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Ishita DeyNameIshita Dey

Address: GC 45, Sector III, Salt Lake,  

Kolkata 700106, India

Phone: (033) 2337-0408

Email: ishita@mcrg.ac.in
Website: www.mcrg.ac.in

                                               

Educational Qualifications:
B.A. English, Delhi University.
M.A. Sociology, Delhi University

M Phil Sociology, Delhi University

 

 


 

Current Positions: 
Joined as Research Associate in CRG May 2007. Her M Phil dissertation was on "Migration and Entrepreneurship: Chinese Community in Kolkata Primary areas of academic research interests are development and its impact on migration, social movements Food practices and consumption culture in 21st C Bengal.”  

She has been involved in organizing three consultations on Internal Displacement in India assisted in organising and compiling a report-  "Responsibility to Protect" which is available on the report section of the website www.mcrg.ac.in. She was a programme associate of the Fifth and Sixth Winter Course on Forced Migration. As part of CRG’s work on forced migration and refugee rights she has been working on the transition of Cooper’s Camp to Cooper’s Camp Notified Area and Globalization, social conflict and Special Economic Zones in India.
Internship Report of the Junior Fellowship Programme of Fifth Annual Winter Course on Forced Migration
Click Here

 

 

Atig GhoshNameAtig Ghosh

Address: GC 45, Sector III, Salt Lake,  

Kolkata 700106, India

Phone: (033) 2337-0408

Email: atig@mcrg.ac.in
Website:
www.mcrg.ac.in

                                               

Educational Qualifications:
Ph.D El Colegio de México, Mexico City

 



 

Current Positions: 
He is presently a Research and Programme Associate with the Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group. He also teaches history on a part-time basis at the West Bengal State University (Barasat). Having studied history at the then Presidency College, Calcutta, and Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, he received his doctoral degree from El Colegio de México, Mexico City. His doctoral research was lodged around conjoint concerns of political economy and cultural anthropology in the context of small-town (mofussil) Bengal in the nineteenth-century. Presently, he is researching statelessness and its socio-ontological textures and tangles in the intractable fastnesses of the Indo-Bangladeshi enclaves.

 
For details click here