Synergizing Policy, Praxis and Theory
We provide space for a unique interface between academia, civil society and government that seeks to enrich, refine and synergize theory, grassroots practice and policy-making.
Shaping Discourse through Research
We open new areas of enquiry, build knowledge and nurture a South Asian scholarly community through collaborative research and support to young and mid-career scholars from the fields of Security Studies, Gender Studies, Conflict Transformation and Peacebuilding.
Facilitating Safe Spaces for Dialogue
To build constituencies of peace across conventional borders and boundaries, we create safe spaces for communities to convene, dialogue, build relationships and nurture trust.
Enabling Capacities
We organize experiential trainings, workshops and consultations with youth groups, women and men, media persons and educators on leadership, peacebuilding, gender justice and democratic articulation, that are context-specific and offer tools for active coexistence and transformative change.
Nurturing Compassion in Action
We actively engage with women from marginalized communities in rural and urban areas; make regular visits to camps for refugees and internally displaced persons; and provide assistance during natural disasters, to deepen empathy and to connect better with the community.
WISCOMP seeks to build constituencies of peace and expand the contours of security beyond state-centric approaches through several interconnected programs
Mentoring
Mentoring: Where Experience and Potential Converge
Facilitating contexts for mid-career and senior professionals to interact with young scholars and practitioners to strengthen their capacities and build positive mentoring relationships is vital to our work. We have facilitated such spaces for individuals from diverse fields, including Education, Gender Studies, Peacebuilding, Public Policy, Law, International Relations and the Creative Arts. Our focus on mentoring cuts across programs, even while the Scholar of Peace Program and cross-border collaborative research projects have been the mainstay for mentorship.
We offer a broad range of resources in the form of in-house publications, bibliographies, research studies, capacity building modules, and training programs as part of WISCOMP’s extensive library.
Browse through our publications here
Creative Expressions on Building Peace
Formats such as – film festivals, theatre, dance, puppetry, heritage walks, music and photo exhibits and installations – are employed by WISCOMP to demystify peacebuilding and security and carry the spirit of national and international norms beyond the community of experts to citizens and young audiences.
Fellows’ Speak
“In moments of policy advice and back-channel diplomacy during heightened tensions between India and Pakistan, the values of dialogue and engagement that I learned through WISCOMP stayed with me. In my work I always asked myself – how do we retain those values of humanity, tolerance and openness to keep talking even at the height of conflict when you see no hope? How do you keep engaging even when the walls have gone up so high that dialogue seems pointless? ”
“As a WISCOMP Fellow, I carried out research on the experiences of Naga women in armed conflict situations. As a young researcher, the Fellowship played an integral role in developing my research interests in ethnography, feminist research methodology, and peace and conflict studies…In retrospect, WISCOMP offered me both financial support and a nurturing space where I could learn how to conduct research and engage with narratives from militarized societies. The monograph ‘Experiences of Naga Women in Armed Conflict: Narratives from a Militarized Society’ is a testimony to my journey as a young WISCOMP researcher, anxious yet driven to understand the history of violence and resilience of a society, and the commitment of WISCOMP to identify and support young researchers like me.”
“I completed a Ph.D. at the Global Women’s Studies Programme at NUI Galway. My thesis “Narrating In/Security: Women and Activism in Kashmir” explored the relationship between in/security and activism for women activists in Kashmir. As a visiting research fellow at WISCOMP, I gained the opportunity to learn from best practices in peacebuilding in Kashmir. It was beneficial to have access to the WISCOMP library of publications and learn from the vast experiences of the lovely and helpful staff members. From collaborating with WISCOMP I was provided with invaluable contacts in Kashmir, which helped with the successful completion of the doctoral thesis.”
“I was living in a remote village, bed-ridden due to a bullet injury, when the WISCOMP team reached me. WISCOMP supported me in my efforts to educate orphans and disabled children. They gave me a number of opportunities to participate in workshops and meetings on peacebuilding… Because of the support of WISCOMP over a decade (2001-2012), I am today a disability activist, a social worker, and a supporter of the poor. Maybe…without this support from WISCOMP, I could have not achieved much.”