
Research
Discover courses, designed for undergraduate students, aimed at exploring the connections between global history and modernity, highlighting key disruptions throughout history and their lasting impact on contemporary politics. Through a multidisciplinary lens, students examine the interplay of historical events, ideas, and political developments, fostering a deeper understanding of how the past shapes the present world.

‘Human Rights Discourse, I have argued, is against the ideologies of both revolution and counterrevolution that dominated much of the twentieth century even while it indirectly carries on significant parts of the counterrevolutionary project’. This thesis discusses to what extent can contemporary human rights discourse be seen to serve the interests of continuing beneficiaries of ‘past’ evils?

Lecture series that explores the historical milestones in human socialisation and how the introduction of new technology from the primitive plough to facebook in modern times has impacted social relations.

Read about my experience as a Barefoot Research Fellow with PUKAR (Partners For Urban Knowledge and Research) documenting the impact of violence on runaway children.
