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New Atlanticist

Sep 16, 2020

The international community must do more to support Afghan and Rohingya refugees amid the COVID-19 pandemic

By Rudabeh Shahid and Harris Samad

While the international community remains hyper-focused on addressing the virus and its associated economic slowdown, Afghan and Rohingya refugees continue to be forced into a life of complete uncertainty as they escape violence in their home countries. Concerted action by the international community and host countries towards mitigating the virus’ disproportionate effects on asylum seekers would immensely improve refugee welfare.

Afghanistan
Bangladesh

SouthAsiaSource

Aug 13, 2020

Divergent tales of septuagenarian Bengal

By Rudabeh Shahid and Adil Hossain

As South Asia observes the seventy-third anniversary of the Partition of India, Bangladesh finds itself in conflict with the statistics cited by many to celebrate what they perceive to be rising prosperity. Simultaneously, the rise in communal tensions in West Bengal possibly signal long lasting consequences for India’s secular polity which might adversely affect Hindu-Muslim relations in South Asia […]

Bangladesh
Democratic Transitions

New Atlanticist

May 28, 2020

Nepal’s #BackoffIndia hashtag was a long time coming

By Rudabeh Shahid

India and Nepal’s “special relationship,” clearly leaves Nepal at the short end of the stick. New Delhi must consult more with Kathmandu and reassure its smaller sibling that policies meant to increase ties between both neighbors—such as the building of the link road—are beneficial to citizens of both countries, rather than come at the expense of the Nepalese.

India
Nationalism

Dr. Rudabeh Shahid is an Atlantic Council nonresident senior fellow on India and a senior consultant at the European Institute for International Law and International Relations. Shahid is also a visiting assistant professor of politics at Oberlin College. Previously, she was a postdoctoral fellow and visiting assistant professor at the Department of Political Science at the New College of Florida, and a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Politics at the University of York. Additionally, she teaches and moderates courses on South Asia at the Foreign Service Institute (FSI) of the US Department of State.

Shahid is a multidisciplinary scholar who studies South Asia, combining the lens of political science, anthropology, and history. Her research portfolio includes geopolitical, ethnic, and migration issues in Bangladesh, Myanmar, and India. Over the years, her research has focused on civil society in post-partition South Asia and wider international relations of the region, including the situation concerning the ongoing Rohingya refugee crisis and issues of statelessness and disenfranchisement developing in India’s north-eastern state of Assam. Beyond academia, Shahid has published in various international policy and media outlets including at the Atlantic Council, NBC News, the Diplomat, the East Asia Forum, South Asian Voices, 9DashLine, and E-International Relations. Additionally, she has been interviewed and her opinions have been cited by global news outlets including at the Washington Post, Now This News, and PBS Newshour. 

Shahid holds a PhD from the School of Government and International Affairs of Durham University, a MA in international relations from the University of Sussex, and a BA from Middlebury College.