Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi
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Jawaharlal Nehru University
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Type | Public |
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Established | 1969 |
Chancellor | K. Kasturirangan |
Vice-Chancellor | Sudhir Kumar Sopory |
Academic staff
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473 (on 31 January 2011) |
Administrative staff
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1276 (on 31 March 2011) |
Students | 8,309 (on 31 August 2015) |
Location | , |
Campus | Urban 1000 acres (4 km²) |
Affiliations | UGC, NAAC, AIU |
Website | www.jnu.ac.in |
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Jawaharlal Nehru University, (Hindi: जवाहरलाल नेहरू विश्वविद्यालय) also known as JNU, is a public central university in New Delhi, the capital of India. In 2012, The National Assessment and Accreditation Council gave the university a grade of 3.9 out of 4, the highest grade[1] awarded to any educational institution in the country.[2] The university is ranked second among the public universities in India, as published by India Today[3] magazine.
Contents
History
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Jawaharlal Nehru University was established in 1969 by an act of parliament.[4] It was named after Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first Prime Minister. G. Parthsarthi was the first vice-chancellor.[5]
The objective of the founders was to make the university a premier institution of higher learning and to promote research and teaching leading to the increasing engagement of its students and teachers in higher level academic work and national and international policy making.[citation needed]
Logo
The JNU Logo is a graphic statement which stands for international academic exchange and onwards search of knowledge for the betterment of human being. The overlapping circular segments of the design denote global interaction, creating a flame emitting enlightenment, this flame emerges from the traditional Indian 'diya' (lamp)-a source of Light, Understanding and Brotherhood. The design is also representative of the rose-bud closely associated with the name of Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru. The University is driven by the following ideals.[citation needed]
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A University stands for humanism. For tolerance, for reason, for the adventure of ideas and for the search of truth. It stands for the onward march of the human race towards ever higher objectives. If the Universities discharge their duties adequately, then it is well with the Nation and the People.[citation needed]
Schools
University is organised into ten schools, each of which has several centres, as well as four independent special centres:
- School of Arts and Aesthetics:[6] This is one of the newest schools in the university. It is one of the few places in India that offers post-graduate degree courses in the theoretical and critical study of the cinematic, visual and performing arts. Moreover, it is the only place in India where these disciplines are offered in one integrated programme that allows students to understand the individual arts in a broader context of history, sociology, politics, semiotics, gender and cultural studies apart from being able to integrate the study of one art form with the other arts. The three streams of study offered at the school are Visual Studies, Theatre and Performance Studies and Cinema Studies.[citation needed]
- School of Biotechnology: This school was set up in 2006 from the earlier Center for Biotechnology. BioSpectrum magazine rated the Bio Technology program of JNU as third ranking institute among all public schools in India.[citation needed]
- School of Computer and Systems Sciences: Since its inception in 1974, this school has been attracting the largest number of applications as compared with the other schools. The school specially caters to three fields of study: Master of Computer Application (MCA), Master of Technology (M.Tech.) and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.). The faculty and students deal with a wide range of computer science and technology areas, for example: Database Systems, Artificial Intelligence, Computer Networks, Operation Research, Mathematical Modelling, Optimization Techniques, Software Engineering and many more. A student placement cell facilitates the students to enter the global IT market after completion of the course.[7]
- School of Environmental Sciences: Research into remote sensing application in geosciences, especially groundwater and earthquake forewarning and Sun-Earth connection. Other research includes Environmental Biosciences, Ecology, Geomics, Glaciology, Chemistry, Cell Biology, Immunology, Pollution studies, Radiation Physics and Environmental Physics.[citation needed]
- School of International Studies: This is the oldest school. It predates the establishment of JNU as the Indian School of International Studies, which was set up in 1955.[8] The centers in this school are the Center for Canadian, US and Latin American Studies, the Center for East Asian Studies, the Center for European Studies, the Center for International Legal Studies, the Center for International Politics, Organisation and Disarmament Studies, the Center for International Trade and Development, the Center for Russian and Central Asian Studies, the Center for South, Central, Southeast Asian and Southwest Pacific Studies, the Center for West Asian Studies, Centre for African Studies and the Group of Comparative Politics & Political Theory.[citation needed]
- School of Language, Literature and Culture Studies: This is the only school that offers undergraduate courses with several centers: the Center for Arabic and African Studies, the Center for Chinese and South East Asian Studies, the Center for French and Francophone Studies, the Center for German Studies, the Center of Indian Languages, the Center for Japanese Korean and North East Asian Studies, the Center for English Studies, the Center for Linguistics, the Center for Persian and Central Asian Studies, the Center for Russian Studies, the Center for Spanish, Portuguese, Italian & Latin American Studies.[citation needed]
- School of Life Sciences: The School of Life Sciences (SLS) was established on the basis of a report prepared by a working group headed by Prof. M.S. Swaminathan in 1970. The school stands today as a unique institution in the country where multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary teaching and research in life sciences have established permanent roots. The uniqueness of the school essentially lies in the fact that in the faculty there are experts and active researchers representing almost all areas of modern biology. The school has been recognized as Center of Excellence under UGC-COSIST and DSA Special Assistance Programmes. Almost all the students completing Ph.D. degrees from SLS (285 till date) get opportunities for post-doctoral work abroad, and a great many return to serve the country. The school’s faculty and students publish extensively in reputed national and international journals: To date, SLS has to its credit over 2000 research publications.[citation needed]
- School of Physical Sciences: This school was formed in 1986 with a faculty in Physics and later added with faculties in Chemistry and Mathematics. The degree programs offered are M.Sc. (in Physics) and Ph.D. (in Physics, Chemistry or Mathematics). The areas of research interests include Theoretical and Experimental Condensed Matter Physics, Soft-Matter Physics, Non-equilibrium Statistical Mechanics, Quantum Field Theory, Classical and Quantum Chaos, Low Temperature Physics, Materials Science, Supramolecular Chemistry, Ultrafast Laser Spectroscopy, as well as extensive computational facilities with a dedicated Nonlinear Dynamics laboratory.[citation needed]
- School of Social Sciences: It is the largest school (in terms of the number of faculty members) in JNU with nine centres. Its centers include the Center for the Study of Regional Development, which is accredited as the Center for Advanced Studies (CAS) by the University Grants Commission and is the premier center in the field of geography, the Center for Economic Studies and Planning [5], which is a premier institute in the field of economics, the Center for Historical Studies, which regularly brings out a reputed peer-reviewed journal Studies in History, the Center for Philosophy, the Center for Political Studies, the Center for Studies in Science Policy, the Center for the Study of Social Systems, the Center of Social Medicine and Community Health, the Zakir Husain Center for Educational Studies,[9]
- Special centres
- Center for the Study of Law and Governance
- Center for Molecular Medicine
- Center for Research and Innovation
- Special Center for Sanskrit Studies
- Special Center for Nano-sciences
Reputation and rankings
University rankings | |
---|---|
General – international | |
QS (World)[10] | 150-200 |
General – India | |
Careers360[11] | 20 |
Medical - India | |
Business – India |
Constituent centres
The following are the constituent institutes under the university:[12]
- Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB), Hyderabad
- Officers Training Academy, Chennai
- Central Drug Research Institute (CDRI), Lucknow
- Centre for Development Studies (CDS), Trivandrum
- Central Institute of Medicine and Aromatic Plants, Lucknow
- College of Military Engineering (CME), Pune
- C.V. Raman Research Institute, Bangalore
- International Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), New Delhi
- Institute of Microbial Technology, Chandigarh
- Military College of Electronics and Mechanical Engineering (MCEME), Secunderabad
- Military College of Telecommunication Engineering (MCTE), Mhow
- Naval College of Engineering (NCE), INS Shivaji, Lonavla
- National Institute of Immunology (NII), New Delhi
- Nuclear Science Center, New Delhi (enamed as the Inter-University Accelerator Centre (IUAC))
- The National Defence Academy, Pune
- The Army Cadet College, Dehra Dun
- National Institute of Plant Genome Research (NIPGR), New Delhi[13]
- Indian Naval Academy, Ezhimala, Kerala
In addition, the university has exchange programmes and academic collaboration through the signing of MoUs with 71 universities around the world.[14] The University has also sent a proposal to set up a Center in Bihar.[15]
Infrastructure
JNU Campus
The university is an example of the new red brick universities built in the mid-20th century.[citation needed]
Located in the southern part of New Delhi and spread over an area of about 1000 acres (4 km²), the campus occupies some of the northernmost reaches of the Aravalli Hills. Rocky formations of the Aravalli hills constitute the natural highest point in the university known as Parthasarthy rocks, named after the university's first vice chancellor. The campus maintains large patches of scrub and forestland – the JNU ridge is home to over 200 species of birds and other wildlife such as, Nilgai, Indian Crested Porcupines, Common Palm Civet, jackals, mongoose, peacocks as well as a large number of snakes.[citation needed]
The JNU library is a nine-storey building in the middle of the academic block of the university and is the tallest structure on the campus. It contains large collections of books, printed journals, newspapers and archives of primary sources. On the ground floor are the reading rooms, a section of the stacks, the library's collection of the back numbers of scholarly journals, computer terminals and a newspaper and journal section. The floors are devoted to different subjects. The library houses the P.C. Joshi Archives. The library compound is fully Wi-Fi, with online access to international academic journals including Project MUSE and JSTOR.[citation needed]
Modernization
The university has been modernising by moving toward "paperless"[16] transparency and e-governance with the help of Wipro and a wireless network to connect the students and the teachers to the library.[citation needed]
Student life
Jawaharlal Nehru University Students' Union (JNUSU)
The Jawaharlal Nehru University Students' Union (JNUSU) is primarily responsible for building and preserving a healthy political culture and an atmosphere of open debates on the campus. Students are kept informed about the public meetings, discussions and other issues through pamphlets and notices. Public Action, an objective forum, invited a variety of journalists, politicians, and academics, to debate and discuss various topics. There is a long tradition in JNU of holding serious post-dinner meetings in the hostels to which the students often invite well-known public figures, writers and intellectuals.[citation needed]
Student activism
The university is known to have a long tradition of alumni who now occupy important political and bureaucratic positions (see Prominent alumni). This is in part due to the strong prevalence of Left-Centric student politics and the existence of a written constitution for the university to which noted Communist Party leader Prakash Karat contributed exhaustively during his education at JNU.[17] However, on 24 October 2008 the Supreme Court of India stayed the JNU elections and banned the JNUSU for not complying with the recommendations of the Lyngdoh committee.[18] After a prolonged struggle and multi-party negotiations, the ban was lifted on 8 December 2011.[19] After a gap of more than four years, interim elections were scheduled again on 1 March 2012.[20] Following the election results declared on 3 March 2012, AISA candidates won all four central panel seats and Sucheta De, the president of AISA became the president of JNUSU.[21]
International Student's Association
The International Student's Association (ISA) is an official Jawaharlal Nehru University body. It was instituted in 1985 with a view to promoting friendly relations and cultural exchange. The ISA has a constitution and elected executive, cultural, advisory and financial committees. All foreign students of JNU are also members of the FSA. The university has 133 international students.[22]
ISA had started as the Foreign Students Association (FSA). The word 'foreign' was replaced with 'international' for semantic propriety.[citation needed]
Cultural activities
The university has nine central cultural clubs: the Drama Club, Music Club, Film Club, Fine Arts Club, Photography Club, Literary Club, Debating Club, UNESCO Club, and Nature & Wildlife Club. Programs are organized by the convenor and the members of the respective clubs.[citation needed]
In addition there are a large number of associations of students from different states of India and various other autonomous cultural groups such as Bahroop Arts Group, IPTA (Indian Peoples’ Theatre Association), Wings Cultural Society, JANRANG and many more.[citation needed]
- Bahroop Arts Group is an amateur theatre group which has been active on campus for more than 15 years. Their plays often focus on topical issues.
- IPTA is a theater group.
- JANRANG is a political-cultural group and this group is active since 2012.
- Wings Cultural Society plans cultural activities, including theatre, painting exhibitions, literary seminars, and symposiums, etc.
- Onam Committee is a cultural group of students from "Gods Own Country" in JNU. It organises Cultural events under its banner of Onam Celebrations. It also organises a Kerela Food Festival which is an extremely popular event in JNU campus.
- Haryana Students Association is the association of students from Haryana on campus of JNU.
- Rajasthan Students Association is the association of students from Rajasthan on campus of JNU. It organises events like "Padharo Mhare Desh" which is a cultural and social extravaganza highlighting the culture of different regions of Rajasthan. The food festival organised by the Rajasthan students Association is very Popular.
- Odisha Sanskrutika Parishad is the oldest union of Oriya students and has the largest membership of Oriya students in JNU. It actively promotes Indian nationalism, patriotism and pride in Oriya identity and culture. OSP organises Maa Saraswati Puja and Ganesha Puja, Utkal Dibas, Sports Meet and cultural competitions in JNU campus, which is most awaited event for students of Oriya community. OSP plans to conduct Sri Jagganatha Rath Yatra as the expression of unique Oriya festival and has massive support for it on JNU Campus.It also publishes a Souvenir every Utkal Dibas featuring collection of poems and literary articles by its members. In the past OSP has organised several cultural events like Odissi Dance Festival attended by Guru Kelucharan Mahapatro in 1999, Oriya Kobi Sammelono in 2001, 1st Oriya JNU Alumni Meet in 2009 and student meetings with eminent Oriya personalities like Shri KP Singhdeo, Hon'ble MP. OSP has always been active in promoting the concerns of Oriya students most effectively.[citation needed]
- Odisha Students Association is a liberal, democratic, egalitarian and secular association of Students from Odisha that organises regular Seminars and Meetings on issues pertaining to Odisha. It also organises Odisha Day, Culinary Festival of Oriya cuisine, cultural programmes and classes of Oriya language for all interested students on campus during vacations. It seeks to uphold the rich inclusive cultural heritage of Odisha, opposes Saffronisation, Sanskritisation, hegemonisation and homogenisation by highlighting the often overlooked sub-regions, communities and cultures of Odisha. It supports positive social transformation through engaged State support for the marginalised and repressed. Odisha Students Association expressly eschews and abjures religiosity and celebrations of religious ceremonies on Campuses of Public Universities funded by Government.[citation needed]
- Gujarat Students Association is the association of students from Gujarat on campus of JNU. It organises cultural events like "Garba Nite" and food festival.[citation needed]
Halls of residence
The residential character of JNU is an important component of the intellectual and cultural life of the campus. There are 17 residences (hostels), including one (Mahanadi) for married research scholars and one (Subansir also known as Mahanadi Old) for Post Doctoral Fellows. Of the 17 residences, 7 are for men, 5 are for women and 4 have mixed wings for women and men. They are all named on the rivers of India.[citation needed]
Hostels
- Ganga, Yamuna, Godavari, Koyna and Shipra (women)
- Jhelum, Satluj, Periyar, Narmada, Kaveri, Mahi-Mandavi and Brahmaputra (men)
- Sabarmati, Tapti, Lohit, Chandrabhaga (co-ed, mixed wings)
- Mahanadi (married research scholars) and Subansir (also known as Mahanadi Old) for post doctoral fellows[citation needed]
Sports
There are sports clubs in the university. The practice sessions are organised by the convenor with help of the Sport Office, which provides the necessary kit and other equipment. All the clubs organise annual tournaments in the winter semester. There are three main venues where the following games are played:[citation needed]
- Sports Complex/JNU Stadium: For football, cricket, volleyball, lawn tennis, weight lifting/gymnasium, yoga and athletics
- Badminton Hall inside the Students Activity Centre (Tefla's Building): For badminton and taekwondo (with a qualified instructor, Black Belt 4th Dan)
- Central School Grounds Basketball Court (near Tapti Hostel): Basketball[citation needed]
Notable alumni
- Abhay Kumar, diplomat, Public Diplomacy Division of the Ministry of External Affairs India
- Abhijit Banerjee, Ford Foundation Professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US
- Aditya Jha, Canadian entrepreneur; philanthropist and philosopher; active in Canadian public affairs
- Ahmed bin Saif Al Nahyan, chairman of Etihad Airways
- Ajit Seth, Indian Civil Servant, Cabinet Secretary of Republic of India
- Ali Zeidan, Prime Minister of Libya[23]
- Amitabh Rajan, Indian Civil Servant, Home Secretary of Government of Maharashtra
- Anjali Gopalan, Executive Director of the Naz Foundation (India) Trust.
- Ashok Tanwar, Secretary, All India Congress Committee and Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
- B. S. Chimni, Professor, JNU and former Vice Chancellor WBNUJS
- Baburam Bhattarai, former (36th) prime minister and former finance minister of Nepal
- D. P. Tripathi, general secretary NCP, Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha
- Digvijay Singh, former Union Minister of State for Foreign Affairs
- Gaiti Hasan, microbiologist
- Harun Rashid Khan, Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India
- Lalit Mansingh, Dean of Foreign Service Institute, New Delhi
- Mahendra P. Lama, Professor, JNU
- Muzaffar Alam, George V. Bobrinsky Professor of History, University of Chicago, US
- Nirmala Sitaraman, Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Ministry of Commerce & Industry,[24] as well as a Minister of State for Finance and Corporate Affairs.Until recently she served as a national spokesperson for Bharatiya Janata Party.[25] Also she is a Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha for Bharatiya Janata Party
- Palagummi Sainath, journalist
- Prakash Karat, Member, Polit Bureau, Communist Party of India (Marxist)
- Ranjit Nayak, World Bank Country Representative in Kosovo
- Seyed Ehtesham Hasnain, professor IIT, Delhi, India
- Sitaram Yechury, General Secretary, Communist Party of India (Marxist)
- Sunny Singh, writer
- Thomas Isaac, former finance minister of Kerala, Central Committee Member, Communist Party of India (Marxist)
- Udayan Mukherjee, CNBC News
- Umesh Upadhyay, President News, Network 18
- Yogendra Yadav, Ex-Leader of Aam Aadmi Party & Psephologist
Notable faculty
- Abhijit Sen, Member of Planning Commission of India
- Amitabh Mattoo, Director Australia India Institute and Professor of International relations, University of Melbourne
- B. S. Chimni, Former Vice Chancellor, National University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata
- Baburam Bhattarai, 36th Prime Minister of Republic of Nepal
- Bipan Chandra, Chairman, National Book Trust, New Delhi
- H.S. Shivaprakash, Theatre and Performance Studies, Poet, Dramatist and Director, ICCR- Tagore Centre, Berlin
- Jayati Ghosh, Member of National Knowledge Commission, India
- K. N. Panikkar, Vice Chancellor, Sree Sankaracharya Sanskrit University, Kalady, Kerala
- Kanti Bajpai, Former Professor of International Relations, Wolfson College, Oxford
- Lalit Mansingh, Former Ambassador to the United States
- Madhavan K. Palat
- Muchkund Dubey, Former Foreign Secretary of India
- Naman Ahuja, art historian
- Prabhat Patnaik, Deputy Chairman of the Kerala Planning Commission
- Prasenjit Sen, Rector and Professor,School of Physical Sciences
- Romila Thapar, former Chancellor of Hyderabad University
- Sarvepalli Gopal, Biographer of Jawaharlal Nehru; also former chairman, National Book Trust
- Satish Chandra, former chairman, University Grants Commission, New Delhi
- Sudipta Kaviraj
- Sudhir Kumar Sopory, Plant physiologist, Padma Shri awardee and vice chancellor
- Tanika Sarkar
- U. P. Arora, Greek history and Culture, Indo-Greek studies.
- V. S. Mani, Founding Director of the Gujarat National Law University
See also
- List of universities in India
- Universities and colleges in India
- Education in India
- Education in Delhi
- Distance Education Council
- University Grants Commission (India)
References
- ↑ http://www.jnu.ac.in/naac.jpg
- ↑ http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-newdelhi/article3625872.ece
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- ↑ http://www.jnu.ac.in/SAA
- ↑ [1] Archived 4 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine
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- ↑ JNU (1997) Silver Jubilee Commemoration Volume; A Profile of School of Social Sciences, New Delhi: Jawaharlal Nehru University
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- ↑ Institutions affiliated to JNU Archived 8 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ National Institute of Plant Genome Research
- ↑ Global Presence of JNU http://www.jnu.ac.in/main.asp?sendval=GlobalPresence#
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "JNU all set to go `paperless'", The Hindu, 28 October 2006 [on-line] http://www.hindu.com/2006/10/25/stories/2006102519390300.htm
- ↑ [2]
- ↑ [3] Archived 6 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ [4]
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- ↑ http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/return-of-18000-indians-to-top-ahameds-agenda-in-libya/article4611271.ece
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