Childhoods in South Asia: Contemporary and historical perspectives

This conference will provide an interdisciplinary platform for scholars and NGO representatives who work in the areas of childhood and education in South Asia. While there is increasing theoretical and development interest in children in South Asia, children's experiences and perspectives are still underrepresented in political, social and economic debate. This interdisciplinary conference seeks to foreground children's experiences in light of changing conceptual discourses of childhood in historical and contemporary South Asia. While acknowledging the ways children are situated within structures of power, the conference will focus on South Asian children's stories and agency.

We will explore children's interactions with institutions of modernity, social constructs and social structures-including age, gender, family, class, community and caste-that often marginalise children in multiple ways. We aim for a convergence of innovative ideas around childhood, recognising that this category is contested and raises important dilemmas for interdisciplinary studies.

The conference offers a forum within these two days to identify and develop convergences, conflicts, and aspects that may have been overlooked by one discipline, but explored in another. Our inclusion of historical and contemporary scholarly perspectives aims to contextualise and historicise issues. A significant objective of the conference will be to highlight the methodological implications of research into the perspectives and experiences of children.

Sponsored by: ANU South Asia Research Institute; Australia-India Council, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade; ANU Research School of Humanities and the Arts; and the ANU Gender Institute.

Registration for this event is free of cost.

Please register for catering purposes- see link below for details.

For more information please contact Dr. Zazie Bowen or Jessica Hinchy.

Date & time

Thu 18 Jul 2013, 9am – Fri 19 Jul 2013, 5pm

Location

Theatre 1 and 2, Hedley Bull Centre (Building no. 130), ANU

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Updated:  4 July 2013/Responsible Officer:  Convenor, Gender Institute/Page Contact:  Gender Institute