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| Recent Developments |
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Volume 2, Issue 3 of The Subcontinental is released. This issue on Education was guest edited by Vijay Prashad. |
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The Subcontinental helps sponsor Project Impact's In Ink: A Celebration of South Asian Writing On October 23rd, 2004. |
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Volume 2, Issue 2 of The Subcontinental is released. This issue on Arts & Culture features works by Shahzia Sikander, Ibrahim Quraishi, Divya Kumar, Sharbari Ahmed, Bapsi Sidhwa, and others. |
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The Subcontinental joins Project Ahimsa, the Sikh Herritage Foundation, and the Smithsonian Institution to sponsor the opening of the Sikh Herritage Gallery in the National Museum of Natural History on the National Mall. |
| View News Archives |
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The Subcontinental is the first publication for expert research, analysis, and opinion on the full range of economic, legal, and policy issues affecting the South Asian American community. The Subcontinental publishes the most influential scholars and leaders with an aim toward identifying unifying themes and principles to help South Asian Americans contribute to American public policy.
The Autumn 2004 issue focuses on Education in America, featuring an interview with Tariq Ramadan and an investigation of U.S. aid dollars to stem fundamentalism in Pakistan.
This issue was guest edited by notable academic, activist, and author of eight books, Vijay Prashad.
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Vijay Prashad on South Asia in the Academy
Rita Verma speaks with Sikh Students about 9/11
Alis Sandosharaj's perspective on Growing Up South Asian in Urban America
Ajay Nair & Rohini Khanna on Student Outreach to Philadelphia's Bangla Community
Hannah Richman defends Charter Schools
Gabrielle Coppola on the No Child Left Behind Act
Robin Sukhadia tells the story of a Music Education Foundation
Naeem Mohaiemen & Ahmed Nassef on Muslim Voices in Academia, Homeland Security, and Tariq Ramadan
Sarada Peri on Madrasas in Pakistan
Amitava Kumar's poem, "So You Don't Understand Your Foreign T.A.?"
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