Research Seminar Series
Chautari started a separate series of discussions related to current political affairs every Sunday at 3 PM from February 2003. The date and title of the discussions and the names of the people who led the discussions (Pundits) are listed in archives below. Since February 2005 to October 2005, regular Sunday discussion series has been converted to research series. However, after October 2005, Sunday series included discussions on both types of topics either research or current politics.
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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'Satisfied with My Job'― How are They? : The Case of Female Construction Workers in Nepal
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Abolition of Kipat and its Socio-cultural and Political Consequences amongst the Limbus
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Madheshi Dalit Women in Higher Education: Prospects and Challenge
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Politico- Economic Dimensions of Marginalization and the Art of Resistance Among the Musahars of East-Central Tarai
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Health Services in Rural Nepal and the Work of the Nick Simons Institute
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Anthropological Analysis of Doctor-Patient Relationship: A Case Study in Shahid Gangalal National Heart Centre
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Towards Financial Self-Reliance for Civil Society Organizations
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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History of Trade Union Movement in Readymade Garment Industry Nepal
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Ethnicity and Federalism in Nepal: A Case Study of Proposed Magrat Province
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Reservation in Public Service and Higher Education Aspirations of Janajati Youth
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Discussion on Tara Lal Shrestha's Book Shakti, Srashta ra Subaltern
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Big and Small Men: Daku-s, Military Labor, and the State in the Nepal-India Borderland, 1820-1850
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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Why They Go? How They Go? And What about those Left Behind? A Study of Migration in Gwaldaha
Discussion > Research Seminar Series
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