Law and Society in South Asia (LASSA) Workshop 2023
December 15-17, 2023
The LASSA Workshop is a North-South collaboration among Law & Society scholars working on Pakistan and postcolonial South Asia more broadly. The Workshop is envisaged as a key platform for bringing together diverse and multidisciplinary scholars to deepen Law & Society research and methods regarding South Asia. It has two primary objectives: (i) to enable and facilitate connections between global LSA networks and local communities of sociolegal researchers on South Asia with limited access to Global North institutions and networks, and (ii) to strengthen South-South mentoring and collaboration on Law & Society in South Asia. The inaugural LASSA Workshop is an intensive three-day event, hosted by the Institute of Development & Economic Alternatives (IDEAS) from December 15th to 17th, 2023.
The LASSA Workshop is generously supported bythe Global Collaboration Grant 2023, LSA.
For more information, please see the Call for Papers.
DINA M. SIDDIQI | KEYNOTE ADDRESS | LASSA WORKSHOP 2023
Participants
Maryam S. Khan
Co-Organizer
Research Fellow at IDEAS Lahore, Pakistan
Dr. Maryam S. Khan is a socio-legal scholar on SouthAsia, and a resident Research Fellow at the Institute of Development andEconomic Alternatives (IDEAS) in Pakistan. Maryam’s interests and ongoing projects relate to comparative constitutional law and history, sociology of legal professions, judicialization and legal mobilization in authoritarian contexts, ethnic federalism, and law and social movements. She is presently thePakistan Country Lead for a 5-year Economic & Social Research Council (ESRC)research project on ‘Sustaining Power for Women’s Rights in South Asia’ (SuPWR)that studies the decision-making and strategizing processes of women’s collectives in response to backlash. Her current book project is on Pakistan’sConstitution of 1973, involving both archival research and oral history on the socio-political foundations and processes of constitution-making. Her work has been published widely in international and comparative law journals, includingYale Law Journal, Harvard Journal on Racial and Ethnic Justice, TempleInternational and Comparative Law Journal, and others. She was the co-convener for a special issue on ‘Law in Context in Post-Colonial South Asia’ in theInternational Journal on Law in Context (IJLC) published in 2023. Maryam is a Barrister-at-Lawfrom Lincoln’s Inn (2003), an LL.M from Yale Law School (2009), and an SJD(Doctor of Juridical Science) from University of Wisconsin Law School (2023).
Maryam S. Khan
Co-Organizer
Research Fellow at IDEAS Lahore, Pakistan
Jeff Redding
Chair & Co-Organizer
Senior Research Fellow University of Melbourne, AUS
An experienced and passionate teacher of Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Family Law, Law and Religion, and numerous topics in Comparative Law and Human Rights, Jeff is currently expanding upon research and scholarly approaches developed for ‘A Secular Need: Islamic Law and State Governance in Contemporary India’ (University of Washington Press,Global South Asia series, 2020) while also working on his next monograph concerning the legal archives of transgender rights in South Asia. Jeff’s scholarship has appeared in top-ranked international peer-reviewed journals like South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, Modern Asian Studies, AsianJournal of Law and Society, and Modern Law Review. He has also published in theNational Law School of India Review and many U.S. law journals. Jeff is also the South Asia contributor to the field-defining Oxford Handbook of IslamicLaw, the co-editor of a recent Indian Law Review special issue on family law, and the co-editor of the pathbreaking volume ‘Queer and Religious Alliances inFamily Law Politics and Beyond’ (Anthem Press, 2022). Jeff’s research interests are in the areas of comparative law and religion, Islamic law, legal pluralism, family law, and law and sexuality. He has lectured widely on these topics inNorth America, South Asia, Europe, and Australia, where he has been a NewGeneration Network scholar and Senior Research Fellow at the University ofMelbourne. Jeff has taught around the world, including for many years in theUnited States, where he has also held research fellowships at Yale Law School(Oscar M. Ruebhausen program), Harvard Law School (Islamic Legal StudiesProgram), and Columbia Law School (Center for the Study of Law and Culture).Earlier in his career, Jeff taught law in Pakistan while a recipient of afellowship from the U.S. Fulbright Foundation and later served as Dean andProfessor of the Shaikh Ahmad Hassan School of Law at the Lahore University ofManagement Sciences. Jeff earned his J.D. from the University of Chicago LawSchool.
Jeff Redding
Chair & Co-Organizer
Senior Research Fellow University of Melbourne, AUS
Zoha Waseem
Co-Organizer
Assistant Professor University of Warwick, U.K
Dr Zoha Waseem is an Assistant Professor (Sociology and Criminology) at the Department of Sociology, University of Warwick, andCo-coordinator of the international platform, the Urban Violence ResearchNetwork. She is the author of the book Insecure Guardians: Enforcement,Encounters, and Everyday Policing in Postcolonial Karachi (Hurst/OxfordUniversity Press, 2022) which ethnographically explores the development of police institutional culture in postcolonial contexts, with a focus on urbanPakistan. She is also co-editor of the volume, Southern and PostcolonialPerspectives on Policing, Security, and Social Order (Bristol University Press,2023) and an Associate Editor of the journal, Critical Studies on Security. Zoha conducts interdisciplinary research on policing, state violence, crime, coercion, and counterinsurgency with a focus on Pakistan, South Asia, as well as the UK. She is broadly interested in the politics of policing and insecurity in the urban global South, militarisation, migration, informality, the pluralisation of policing, ethnographic methods, and postcolonial and decolonial perspectives on policing, security, and criminal justice. Her work has been published in the Journal of Urban Affairs, Policing and Society,Political and Legal Anthropology Review (PoLAR), and the International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction.
Zoha Waseem
Co-Organizer
Assistant Professor University of Warwick, U.K
Yasser Kureshi
Co-Organizer
Department Lecturer South Asian Studies University of Oxford, U.K
Dr. Yasser Kureshi is a Department Lecturer inSouth Asian Studies and the Course Director for the MSc and MPhil in ModernSouth Asian Studies at the School of Global and Areas Studies at the University of Oxford. Working at the intersection of political science and public law, his research looks at the politics of unelected state institutions outside democratic contexts. In particular, he studies the military and the judiciary and their impact on constitutional configurations and democratic outcomes in authoritarian and post-authoritarian states. His recently published book, “Seeking Supremacy: The Pursuit of Judicial Power inPakistan,” traces the evolution of the relationship between the judiciary and military in Pakistan, and seeks to explain why Pakistan’s high courts shifted from loyal deference to the military to open competition, and confrontation, with military and civilian institutions. His other research onjudicial politics examines the emergence and characteristics of populist courtsaround the world, and the role anti-corruption jurisprudence can play infacilitating democratic backsliding. Beyond courts, Yasser is also undertaking research on democratic backsliding, authoritarianism and military constitutionalism in South Asia, federalism and constitutional decentralizationin hybrid and tutelary regimes, and the formation of legal cultures.
Yasser Kureshi
Co-Organizer
Department Lecturer South Asian Studies University of Oxford, U.K
Dina M. Siddiqi
Keynote Speaker
Clinical Associate Professor New York University, NY, USA
Professor Dina M. Siddiqi is a cultural anthropologist by training and is based at New York University (NYU). Her research — grounded in the study of Bangladesh — joins critical development studies, transnational feminist theory, and the anthropology of labor andIslam. She has published extensively on the global garment industry and supply chains, non-state gender justice systems, and the cultural politics of Islam, feminism, and nationalism. She is currently engaged in a project on discourses of national development and the travels of civilizational feminism. Professor Siddiqi sits on the editorial boards of Contemporary South Asia, DialecticalAnthropology, and the Journal of Bangladesh Studies. She serves on theExecutive Committee of the American Institute of Bangladesh Studies (AIBS), and is on the Editorial Board of Routledge’s Women in Asia Publication Series. She is also on the Executive Board of Sakhi for South Asian Women. She is affiliated with the Law, Ethics, History, and Religion (LEHR) and the GlobalCultures concentrations.
View Dina M. Siddiqi’s Keynote Address at theLASSA Workshop 2023 on this link.
Dina M. Siddiqi
Keynote Speaker
Clinical Associate Professor New York University, NY, USA
Cynthia Farid
Discussant
Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong
Dr. Cynthia Farid is a legal historian and a lawyer with longstanding experience in research, legal practice as well as a range of international development and rule of law programming with INGOs, think tanks, and legal rights organizations. Having completed her bar from the UK andBangladesh, she graduated with advanced degrees from Cornell Law School (LL.M)and the University of Wisconsin Law School (SJD-Doctor of Juridical Science).Prior to joining the Hong Kong University as a Global Academic Fellow in 2022,Cynthia was practicing as an Advocate of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh, and had been working with the Human Rights Forum Bangladesh, a coalition of 20human rights NGOs, to support its engagement with the United Nations Committee against Torture and the Universal Periodic Review. Cynthia’s research interests include socio-legal history, constitutional and administrative law, law and development (with a focus on South Asia), and knowledge production processes in the Global South. She is also the organizer of two International ResearchCollaboratives of the Law and Society Association (LSA) on South Asian LegalSystems and Scholars in the Global South respectively, that have brought together scholars from around the globe to work on collaborative projects. She has published in a number of international journals and has secured a book contract with Hart Publishers in its “Constitutional Systems of the World”series for a co-authored book titled “The Constitution of Bangladesh: A Contextual Analysis” with an anticipated publication date of 2023. As a GlobalAcademic Fellow, she plans to expand on and publish her doctoral research(titled “Imperial Constitutionalism: Judicial Politics in Colonial India(1861-1935)”) into a book-length monograph.
Cynthia Farid
Discussant
Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong
Dinesha Samararatne
Discussant
Faculty of Law University of Colombo, Sri Lanka
Dr. Dinesha Samararatne is Professor at the Department of Public & International Law at the Faculty of Law of theUniversity of Colombo, Sri Lanka. Her research interests include public participation in constitution-making, constitutional resilience, women and constitutional law, fourth branch institutions and the relevance of the global south in comparative constitutional law. Dinesha has published widely. She is aSenior Research Associate, Laureate Program in Comparative Constitutional Law and Co-Convenor of Constitution Transformation Network (CTN) of the MelbourneLaw School, Australia. She is a member of the Editorial Board of the Indian LawReview and has served as a Co-Editor of the IACL Blog (2019-2021). At theMelbourne Law School, she has been Postdoctoral Fellow (2019-2020) and KathleenFitzpatrick Visiting Fellow (April – May 2018). In 2023 she was appointed as an independent expert to the Constitutional Council of Sri Lanka.
Dinesha Samararatne
Discussant
Faculty of Law University of Colombo, Sri Lanka
Yaqoob Bangash
Discussant
Author Lahore, Pakistan
Yaqoob Khan Bangash is a historian specializing in modern South Asia. He holds a DPhil from Oxford and a Post Doc from Harvard. His research focuses on the emergence of Pakistan as apost-colonial state, encompassing broader interests in decolonization, modern state formation, the development of identities, and the emergence of ethnic andidentity-based conflicts across South Asia. Dr Bangash’s first book, titled ‘A Princely Affair: Accession and Integration of Princely States in Pakistan,1947-55,’ was published by Oxford University Press in 2015. Currently, he is in the process of completing another book titled ‘Between the Sword and the Pen:The History of the Lahore High Court.’ His work has also been published in reputable journals such as Modern Asian Studies, Imperial and CommonwealthHistory, South Asia Research, and the Indian Economic and Social HistoryReview. He has previously held positions as a British Academy Visiting Fellow, Chevening Fellow, and Fulbright Fellow. Currently, he serves as the Dean of theFaculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at IT University in Lahore.
Yaqoob Bangash
Discussant
Author Lahore, Pakistan
Shaista Anwar
Participant
Assistant Professor, University of Central Punjab Lahore, Pakistan
Shaista Anwar holds the position of Assistant Professor at the University of Central Punjab, Lahore, where she is dedicated to fostering academic excellence in Jurisprudence, International Law, andProperty Laws. With a commitment to advancing legal education and scholarship,she served as the Secretary for both the 1st International Conference onClinical Legal Education and the 2nd International Conference on Law Tech andLegal Education, held at the University of Central Punjab, Lahore. As a legal scholar, Shaista’s research interests span across the realms of international law, international humanitarian law, human rights law, conflict of laws,arbitration, and legal philosophy. Her work reflects a deep engagement with contemporary legal issues and a nuanced understanding of the intersections between theory and practice. Through her teaching and research endeavors, Shaista Anwar contributes to the academic discourse, fostering an environment that encourages critical thinking, creativity, and the development of a comprehensive understanding of the complex jurisprudential landscape.
Shaista Anwar
Participant
Assistant Professor, University of Central Punjab Lahore, Pakistan
Tejaswi Chhatwal
Participant
PhD Student, Jawaharlal Nehru University Delhi, India
Tejaswi Chhatwal is a PhD student at theCentre for Study of Law and Governance (CSLG), Jawaharlal Nehru University(JNU), New Delhi. She is also the Post Graduate Research Student Coordinator for LASSnet (Law and Social Sciences Network). Her doctoral research examines the operation of penal anti-caste discrimination laws in India and adopts anethnographic approach to study ‘atrocity’ trials in courtrooms. Previously, Tejaswi has worked as a Research Associate on a number of projects concerning domestic labour; ethnic conflicts; disability, sexuality, and violence against women. Tejaswi is also the Post Graduate Research Student Coordinator for LASSnet (Law and Social Sciences Network).
Tejaswi Chhatwal
Participant
PhD Student, Jawaharlal Nehru University Delhi, India
Sagnik Dutta
Participant
Associate Professor, OP Jindal Global University, Sonipat, India
Dr Sagnik Dutta is an Associate Professor at Jindal Global Law School, OP Jindal Global University. They hold a PhD inPolitics and International Studies from the University of Cambridge. Their work contributes to decolonial, postcolonial political theory through an exploration of the everyday politics of Muslim citizenship in India. Their scholarship brings together insights from political theory, legal anthropology, critical legal studies, and feminist theory. They have published in prominent peer-reviewed journals including Feminist Theory, Law and Social Inquiry, Ethnicities, AsianJournal of Law and Society, and Legal Pluralism and Critical Social Analysis.Their monograph titled ‘In the Shadow of Minority Rights: Decolonising the gendered politics of Muslim citizenship in India’ is forthcoming with CambridgeUniversity Press.
Sagnik Dutta
Participant
Associate Professor, OP Jindal Global University, Sonipat, India
Vishesh Chander Guru
Participant
Independent Researcher, Bangalore, India
Vishesh is a researcher from Bangalore, India.He holds a post-graduate diploma in human rights law from the National LawSchool of India University, and a Master’s in Anthropology & Sociology from the Graduate Institute, Geneva. His master’s thesis studies life after prison and rehabilitation work in India. More recently, he was a Research Associate at Azim Premji University, on two research projects that explore the legal aid apparatus in Karnataka state, India. His research interests include the anthropology of the law, politics, and the state. He is also interested in questions of colonialism and carcerality in South Asia.
Vishesh Chander Guru
Participant
Independent Researcher, Bangalore, India
Momal Malik
Participant
Legal Professional, Axis Law Chambers Lahore, Pakistan
Momal, a legal professional holding aB.A.-LL.B. (Hons.) from the Lahore University of Management Sciences, is deeply committed to championing fundamental rights. In her current capacity at AxisLaw Chambers, Momal specializes in constitutional, civil, and commercial litigation matters, bringing a practical understanding to these areas. Her practical experience as a Judicial Clerk at the Supreme Court of Pakistan exposed her to the intricacies of constitutional law and human rights. In her current capacity at Axis Law Chambers, Momal specializes in constitutional,civil, and commercial litigation matters, bringing a practical understanding to these areas. Beyond her legal work, Momal actively advocates for the value of literature and legal pedagogy in fostering a more inclusive legal landscape.Serving as the General Secretary of the LUMS Alumni Association and as the LawSchool Representative on the LUMS Student & Alumni Advisory Board, Momal embraces the opportunity to contribute to her commitment of mentoring and supporting the next generation of legal professionals.
Momal Malik
Participant
Legal Professional, Axis Law Chambers Lahore, Pakistan
Anjali Mathur
Participant
PhD student, Jawaharlal Nehru University Delhi, India
Anjali is a PhD scholar at Jawaharlal NehruUniversity, Delhi. She completed her bachelor’s degree in Political Science from Miranda House, Delhi University. The course exposed her to diverse threads of political discourse. She completed her master’s degree from the Centre forPolitical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi. This enabled her to acquire a deeper understanding into the ever evolving nature of governance structures and law that is often shaped by imperatives of populism and power calculus. Her current thesis concerns itself with analyzing the selective and curated application of laws in service of the logic of populism and how that can impact and shape long standing constitutional values. It specifically deals with the application of Extraordinary Security Laws in the Indian context and the ways in which it can render the understanding of Rule of Law malleable in the Indian political imagination. She has presented at the workshop under the project ‘Geographies of Populism’ organized by Aalbourg University, Denmark.She has also made a presentation at Ulster University, Northern Ireland titled ‘Honour and Chivalry: Investigating the Ingredients of Anti-Terror Laws inIndia’ as well as at Aligarh Muslim University titled ‘India as Aid Donor andSignificance of Aid in International Politics’. Her fields of interest includePolitical Philosophy and Constitutional Law.
Anjali Mathur
Participant
PhD student, Jawaharlal Nehru University Delhi, India
Aqsa Qandeel
Participant
Lecturer, Women’s University Multan Punjab, Pakistan
Aqsa Qandeel is a lecturer of Sociology at theWomen’s University Multan, Pakistan. She recently completed her PhD at theUniversity of Malaya, Malaysia. Her research covers various socio-cultural and socio-legal aspects of homelessness in Pakistan. Aqsa Qandeel is a lecturer ofSociology at the Women’s University Multan, Pakistan. She recently completed her PhD at the University of Malaya, Malaysia. She is a gold medalist inMasters of Sociology from Bahauddin Zakariya University Multan, Pakistan. She has a distinction in M.Phil Sociology from the same institution. Her area of research expertise is qualitative gerontology. Her research covers various socio-cultural and socio-legal aspects of homelessness in Pakistan. She has written five journal articles, publications in national and internationalHEC-recognized journals, and three book chapters on current issues, including destitution among elderly people, legislative issues of marginalized and vulnerable groups, the COVID-19 situation, and academic achievements with qualitative and quantitative research approaches. She has experience teaching the following subjects: sociology of education, sociology of law, health and medicine, gender studies, anthropology, social research methodology, social theories, principles of sociology, criminology, political sociology, community development and social statistics. Above all, she is passionate and enthusiastic about learning innovative research methodologies for self-improvement and community development.
Aqsa Qandeel
Participant
Lecturer, Women’s University Multan Punjab, Pakistan
Panchali Ray
Participant
Associate Professor & Associate Dean, Krea University Sricity, India
Panchali Ray is Associate Professor ofAnthropology and Gender Studies and Associate Dean (Academic) at Krea University. Her book ‘Politics of Precarity: Gendered Subjects and the HealthCare Industry in Contemporary Kolkata’ (OUP, 2019) focused on the stigma faced by nurses and nursing aides and the persistence of gender and caste in the profession. Subsequently, she worked on nationalism, gender and politics and edited a volume ‘Women Speak Nation: Gender, Culture, and Politics’ (Routledge,2020). She is currently researching rivers, borders, migration, citizenship and care regimes in Bengal, India.
Panchali Ray
Participant
Associate Professor & Associate Dean, Krea University Sricity, India
Rishika Sahgal
Participant
Assistant Professor, University of Birmingham, U.K
Dr. Rishika Sahgal (she/her) is an AssistantProfessor in Law at the University of Birmingham. She completed her DPhil inLaw at the University of Oxford in 2022 as a Rhodes Scholar, exploring issues of displacement and resistance in India and South Africa. Her research and teaching interests span human rights, equality law, and criminal justice issues, from comparative Global South and anticolonial perspectives. Prior toOxford, Dr. Sahgal served as law clerk to the Chief Justice of India at theSupreme Court of India. She completed her undergraduate studies in law atNational Law University, Delhi, where she was senior researcher on the DeathPenalty Research Project. This research was cited by the Law Commission ofIndia in its report recommending the abolition of the penalty, and by Dr.Shashi Tharoor, member of the Indian Parliament, while introducing a private member’s bill to abolish the death penalty in India.
Rishika Sahgal
Participant
Assistant Professor, University of Birmingham, U.K
Srinjoy Sarkar
Participant
Associate Professor, O.P Jindal Global University Sonipat, India
Srinjoy Sarkar is an Associate Professor at Jindal Global Law School where he enjoys teaching International Law, and HumanRights Law and Theory. He occasionally also teaches Legal Methods to first year law students. His current research is directed towards municipal application of peremptory norms. Srinjoy has an emerging interest in the intersection of anthropology and human rights. He has previously worked as a researcher and writer with the War Crimes Research Office, Washington D.C., where he helped build the Gender Jurisprudence Collection. The Gender Jurisprudence Collection is a database of relevant sexual gender based violence cases emerging from the international and domestic war-crimes tribunals along with decisions of theEuropean Court of Human Rights. Srinjoy has also served as a reporter forOxford Reports on International Law: European Human Rights Section, where he was responsible for preparing case briefs of identified cases from the EuropeanCourt of Human Rights. Srinjoy was accepted as a Legal Fellow at the Robert F.Kennedy Human Rights, where he was a part of the Strategic Litigation Team to support their work with Human Rights Award Laureates. Furthermore, Srinjoy previously worked for the non-profit law firm: Public International Law andPolicy Group.
Srinjoy Sarkar
Participant
Associate Professor, O.P Jindal Global University Sonipat, India
Palvasha Shahab
Participant
Lawyer, researcher, and lecturer Institute of Business Adminitration (IBA) Karachi, Pakistan
Palvasha Shahab is a lawyer, researcher and lecturer. She teaches history and politics at the Department of Social Sciences and Liberal Arts at IBA, Karachi. She is presently undertaking a scholarship at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory, Frankfurt. Her research interests include contemporary encounters and critical histories ofcitizenship, conditions of labour extraction, environments, bureaucratic ordering and global supply chains. She researches the nexuses between these, asmo(ve)ments of meaning-making and narrativity, to find emancipatory possibilities. Her law practice has been focused on socio-economic rights, labour, gender and environmental justice.
Palvasha Shahab
Participant
Lawyer, researcher, and lecturer Institute of Business Adminitration (IBA) Karachi, Pakistan
Bazaf Shahbaz
Participant
Lawyer and researcher Lahore, Pakistan
Bazaf Shahbaz is a lawyer based in Lahore. He graduated with honors, earning a Bachelor of Laws degree (LL.B Honors) from the prestigious University of Central Punjab, Lahore. His dedication and academic excellence were recognized as he graduated as a Gold Medalist and was bestowed with the Roll of Honor Award. Currently serving as an Associate at Saqlain and Husnain Advocates & Corporate Counsels, Mr. Shahbaz combines his legal expertise with a passion for research. His scholarly pursuits have spanned diverse areas, including fundamental rights, clean water, and environmental law. A committed academic, Mr. Shahbaz also contributes to the legal education landscape as a Visiting Lecturer at the University of Central Punjab, Lahore.With an evolving focus on research, Mr. Shahbaz’s current scholarly endeavors center around the socio-legal perspectives of vagrancy. His research not only delves into the legal intricacies surrounding vagrancy but also explores its broader societal implications.
Bazaf Shahbaz
Participant
Lawyer and researcher Lahore, Pakistan
Sakshi Wadhwa
Participant
PhD student at Jawaharlal Nehru University Delhi, India
Sakshi Wadhwa is a doctoral student at theCentre for the Study of Law and Governance, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India. She is working on the idea of “The People and Peoplehood” in terms of cultural artifacts, the state, and popular mobilizations in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. Her research interests include the confluence of culture and politics, law and society, and social stratification in the construction of peoplehood inIndia. She has co-authored papers at the workshop under the project ‘Geographies of Populism’ organized by Aalborg University, Denmark, and at Aligarh MuslimUniversity, India. She has also presented a solo-authored paper centering around populism at an international conference organized by the University of Dhaka, Bangladesh. She has interned at a news website where she has written research articles on contemporary political issues and legal developments that involved political parties, civil liberties, and individual rights. She completed her master’s in Political Science from the Centre for PoliticalStudies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi.
Sakshi Wadhwa
Participant
PhD student at Jawaharlal Nehru University Delhi, India