Sumit Baudh

Dr. Sumit Baudh (they/them or he/him) is a Professor of Law at O.P. Jindal Global University, Sonipat, Haryana. Dr. Baudh received their Doctor of Juridical Science (S.J.D.) from the University of California, Los Angeles, CA (UCLA) School of Law, Master of Laws (LL.M.) from the London School of Economics, London, UK, and a Bachelor of Arts and Laws with Honors (B.A. LL.B. Hons.) from National Law School of India University, Bengaluru, Karnataka.

As a former British Chevening scholar, Dr. Baudh has held prestigious Fellowships including the University of California Human Rights Fellow, Berkeley, Michael D. Palm Fellow of the Williams Institute, UCLA School of Law, Fellow of the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies, Columbia Law School, and the Transnational Law Institute Fellow, King’s College London. Dr. Baudh is qualified to practice law as an Advocate in India and enrolled as a Solicitor with The Law Society, England and Wales. As an independent consultant, Dr. Baudh has advised national and international organizations including the US based Arcus Foundation, the United Nations Development Program, the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, and the Norway-based LLH.

As the first Fulbright-Nehru Visiting Chair at Emory University, Dr. Baudh’s research is titled ‘A Comparative Review of Civil and Human Rights in India and the United States of America. —from a Critical Race and Dalit perspective’; amidst other sources, the research is informed by classroom instructions of a taught course on Critical Race Theory and Caste.

Akhila Vimal Chenicheri

Dr. Akhila Vimal Chenicheri is a trained dancer, and a Performance and Disability Studies scholar. She completed her PhD in Theater and Performance Studies at the School of Arts and Aesthetics, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Her thesis was titled ‘Performing Disfiguration: Pain, Affect and Staging of Relationalities in Classical and Ritual-Healing Performances of Kerala’. She obtained her master’s and M Phil degrees from the School of Arts and Aesthetics, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, in 2012 and 2014 respectively, and has a B A (English) from Maharajas College, Ernakulam, Kerala .

As a trained dancer who identifies as disabled, owing to partial and recurrent vision loss, Dr. Chenicheri’s research is located at the intersection of performance and disability and disabled dance pedagogy. Methodologically, she is committed to ‘Practice as Research’ and her research interests include disfiguration, relationality of disability, gender, and caste in the Indian textual and performance practices and ritual performances. This research has appeared in peer-reviewed journals and edited volumes. In 2021, she received the inaugural International Federation of Theatre Research New Scholars Award in Disability Performance. Akhila has been a fellow at the prestigious Mellon School of Theater and Performance Research funded by the Andrew Mellon Foundation at Harvard University in 2016.

Her Fulbright-Nehru Postdoctoral Research project is to develop a practice- led dance pedagogy for blind and low- vision performers. The pedagogy aims to collectively initiate collaborative learning through somatic engagement with blind and low- vision performers, including the cultural unlearning of the expectations that come with dance training and sensibility.

Senganglu Thaimei

Prof. Senganglu Thaimei is an Associate Professor of English at Miranda House, University of Delhi, New Delhi. She is currently a fellow at The Highland Institute in Kohima, Nagaland. She received her PhD from the English Department, University of Delhi. Her specialization is folklore studies. Dr. Thaimei has worked on many projects at the Centre for Archiving and Academic Translation, University of Delhi, that involved archiving of tribal oral materials from Northeast India. Her published works appear in folklore journals such as Folklore and Folkloristics. Dr. Thaimei is also a visual artist and a published illustrator. Her illustrations are featured in Easterine Kire’s novels, Songry (2021), Journey of the Stone (2021), published by Barkweaver. She is a member of the Art for Change Foundation, an arts organization based in New Delhi. She has recently ventured into a pluralist approach involving research along with artistic illustration – an attempt to present a confluence of scientific survey, folk knowledge, visual art, and literature .

Jayesh Sonwane

Dr. Jayesh Manohar Sonawane obtained his Ph D from the Department of Energy Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Maharashtra, under the s upervision of Prof. Prakash Chandra Ghosh and the Department of Chemistry, Monash University, Australia under the supervision of Prof. Samuel Adeloju. His Ph D research focuses on the development of conducting polymer electrodes for microbial fuel cells for power generation and wastewater treatment. Dr. Sonawane is a recipient of the prestigious “Excellence Research award 2016-18” from Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of India.

During his PhD , he was awarded the Shastri Fellowship from the Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute and went to Toronto University where he worked on Elucidation electric properties of engineered E. coli with pilA gene from Geobacter sulfurreducens, at the Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry. Later, he joined a postdoctoral researcher in the same department, w here he worked on a hybrid bioelectrochemical treatment process for liquid stream for the “Reinventing the Toilets” project funded by the Bill & Melinda G ates F oundation. Dr. Sonawane is currently working on a microfluidics bioelectrochemical system for understanding electroactive biofilms at Université Laval, Quebec, Canada.

Protein nanowires are a revolutionary green sustainable electronic material with unique physical, chemical, and biological properties that offer substantial advantages over other nanowire materials for biomedical and environmental sensing. The project will explore novel concepts for the large-scale separation of the wires from the cells. High throughput methods will be optimized for the fabrication of sensors specifically designed for four different analytes to demonstrate a range of high commercial relevance in clinical and environmental sensing. Dr. Sonawane is supported by the Fulbright-Nehru F ellowship and is working with scientist Prof. Derek R Lovley at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA.

Digvijay Singh Negi

Prof. Digvijay S Negi is an A ssistant P rofessor at the Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research (IGIDR), Mumbai, Maharashtra. Before joining IGIDR, he was a postdoctoral F ellow at the Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi, New Delhi. Prof. Negi obtained his Ph D in E conomics from the Indian Statistical Institute, New Delhi, and a Master’s in Economics from the Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi.

His introduction to academic research happened at the ICAR-National Institute of Agricultural Economics and Policy Research as a research associate. Ever since then, he has been interested in seeking solutions to multiple policy challenges faced by Indian agriculture. His primary research areas are agricultural economics, international trade, risk and insurance, and development economics. More recently, pushed by student collaborators at IGIDR, he has started venturing into other related areas of research which include health and nutrition and issues in cultural norms and gender.

Prof. Negi has published several research articles in reputed national and international journals. He also won a graduate student travel grant from the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association (AAEA) to attend the annual AAEA (2018) conference in Washington DC; and travel support from the International Association of Agricultural Economics to attend the 30th International Conference of Agricultural Economists (2018), Vancouver, Canada.

For his Fulbright-Nehru project, he plans to study the viability and applicability of satellite imagery and remotely sensed data in designing index-based crop insurance contracts suitable for Indian farmers.

Richa Singh

Dr. Richa Singh did her PhD in 2020 under the supervision of Dr. Manjari Jain at the Indian Institute of Science Education & Research (IISER) Mohali, Punjab. Her thesis examines the effect of three important environmental factors (light, temperature and ambient noise) on the acoustic signaling of a nocturnal ensiferan insect, Acanthogryllus asiaticus. After her PhD, she moved to the Indian Institute of Technology Mandi , to monitor bird populations using a machine learning approach. She is currently working as a p roject s cientist at the Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun.

Dr. Singh is a recipient of a DST-Inspire Fellow ship and has qualified for the UGC-NET examination. She is an Executive Committee member of the Ethological Society of India and has published her research work in reputed international journals. She has won various travel grants to present her work on international platforms such as the International Bioacoustics Congress Travel grant award from University of Sussex, UK, Association for the Study of Animal Behavior Diversity travel grant award from University of Konstanz, Germany, DST International travel grant, Government of India and Animal Behavior Society Diversity travel grant from University of Illinois, Chicago. She secured third place in the 3MT (3-minute thesis) competition in Behavior Conference at University of Illinois, Chicago, in 2019. She got the best oral presentation awards (National Conference on Behavioral Ecology, Gujarat, 2017 and Young Ecologists Talk and Interact, Assam, 2017) and the best poster presentation awards (Conference on Insect Biodiversity Studies, Kerala, 2016 and National Symposium on Behavioural Ecology, Varanasi, 2014).

Frog-biting mosquitoes and their host are confronted with unprecedented growing anthropogenic noise levels. It is unknown how such novel acoustic conditions will affect mosquitoes in detecting, recognizing, and localizing their hosts. As a Fulbright-Nehru Postdoctoral Fellow , Dr. Singh will use a neuroethological approach to understand the behavioral responses and underlying mechanisms of organisms under novel noisy conditions. In particular, her research will shed light on the effect of anthropogenic changes on vector-host interactions.

Manpreet Singh

Dr. Manpreet Singh is a postdoctoral F ellow at Harish-Chandra Research Institute (HRI), Prayagraj (Allahabad). His research interest is in low dimensional topology. Before joining HRI, he was an Integrated PhD student in the Department of Mathematical Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Mohali. He received his master’s degree and PhD under the supervision of Dr. Mahender Singh, in 2021. During his PhD, he worked on algebraic and combinatorial aspects in knot theory. He has published several research articles in reputed international journals.

During the Fulbright-Nehru Postdoctoral Research Fellowship, he will work on exploring connections among algebraic and geometric invariants of knots. He aims at understanding certain colorings of alternating diagrams of prime links using the elements of the first homology groups of cyclic branched coverings of links. In the last two decades, many algebraic structures have been introduced as invariants of (ramified) knots. Dr. Singh is planning to delve into the intricacies of such invariants from a geometric facet.

Shivani Sharma

Dr. Shivani Sharma received her BSc (Honors) from Gargi College, University of Delhi, New Delhi, in 2013. After that, she joined the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Pune (IISER-Pune), for an Integrated MS-PhD program. After completing her MS in 2015, she joined the research group of Prof. Sujit K Ghosh to pursue her doctoral studies. Her work was focused on the design and synthesis of neutral nitrogen donor linker-based metal-organic frameworks with a focus on sequestration and sensing of toxic pollutants. She has published several research articles in reputable international journals. She qualified for the IIT-JAM examination and was awarded the CSIR-SRF research Fellow ship. Her other recognitions include the Best Poster Award at a conference hosted by RSC Porous Materials Group, UK .

She is currently working as a postdoctoral researcher under the supervision of Dr. Alexander C Forse at the Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, UK. Her work is focused on the design of novel sorbents for carbon capture.

For her Fulbright-Nehru postdoctoral stint, Dr. Shivani will be working in the research group of Prof. Jeffrey R Long at the University of California, Berkeley, CA. Her project aims to develop new porous materials for the capture of highly toxic ions and the extraction of trace/precious metal ions from various waste/seawater by electrochemical methods. She is passionate about achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, including freshwater security and sustainable development.

Balaji Sedithippa Janarthanan

Dr. Balaji Sedithippa Janarthanan is a s cientist at the ICAR-National Institute of Agricultural Economics and Policy Research (NIAP), New Delhi. His research work revolves around agricultural growth, transformation and development in India. His current work focuses on farmers’ income, governance impacts and agricultural trade. He has been part of the research team contributing to the Committee on Doubling Farmers’ Income, and has coordinated the research of a network of institutions in the project Structural Transformation, Regional Disparity and Institutional Reforms in Agriculture at NIAP. He obtained his Ph D for his thesis titled ‘Agricultural Growth, Rural Non-Farm Employment and Poverty in India’, from the Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi. He was a Visiting Fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC. He received R.T. Doshi Award in 2021 and 2018, Young Agricultural Economist Award in 2020, Uma Lele-AERA (India)-AAEA Mentorship Award in 2018, and Best Research Paper Presentation Award in 2015.

As a Fulbright- Nehru Postdoctoral Research Fellow, at the University of Georgia, Dr. Balaji SJ will focus on the means of achieving inclusive income growth in agriculture and reducing poverty among the Indian farmers. He will explore the spatial income characteristics at a highly disaggregated level for about two decades in the country, and will develop a model to explain how technology, resource use, market, and policies shall enhance farmers’ income across space, notably the poor.

Priti Samyukta

Dr. Priti Samyukta completed her bachelor’s d egree from JNTU, College of Fine Arts, Hyderabad, in 2001, and her master’s d egree in Fine Arts from the University of Hyderabad in 2003. She received her PhD in the month of July 2021, under the supervision of Dr. P K Khandoba, from Gulbarga University, Karnataka. Her research topic for her PhD, “A comparative study of Batik and Kalamkari paintings – with special reference to Telangana and Andhra Pradesh”, is a compiled work of a historical overview of the two art forms on fabric and its presence in today’s art context. Dr. Samyukta has published several research papers in reputed n ational and i nternational j ournals, and has attended several seminars and conferences. Dr. Samyukta is also a painter. She has attended art camps and participated in several art exhibitions . She has also curated art exhibitions in India and abroad. She has won several awards, like The Hyderabad Art Society Award (2003 & 2009), HYBIZ TV Award (2021), 9th Faculty Branding Award (2021), Karnataka State Govt , and the BV Halabavi Award (2021). Her paintings are with collectors in India and abroad. Presently, Dr. Samyukta is Head, Department of Painting, College of Fine Arts, JNAFA University, Hyderabad.

The topic for her p ostd octoral thesis, “Women in Quilt Art of the Gulf South Region: An Investigation into their contribution to the 21st Century America”, is to look at the historical overview of the American Narrative Quilt women artists and the Gees Bend community of Alabama and their contribution to uphold “quilt” as an art form in today’s American art. Dr. Samyukta would want to introduce, simultaneously, South Indian textiles to the quilt artists, while practicing quilt with them and researching as well. She would finally bring back the nuances of American Quilt Art to Telangana’s Quilters, enlightening them about how quilts of Telangana can be art specific as well.