Kanchan K. Malik

Dr. Kanchan K. Malik is a Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Hyderabad, India, where she also served as Head from 2017-20. She has been a Faculty Fellow with UNESCO Chair on Community Media since 2011 and Editor of the e-newsletter, CR News. With a dual Master’s in Economics and Mass Communication, Dr. Malik worked as a journalist with The Economic Times, New Delhi, before kindling her career in academics. Dr. Malik’s teaching and research are in the areas of community media, women in community communications, journalism studies, and media ethics. She has worked with national and international research projects and published papers on media interventions by non-governmental organizations for empowerment at the grassroots level.

Dr. Malik co-authored with Prof. Vinod Pavarala the much-cited book ‘Other Voices: The Struggle for Community Radio in India’ (Sage: 2007). Her co-edited book is ‘Community Radio in South Asia: Reclaiming the Airwaves’ (Routledge: 2020). She recently worked on the manual ‘Strengthening Gender Sensitive Practices and Programming in Community Radio’ (UNESCO, 2021).

Dr. Malik’s Fulbright-Nehru teaching component will comprise thematic seminars focusing on how community media in South Asia have enabled women to create gender spaces, challenge women’s marginalization in access to media and help mainstream gender in social change discourses. Her research project will seek to develop a framework for interpreting the empowerment question through the culturally rooted lived realities of women engaged in community communication and untangling how women negotiate with and navigate the deep-rooted issues affecting gender equality.

Harish Sankar Aghila

Harish S A is a Ph.D. candidate and teaching assistant at the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad. The broader domains encompassing his research interests include networks, systems, and security. His current research explores the security implications of in-network systems that leverage cutting-edge technologies like software-defined networks and programmable data planes.

Harish is a recipient of the prestigious Prime Minister’s Research Fellowship (PMRF) awarded by the Ministry of Education, Government of India. As a part of his doctoral research, he actively engaged in a security project alongside ASEAN countries and participated in their student exchange program. He published research papers and presented his work at reputed international venues. Additionally, he has received the notable SIGCOMM travel grant award, among many others.

He earned a bachelor’s degree in computer science and engineering from the National Institute of Technology Puducherry, during which time he interned with the UMR TETIS Joint Research Unit in Montpellier, France. He holds a master’s degree in computer engineering (cyber security) from the National Institute of Technology Kurukshetra.

As a Fulbright-Nehru Doctoral Research fellow at the University of Texas, Austin, TX, Harish is examining to secure data-driven, in-network systems built on high-speed programmable data planes against adversarial inputs. His vision is to bolster the resilience of next-generation computer networks against security threats. Harish teaches undergraduate students about network security. He enjoys road trips and chess.

Megha Bahl

Ms. Megha Bahl has been practicing criminal law in Delhi for the last seven years. Through research and litigation, she has engaged with the legal issues underlying incidents of custodial violence, sexual offenses, the stifling of journalistic freedoms, and the criminalization of the lives of indigenous people and manual scavengers, among others. She has worked with teams on the prosecution and defense sides of the criminal justice system, acquiring an in-depth understanding of the functioning of institutions like courts, police, and prisons.

Before this, Ms. Bahl obtained her master’s degree in sociology from the prestigious Delhi School of Economics. This academic training and her long engagement with organizations working on issues concerning the democratic rights of people have helped her identify the socio-political reasons for the occurrence of crimes. She has also understood the operation of power that determines access to justice and the availability of rights to victims and accused persons.

After completing her training under the Fulbright-Nehru Master’s Fellowship, Ms. Bahl intends to start a research and litigation clinic in India focusing on interventions that impact the constitutional rights of accused persons and victims in the criminal justice system. A synthesis of academic discourse, courtroom observation, and the lived experiences of people will help generate and disseminate meaningful ideas towards developing more humane jurisprudential practices in India.

Manoj Kapil

Prof. Manoj Kapil serves as the dean and principal at the Faculty of Engineering & Technology, Swami Vivekanand Subharti University in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh. With an illustrious academic career spanning over nineteen years in the realm of computer science and engineering, he has authored several books for undergraduate and postgraduate students.

Dr. Kapil also has to his credit numerous international publications in esteemed journals such as IEEE Xplore and Springer. He has chaired sessions at several international conferences and has received a letter of appreciation from the Hon’ble Governor of Uttar Pradesh for his contribution to the field of computer science and engineering. Dr. Kapil has delivered lectures on cyber security and ethical hacking and guided many PhD scholars. He has also advised several state departments on various criminal cases in his capacity as expert consultant. His core domains of work are automata, web technology, security & cryptography.

In his nine months as Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence at Huston-Tillotson University, Austin, TX, Dr. Kapil will teach particular courses, and also assist in curriculum development, leveraging his expertise in computer science and engineering to deliver high-quality education and ensuring that students are well-equipped for future challenges in these fields.

Chandrika Das

Ms. Chandrika Das is a final year Ph.D. candidate at the Department of Translation Studies, the English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad. Her research has led her to explore epic narratives and folktales in the Rajasthan region. She is working on oral-visual cultures, which are now on the wane in a fast-changing digital world. She collects epic narrations and explores translational relations between the narratives’ visual and oral constituents.

Ms. Das is a recipient of the Junior Research Fellowship awarded by the University Grants Commission India. She has presented her work at various national and international conferences. She also served as Associate at the Nida School of Translation Studies, Italy and was selected for the SISU Translation Research Summer School, Shanghai, which was organized by the Baker Center for Translation and Intercultural Studies. She is a budding translator, who translates between Hindi and English. One of her translated short stories has been published by Sahitya Akademi in their journal Indian Literature.

As a Fulbright Language Teaching Assistant, Ms. Das is teaching Hindi at the University of Texas, Austin. Through her participation in the program, she is engaging with a diverse teacher-learner community. She hopes to return to India with upgraded pedagogical skills, which would aid her career as an academician in India.

Nanditha Rao

Dr. Nanditha Rao is Assistant Professor at the International Institute of Information Technology (IIIT), Bengaluru in the VLSI Systems group. She received her Ph.D. in electrical engineering from IIT Bombay in 2017. Her research interests include FPGA based acceleration for machine learning, RISC-V and radiation-hardened designs. She has received the SERB Core Research Grant 2018, MITACS Globalink Research Award 2018 and SERB SUPRA research grant 2022.

Dr. Rao believes in encouraging students in technology and leadership roles. She took up administrative roles such as General Secretary of a women’s hostel in IIT Bombay for which she was awarded the Institute Organizational Citation. She is currently the associate warden of women’s hostel in IIIT Bangalore. She worked as a hardware design engineer at Intel for five years prior to her Ph.D. Her work at Intel involved signal integrity simulations of PCIe, LVDS, DisplayPort and HDMI interfaces. She received 13 Intel Spontaneous Recognition Awards and one Intel Divisional Recognition Award.

During her Fulbright-Nehru Academic and Professional Excellence fellowship, Dr. Rao is working on improving the performance of hardware accelerators for convolutional neural networks (CNN). CNNs are most commonly used today in computer vision, and image and video processing. The CNN accelerator implemented using field-programmable gate arrays (FPGA) enables significant performance improvement and power efficiency compared to GPU implementations. However, to improve the performance on the FPGA further, it is important to explore the appropriate mapping of the accelerator architecture onto optimal FPGA resources, which is what Dr. Rao is focusing on during this fellowship.

Manvi Tandon

Manvi Tandon is a PhD candidate at the Department of English, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi. She completed her master’s in English literature from Banaras Hindu University in 2022, following which she taught English at North-Eastern Hill University, Tura, Meghalaya for a semester as a guest lecturer. For her doctoral research, Manvi is studying narratives of relational childhood trauma. She is working in the area of childhood studies and is deeply interested in childhood ideology and child rights advocacy. Her academic interests include childhood narratives, translation, and popular culture.

Manvi studies Indian fiction for her doctoral thesis. She avidly participated in volunteering and social work during her undergraduate days through the National Service Scheme (NSS), and an internship at My Home India where she worked with ‘Children Under Need for Care and Protection.’

As a Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant, Manvi is assisting with teaching Hindi at the Department of Asian Studies, the University of Texas at Austin, TX. She hopes to contribute to the university’s language programs and foster cross-cultural understanding. This opportunity will also allow her to immerse herself in American culture and share her knowledge of Indian life, to fulfill her role as a cultural ambassador.

Shreya Chakraborty

Shreya Chakraborty is a Ph.D. candidate at the Indian Institute of Science Bengaluru. Her doctoral thesis focuses on understanding genetic architecture of manifestations of neurodegenerative diseases, with a specific focus on human cognition, considering age-associated metabolic risks. She has publications in peer-reviewed international journals with high reach and has presented papers at national and international conferences. She is a recipient of the Prime Minister Research Fellowship from the Government of India, which funds her research at IISc Bangalore.

Shreya holds a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in statistics from St. Xavier’s College, Kolkata and the University of Calcutta. She received the South-East Asia Subsistence fellowship for securing the highest marks at the undergraduate level in her university. Before starting her doctoral studies, she worked as an analyst at Marketing Management Analytics, Ipsos Research Pvt. Ltd.

As a Fulbright-Nehru Doctoral Research fellow, Shreya is focusing on building statistical models that enhance the translation of genetic risk prediction (polygenic risk portability) of cognitive decline across diverse contexts, taking underlying genomic architecture and interactions into account. Since polygenic risk score prediction has direct clinical utility, drawing context-specific predictions, would form a knowledge base for specific target genetic regions for accelerated cognitive decline during aging. Apart from research, she takes a great interest in participating and organizing cultural events, especially when they involve music. Shreya loves spending time with her friends and family, and also enjoys travelling and meeting people from various cultures.

Miriam Chandy Menacherry

Miriam Chandy Menacherry, filmmaker and founder of Filament Pictures, is known for her documentary films which celebrate everyday heroes, such as Stuntmen of Bollywood (2005), Robot Jockey (2007), The Rat Race (2011), Lyari Notes (2015), The Leopard’s Tribe (2022) and From the Shadows (2022). She was a Global Media Makers fellow (instituted by Film Independent) and a BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television) India fellow. She is also a masterclass panelist at IFFI on “Indian documentary on the World Stage”.

Miriam has completed her postgraduate degree from the AJK Mass Communication Research Center, New Delhi. Her social documentaries shed light on invisible narratives to construct a complex reality overlooked by mainstream media, and they have been selected at leading film festivals and broadcast worldwide. Her films have also been screened in educational institutes in India and abroad such as IIT Mumbai, Mount Carmel College, AJK Mass Communication Research Center, New York University, the University of Texas at Austin, Oxford University, and SOAS.

During her Fulbright-Nehru Academic and Professional Excellence (Research and Teaching) fellowship at the University of Texas, Austin, TX, Miriam is engaging with students of film to develop a dialogue about critically important yet invisible stories from India and expand the scope of her research supported by the India Foundation for the Arts to visibilise the contribution of women in cinema to include parallel developments in Hollywood.