WISCOMP Dialogue In collaboration with IIC
Date : 1st November 2021, Time: 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
Northeast India’s geo-political emergence as a postcolonial borderland has been attended by long periods of unrest, rebel movements and militarization both in its immediate past and via its older histories of resistance. The region has come to be inseparable from peace negotiations, mediations and accords on account of protracted conflicts and attempts at their resolution. ‘Peace’ in India’s northeast remains a contested idea appropriated for various, often disparate ends.
The WISCOMP Dialogue sought to articulate questions that are usually not asked and focused on the role of women engaged in peacebuilding. The speakers engaged with the discontents of peace processes, the politics of gender that undergirds their failures and the everyday experiences of living in a space embedded in structural forms of violence even as it struggles for a peaceable future. So, what does peace really mean in northeast India today? Does the absence of violent conflict necessarily yield peace? What are the hidden forces of attrition in this society? What other forms of symbolic violence continue to afflict its people? These and other questions were explored at the Dialogue.
The speakers at the Dialogue were Dr. Roshmi Goswami, a feminist human rights activist and independent researcher known for her pioneering work on women in conflict situations; Dr. Rakhee Kalita Moral, Head, Women’s Studies Center, Cotton University, Guwahati; Patricia Mukhim, Editor, The Shillong Times, Meghalaya’s oldest and largest circulating English daily and Pradip Phanjoubam, Editor, Imphal Review of Arts and Politics.
The speakers shared perspectives on how women participate in post-conflict peacebuilding in the northeast and count for peace.