Radhika Gupta
Universitair docent
- Naam
- Dr. R. Gupta
- Telefoon
- +31 71 527 2727
- r.gupta@fsw.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0001-9872-3730

Radhika Gupta is assistent-professor Culturele Antropologie & Global Sociology. Ze promoveerde in 2011 aan de Universiteit van Oxford in de socioculturele antropologie. Haar onderzoeksinteresses zijn breed en omvatten de studie van grensgebieden, veiligheidspolitiek, antropologie van religie (met een focus op de islam), toerisme, milieukunde en kritische theorie. Haar onderzoek richt zich op Zuid-Azië. Radhika heeft ook gewerkt in internationale ontwikkelingsorganisaties (2000-2007) aan sociale integratie met een focus op waterbeheer op gemeenschapsniveau, milieurechtvaardigheid en de rechten van inheemse volkeren in Zuid- en Zuidoost-Azië.
Het volledige profiel van Radhika is beschikbaar op de Engelstalige medewerkerspagina.
Universitair docent
- Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
- Culturele Antropologie/ Ontw. Sociologie
- Gupta R. (2024), Remembering Abdul Ghani Sheikh, Stawa 11(9): .
- Gupta R. (2022), Islam in the Trans-Himalayan ecumene. In: Wouters J.J.P. & Heneise M.T. (red.), Routledge handbook of Highland Asia. London: Routledge. 129-138.
- Gupta R. (2022), Bespreking van: Walter A.M. (2022), Intimate Connections: Love and Marriage in Pakistan’s High Mountains. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. Contemporary South Asia 30(4): 637-638.
- Gupta R. (2022), Freedom in captivity: negotiations of belonging along Kashmir's frontier. Cambridge, New Delhi: Cambridge University Press.
- Gupta R. (2021), Ruination and Heritage Making in a South Asian Borderland. In: Winckler B., Khansa E. & Klein K. (red.), Thinking through Ruins: Genealogies, Functions, Interpretations. Berlin: Kulterverlag Kadmos.
- Gupta R. (2019), Bespreking van: Ahmad A. (2017), Everyday Conversions: Islam, Domestic Work, and South Asian Migrant Women in Kuwait. Durham: Duke University Press. Contributions to Indian Sociology 53(2) (341-343).
- Gupta R. (2019), "There Is Never a Peace Time, It Is Just No War Time”: Ambivalent Affective Regimes on an Indian Borderland, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 39(3): 475-489.
- Gupta R., 'A Postcolonial Civic? Shi‘i Philanthropy and the Making and Marking of Urban Space in Mumbai'. Muslim Humanitarianism: Allegra Lab. [blog].
- Gupta R., Understanding Kashmir. EASA Network of Ethnographic Theory. [blog].
- Gupta R. (2017), Seeking Knowledge from the Cradle to the Grave: Shi'i Networks of Learning in India. In: Jaffrelot C. & Louer L. (red.), Pan-Islamic Connections: Transnational Networks Between South Asia and the Gulf. London: Hurst and Co.
- Gupta R. (2016), Bespreking van: Bhan M., Counterinsurgency, Democracy, and the Politics of Identity in India. European Bulletin of Himalayan Research (48).
- Gupta R., Rippa A., Rest M., Joniak-Lüthy A., Maertens C., Müller J., Rail L. & Saxer M. (2016) On Roads: A Review Letter. Bespreking van: Harvey P. & Knox H., Roads. An Anthropology of Infrastructure and Expertise. Cultural Anthropology .
- Gupta R. (2015), There Must be Some Way Out of Here: Beyond a Spatial Conception of Muslim Ghettoization in Mumbai?, Ethnography 16(3): 352-270.
- Gupta R. (2014), Poetics and Politics of Borderland Dwelling: Baltis in Kargil, South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal (10): .
- Gupta R. (2014), Experiments with Khomeini’s Revolution in Kargil: Contemporary Shi‘a Networks between India and West Asia, Modern Asian Studies 48(2): 370-398.
- Gupta R. (2014), Bespreking van: Ricci R., Islam Translated: Literature, Conversion, and the Arabic Comopolis. Asian Ethnology Review 73(1-2).
- Gupta R. (2013), Allegiance and Alienation: Border dynamics in Kargil. In: Gellner D. (red.), Borderland Lives in Northern South Asia. Durham: Duke University Press.
- Gupta R. (2013), Bespreking van: Rethinking Secularism, Calhoun C., Juergensmyer M., Antwerpen J. van. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 19(1): 204-205.
- Gupta R. (2012), The Importance of Being Ladakhi in Kargil: Affects and Artifice, Journal of the Association for Nepal and Himalayan Studies 32(1-2): .
- Gupta R. (2012), Contemporary Publics and Politics in Ladakh, Journal of the Association for Nepal and Himalayan Studies 32(1-2): .
- Gupta R. (2009), Asad Ashura: An Indigenous Cultural Tradition?. In: Bray J. & Ahmad M. (red.), Recent Research on Ladakh.
- Mitra K. & Gupta R. (2009), Indigenous Peoples’ forest tenure in India. In: Perera J. (red.), Land and Cultural Survival. Manila: Asian Development Bank.
- Tiwari S. & Gupta R. (2008), Changing Currents: An Ethnography of the Traditional Irrigation Practices of Leh. In: Beek M. van & Pirie F. (red.), Modern Ladakh. Leiden: Brill.
- Gupta R. (2003), Changing Courses: A Comparative Analysis of Ethnographies of Maritime Communities in South Asia, Maritime Studies 2(2): 21-38.