Tiyana has a Bachelor of Global Studies, and a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) majoring in sociology and philosophy from Australian Catholic University.
Drawing on her experience in campaigning and media communications for international non-governmental organisations like Amnesty International and Oxfam Australia, her research will take an interdisciplinary and solutions-focused approach to empowering women to address development and social issues affecting their communities.
Tiyana is passionate about engaging youth in the social change and humanitarian space. She founded the Humanitarian Changemakers Network, a solutions media and education platform for young changemakers. She edits the Changing Times newspaper.
This project will specifically explore the relationship between social movements and their uses of/relationships with media/information/technologies in India. Dealing with both independence and post-independence social movements in India, it will provide doctoral candidates the opportunities to explore the continuities, discontinuities, affordances, experiences arising from the technological mediation of social movements. It will provide opportunities to study at length the specific roles played by theatre, print, radio, television, socialmobile and internet technologies networking in relationship to the mobilisation, communication, identity-building, awareness building and education, recruitment of individuals and communities. Taking a broad view of social movements, it will intentionally consider all movements irrespective of their political/ideological affiliations. The key objective of this project will be to explore the specific contributions made by technologically-mediated movements to the strengthening of movement identity and organizational structures, to examine movement investments in the infrastructures of communications and the historically contingent nature of the relationship between social movements and their uses of communications technology. It will encourage candidates to explore theory inspired by both local and Western scholars and methodologies that are based on both qualitative and quantitative approaches and that are best suited to the generation of empirical data. The methodologies will include archival work, interviews, ethnographic field studies, surveys, big data analysis using Leximancer and other scraping/mining software. Given the combined expertise of both the principle and associate advisors spanning traditional, mass and new media, extensive teaching experience related to social movements both at UG and PG levels, first-hand knowledge of social movements in India and elsewhere and respective standing in their respective fields, we feel that the theme of this project will evince sufficient interest from quality students who will be given the opportunity to contribute to original pieces of work this enhancing the corpus of knowledge on social movements in India.
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