal research. This will be followed by a discussion on a pre-circulated paper that closely relates to the discipline. Members of the SLR Editorial Board will discuss SLR’s Submission Guidelines and Editorial Policies. The session will be followed by a Q&A round.

The workshop is designed and intended for an audience of students across undergraduate, postgraduate and graduate levels as well as early career academics.

The Workshop is open-to-all, and will be taking place online on Microsoft Teams, from 11 AM – 12: 30 PM on Saturday, 10th January 2026. Please note that registration is mandatory, in order to attend. Please fill the form here to register.

For any queries, please reach out to .

Book Talks@NLS Library | ‘Copyright as Personal Property’

NLSIU’s Library Committee is organising a Book Talk on ‘Copyright as Personal Property,’ authored by Dr. Poorna Mysoor and published by the Oxford University Press. The talk will take place at the Ground Floor Conference Hall, NLSIU Training Centre, on Friday, January 9, 2026, at 5 PM. Dr. Poorna Mysoor will be in conversation with NLSIU’s Prof. (Dr.) Arul George Scaria.

The event is open to the public. Registration is mandatory for the non-NLS community. RSVP here.

About the Book

Copyright statutes in many jurisdictions clearly state that copyright is a property right. However, it is not always clear exactly how. Some see it as no more than a statutory right, while others think of it as a chose in action (French for “thing in action”), like debts or shares. Copyright as Personal Property demonstrates why it is incorrect to conceptualise copyright as a chose in action and argues that, despite being an intangible asset, copyright is more analogous to land and chattels.

The book aims to achieve two main objectives. The first is to demonstrate much against popular belief that the analogies with land and chattels help contain the scope of copyright within normatively justifiable limits. Starting with the “thing relatedness” of copyright, the monograph draws parallels with the acquisition of copyright, the nature of exclusionary rights, exclusive powers and privileges, their enforcement, and derivative interests. It employs concepts of property theory, such as numerus clausus, to provide the necessary benchmark to guide the boundaries of copyright. The second objective is to challenge the rigid and binary classification of property rights into choses in possession and choses in action. By addressing an important evolutionary gap in the conceptualization of property rights, this work lays the groundwork for a more sophisticated taxonomy, viewing property rights as existing on a spectrum. It goes on to provide the metrics to calibrate this spectrum, ensuring the incremental and orderly development of property rights.

Original and thought-provoking, the analogy this book develops with land and chattels shows how the unjustifiable expansion of copyright can be curbed and offers a more sophisticated classification of property rights than that based simply on tangibility.

About the Panellists

Dr. Poorna Mysoor is a Fellow in Law at Lucy Cavendish College, University of Cambridge. She is also a member of Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Law at the Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge. She was a Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellow at the Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, a Junior Research Fellow at the Queen’s College, Oxford, and an academic member at the Oxford Intellectual Property Research Centre. She is the author of two books, Copyright as Personal Property (2025) and Implied Licences in Copyright Law (2021), both published with Oxford University Press, and has published her work widely in reputed journals and edited collections. Poorna obtained her undergraduate law degree at NLSIU, Bangalore, and an LLM from SOAS, University of London for which she was awarded the Felix Scholarship. Before embarking on her doctorate, Poorna practised intellectual property law for several years in Hong Kong and was a litigator in India.

Prof. (Dr.) Arul George Scaria is a Professor of Law and Co-Director, Centre for IP Research and Advocacy (CIPRA) at the National Law School of India University, Bengaluru. His expertise lies in intellectual property and competition law. He teaches, researches, and writes on issues at the intersection of law, science, and technology. Prof. Arul has been a lead researcher in different research projects, including an UNESCO funded project on challenges and opportunities for open science in four South Asian countries. He has two single authored books to his credit – Piracy in the Indian Film Industry: Copyright and Cultural Consonance (Cambridge University Press, 2014) and Ambush Marketing: Game within a Game (Oxford University Press, 2008).

Muse@NLS Library | ‘So That You Know’ | Poetry Reading With Dr. Mani Rao

NLSIU’s Library Committee is organising a poetry reading with Dr. Mani Rao, author of the anthology So That You Know (Harper Collins 2025). The reading will take place at the NLS Library Basement on Monday, January 5, 2026, at 4 PM.

The event is open to the public. Registration is mandatory for the non-NLS community. RSVP here.

About the Poet

Dr. Mani Rao is the author of thirteen poetry books including So That You Know (Harper Collins 2025), and four books in translation including Bhagavad Gita and Saundarya Lahari. Researching mantra experience in tantric communities, she discovered continuing revelations and new mantras in circulation on-ground for Living Mantra: Mantra, Deities and Visionary Experience Today.

After studying literature in the early 80’s Madras, she worked as an advertising and television professional for two decades in Mumbai, New Zealand and Hong Kong. A resetting of life-goals led her back to the world of learning – she then did an MFA from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA, and a PhD in Religious Studies from Duke University, USA. Returning to India by 2017, she began to live in Puttaparthi and Bangalore.

Roundtable on ‘Two Decades of Product Patents in India’ | By the Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics and the Centre for Intellectual Property Research and Advocacy (CIPRA), NLSIU

The Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics and the Centre for Intellectual Property Research and Advocacy at the National Law School of India University are organising a roundtable on ‘Two Decades of Product Patents in India‘ on January 10, 2026.

Please note that the roundtable is open to the public. Participation in the Roundtable sessions is by invitation/registration only. Register here to attend.

About the Roundtable

The WTO Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) came into effect on January 1, 1995. As per Art. 27 of the TRIPS Agreement, patents shall be available for any inventions, whether products or processes, in all fields of technology, provided that they are new, involve an inventive step and are capable of industrial application. Some of the developing countries, including India, were not granting product patents in some areas like pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals, at the time of signing of the agreement. In fact, many scholars have pointed out that the specific exclusion of product patents in the area of pharmaceuticals in the Patents Act 1970 has contributed substantially to the blooming of generic pharmaceutical companies in India, and thereby also making India a pharmacy of the world. However, as a signatory to the TRIPS Agreement, India was forced to reintroduce product patents in the area of pharmaceuticals. By virtue of Article 65.4, India got 10 years to comply with the TRIPS requirements in this regard, and the Patents (Amendment) Act, 2005, India made the necessary changes in this area.

As the year 2025 marks 20 years of India re-introducing a product patent regime in the area of pharmaceuticals, the half-day roundtable seeks to review in detail the key changes that may have happened in the area.

Schedule

I. Introduction by Dr. Arul George Scaria (Professor of Law, NLSIU) | 9.30-9.35 am

II. Session 1 | 9:40-11:00 am
Moderator: Dr. Arul George Scaria
Panellists:
(i) Ms. Jayashree Watal (Former Counsellor, WTO) – Historical Perspectives
(ii) Ms. Vindhya S. Mani (Partner, Technology Law Division, Lakshmikumaran & Sridharan, Attorneys, Bengaluru) – Approach of the Judiciary

III. Tea Break | 11.00-11.30 am

IV. Session 2 | 11:30 am – 13:30 pm
Moderator: Bhanu Tanwar (Assistant Professor of Law and Co-Director, Centre for Health Law and Ethics, NLSIU)
Panellists:
(i) Ms. Archana Jatkar (Associate Secretary General, Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance) – Industry Perspectives
(ii) Mr. K. M. Gopakumar (Senior Researcher and Legal Advisor, Third World Network) – Civil Society Perspectives
(iii)Dr. Zakir Thomas (Founding Project Director, OSDD) – Innovation within the Indian Pharmaceutical Industry

V. Vote of thanks by Bhanu Tanwar

The NLS Public Lecture Series | ‘Temporary Lives: Law, Ruination, And The Right To Dwell In Lagos’ | By Daniel E. Agbiboa, Harvard University

The National Law School of India University is organising a public lecture on ‘Temporary Lives: Law, Ruination, And The Right To Dwell In Lagos’ by Daniel E. Agbiboa, John & Ruth Hazel Associate Professor of the Social Sciences at Harvard University on January 12, 2026.

Temporary Lives: Law, Ruination, And The Right To Dwell In Lagos

Across the Global South, urban eviction is increasingly justified in the language of climate adaptation, risk management, and development. Drawing on Agbiboa’s book-in-progress, ‘Dredged Lives: Futures and Foreclosures in an African City,’ this talk examines how such rationales operate in Lagos, Nigeria, where waterfront communities are routinely demolished in the name of  environmental safety, urban renewal, or megacity ambition. Agbiboa argues that these clearances are not failures of governance but deliberate techniques of rule. They take the form of self devouring growth and bureaucratic violence that convert land into speculative value by  rendering certain lives temporary.

Focussing on precarious waterfront communities, Agbiboa traces how law functions less as protection and more as performance. Court orders are ignored, notices are withheld, and legality is retroactively rewritten. In this context, eviction is not an exception but a governing rationality. Risk becomes an alibi, informality a weapon, and uncertainty itself a mode of control.

The talk also examines how residents insist on presence through staying put, rebuilding on rubble, mapping themselves into visibility, and crafting alternative plans for urban life, even when legal remedies fail. These practices constitute what Agbiboa calls ‘refusal without redemption,’ a politics oriented not toward final resolution but toward present-oriented survival and the  labor of carrying on regardless.

By bringing Lagos into conversation with broader debates on climate urbanism, law, displacement, and urban citizenship, the talk invites reflection on a pressing question for legal scholarship. What does justice look like when law itself governs through dispossession, and what forms of political life persist when redemption through law is no longer available?

About the Speaker

Daniel E. Agbiboa is Associate Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University, where he also serves as Faculty Associate of the Weatherhead Centre for International Affairs, Affiliate Faculty of the Bloomberg Centre for Cities, and Co-Chair of the Urban Conversation Series in the Mahindra Humanities Center.

Prof. Agbiboa’s research focuses on the intersection of violence and order, urban governance, mobility and mobilisation, environmental politics, empire and African subjectivity. His works are grounded in discourse analysis, mobile ethnography, and a critical ethnography of the state. He is the author of They Eat Our Sweat: Transport Labor, Corruption and Everyday Survival in Urban Nigeria (Oxford University Press, 2022) and Mobility, Mobilisation and Counter/Insurgency: The Routes of Terror in an African Context; editor of Transport, Transgression and Politics in African Cities: The Rhythm of Chaos (Routledge, 2019); and co-editor of People, Predicaments and Potentials in Africa (Langaa RPCIG).

He is the recipient of several prestigious (book and article) awards, including the Lee Ann Fujii Book Award given by the International Studies Association (ISA); the ISA Peace Best Book Award; finalist for both the Society for Economic Anthropology (SEA) Best Book Prize and the Global Development Studies (GDS) Best Book Award; the Politics and Gender Best Article Award given by editors of Politics and Gender journal (published by Cambridge University Press) and the Women, Gender and Politics Section of APSA; and the 2023 James F. Short Jr. Distinguished Article Award (Honorable Mention) given by the Crime, Law and Deviance Section of the American Sociological Association. In 2023, Professor Agbiboa received the Clarence Stone Scholar Award, given by the Urban and Politics Section of the American Political Science Association (APSA) for his significant contributions to the study of urban politics. He has been a member of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, fellow of the Woodrow Wilson International Centre for Scholars, recipient of the Guggenheim Distinguished Scholar Award, and holder of the CIFAR Azrieli Global Scholar Award (2024-2026). He currently serves on the Editorial Board of the African Studies Review and the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, where he also serves as a Trustee.

‘AI In The Everyday In India’ | A Socio Legal Workshop by the JSW Centre for the Future of Law at NLSIU, University of Amsterdam, Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies at the University of Warwick, and Tilburg University

The JSW Centre for the Future of Law at NLSIU, along with University of Amsterdam, Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies at the University of Warwick, and Tilburg University, is organising a socio-legal workshop titled ‘AI in the everyday in India’ on Saturday, January 10, 2026.

This event is open to the public, register here to attend.

Concept Note

AI and the Everyday in India brings together scholars working on everyday negotiations with AI enabled algorithmic governance in policing, surveillance of public places, welfare provisions, control of borders in the Indian context marked by either the absence of legal, regulatory frameworks or gaps between the law and lived realities of experiences with AI.

The workshop will generate conceptual frameworks and methodological tools for studying AI and the everyday in a comparative perspective that considers generalisable similarities even while being mindful of the unique histories and socio-political dynamics that shape the implementation and reception of AI technologies in India. The discussions will develop the network of scholars exploring the everyday life of AI in the global south.

Programme

10.00 – 10.15 am: Introduction and Welcome
Siddharth de Souza, Sagnik Dutta, Rahul Hemrajani, and Siddharth M

10.15 am – 12.15 pm: AI related challenges to democracy and justice
Chair: Rahul Hemrajani
Discussants: Sagnik Dutta and Siddharth M

  • Antecedents as Precedents? Exploring the Interoperable Criminal Justice System (ICJS) in India – Nupur Chowdhury
  • Law, Ethics, and AI in Urban Traffic Enforcement: The Case Study of Delhi NCR of India – Rajesh Kumar
  • Watching the Republic: A Critical Policy Analysis of AI-Enabled Government Surveillance in India – Nikhil Purohit
  • Democratic Backsliding in the Global Majority: Wading Through the Swamp of AI Slop – Anmol Diwan

12.15 – 1.15: Lunch

1.15 – 3.45 pm: Governance, Human rights and Infrastructures of AI
Chair:
Siddharth de Souza
Discussants: Rahul Hemrajani and Siddharth M

  • When Infrastructure becomes Governance: Rethinking Law’s Role in India’s Digital health Project – Anamika Kundu
  • Ecologies of AI in India – Preeti Raghunath and Suriya Krishna B S
  • ‘Who’ is involved in governing AI in India and ‘how’?: The role of state and non-state actors – Devyani Pande
  • AI and Human Rights: A posthuman conundrum – Manpreet Singh
  • Inclusion, Innovation and AI in/for Law in India’ – Krishna Ravi Srinivas

3.45 – 4.00 pm: Tea and coffee

4.00 – 6.00 pm: Imaginations and futures of AI
Chair:
Sagnik Dutta
Discussants: Siddharth de Souza and Rahul Hemrajani

  • From Assembly to Algorithm: Constitutional Intelligibility and Self-Respect in the Age of AI – Shaunna Rodrigues
  • The Masculine Rhythm of Algorithmic Solutions and the Future of Collective Political Imagination – Debangana Chatterjee
  • Decolonising AI Personhood: Designing a Framework for the Future – Shrawani Shagun and Sanchet Sharma
  • Building AI Futures from Below: Centering youth voices to build equitable and accountable AI – Bhawna Parmar

6.00 – 6.30 pm: Conclusion
Siddharth M, Rahul Hemrajani, Sagnik Dutta and Siddharth de Souza

NLS Comes to Kochi | Open House | NLS BA (Hons) Programme

We invite curious and interested students, parents, schools, and career counsellors, to the open house on the NLS BA (Hons) programme at Kochi on Saturday, January 17, 2026.

This conversation will revolve around BA education and practice, focussing on the multidisciplinary curriculum and pedagogy of what NLS has to offer in this programme. The session will be hosted from 11 am to 1 pm. It is intended to guide students in their Class XI and XII in making an informed decision about their higher education journey.

The open house will be conducted by our faculty members Dr. Anindita Adhikari, NLS BA (Hons) Vice Chair and Assistant Professor of Social Science, and Dr. Megha Sharma, Assistant Professor of Social Science.

Kindly register ahead for the open house by filling out this form.

About the NLS BA (Hons) Programme

NLSIU pioneered and developed an integrated 5-year BA LLB (Hons.) degree that transformed Indian legal education. Several NLS graduates have pursued further degrees in humanities, social sciences, and business and then embarked on very successful careers in these fields.

As NLSIU develops into a multi-disciplinary university, in line with national and state education policies, the NLS BA (Hons.) programme draws on 35 years of experience in offering the integrated 5-year BA LLB (Hons.) programme. The NLS BA (Hons.) programme curriculum has been carefully designed by faculty teams after extensive stakeholder consultations with eminent academics and practitioners from across the country’s top universities to provide their inputs and advice on the curriculum.

Our faculty come from leading universities within India and beyond. We have faculty strength in the following areas:

  • History: Modern South Asia, Urban History, Labour History, Global History, Post-Independent India, Development and Planning, Indian National Movement (19th and 20th century)
  • Politics: Western Political Thought, Tagore, Gandhi, Periyar and Indian Political Thought, Political Economy, Urban Politics, Land, Indigeneity, Political Parties, The Indian State and Democracy, Comparative Methods in Political Research
  • Sociology and Anthropology: Social Theory, Caste and Tribe, Capitalisms, Development, Land Politics, Cinema and Popular Culture, Religion, Urban Anthropology, Ecology
  • Economics: Development Economics, Environmental Economics, Labour Economics, Econometrics, Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, History of Economic Thought, Game Theory

Our faculty have rich research agendas and publication records across law and the social sciences which will inform classroom teaching and learning.

Read more about the programme.

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