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People | |
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Hauser Center Researchers and Staff
Srilatha Batliwala Research Fellow |
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Srilatha
Batliwala is an Indian feminist activist and researcher.
She was born in Bangalore, in South India, in 1952, and holds
a Masters Degree in Social Work from the Tata Institute of Social
Science, Bombay. She is
currently Civil Society Research Fellow at the Hauser Center for
Nonprofit Organizations in Harvard University.
Prior to this, Batliwala was a Program Officer in the
Governance and Civil Society Unit of the Ford Foundation in New
York, handling programs related to strengthening international civil
society and the nonprofit sector in the United States. Before
joining the Ford Foundation in late 1997, she
worked for nearly twenty five years in India in a range of
social change and gender justice activities that spanned grassroots
organizing, advocacy, and research, with a deep commitment to gender
equality and the womens movement in India.
Her
work experience includes the co-founding of SPARC (1984-88), a
Bombay-based NGO that
organized and mobilized pavement and slum dwellers particularly
women to struggle for sustainable, people-centered solutions to
their housing and survival needs in the urban context.
She was also founder and state program director of Mahila
Samkhya Karnataka(1989-93), a Government of India special project
for womens empowerment which was instrumental in organizing over
30,000 poor rural women into village-level collectives which fought
for changes in their social, legal and political status.
She was South Asia Coordinator of DAWN (1993-96), the network
of Southern feminist researchers and activists, and set and headed
the Womens Policy Research and Advocacy Unit (1994-97) at the
National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore.
Her
key achievements include building autonomous community-based
organizations of poor women, operationalizing the concept of
empowerment in grassroots work with both urban and rural women,
undertaking pathbreaking research on the status of women in India
and Asia, and contributing to several international, national and
local policy initiatives aimed at womens empowerment.
She has published extensively on a range of development and
womens issues.
Batliwala is married to her husband of 28 years, has an adult son and daughter. After a three-year separation from her family while she worked in Ford Foundation in New York, her position at the Hauser Center has facilitated an experiment in bi-continental living she alternates three-month stints in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Bangalore, India, where her family is based.
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