South Asian Center for Reintegration and Independent Research

South Asian Center for Reintegration and Independent Research (SACRIR) is a think tank and research forum dedicated to studies and researches on South Asian nations and matters pertaining to people, culture, society, history, economy and politics. It was founded in Northwest Arkansas in Jan 2011 and later joined by young professionals and scholars from the U.S and Indian subcontinent. As of 2019, SACRIR now operates its U.S. and India research desks.

SACRIR new logo

SACRIR[1] is gradually gaining popularity as a South Asian thinkers' forum in the U.S, and has been published on various dailies and journals like the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Global Politician etc. In an (September 2011) interview on a local television channel of NW Arkansas, its founding member A Chattopadhyay defined SACRIR as 'a non profit forum of like minded people who believe South Asia is one, not necessarily in political terms'.

SACRIR also has partnered with a number of events, including HowdyModi in September 2019 at Houston, Texas.

Members

Though various people can get associated with SACRIR at various points, to conduct short term researches, paper submissions and dialogues, SACRIR currently, has three core members - A Chattopadhyay, Surjya Chakraborty and Gaurav Pandey.

References

[2] [3]

  1. "SACRIR on Open Think Tank Database".
  2. SACRIR, "Interview on Fayetteville Public TV", ""
  3. SACRIR, "SACRIR on GroundReport", ""
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.