Founding
The Subir & Malini Chowdhury Center for Bangladesh Studies, established in December 2013, and officially inaugurated on March 30, 2015, with a generous gift from the Subir and Malini Chowdhury Foundation. The Center is housed under the Institute for South Asia Studies at the University of California at Berkeley and it champions the study of Bangladesh’s cultures, peoples and history. The first of its kind in the US, the Center’s mission is to create an innovative model combining research, scholarships, the promotion of art and culture, and the building of ties between institutions in Bangladesh and the University.
The Center was officially launched on Monday, March 30, 2015 by UC Berkeley Chancellor Nicholas Dirks, Founder & Chairman of BRAC Sir Fazle Hasan Abed, and Mr. Subir Chowdhury.
The pioneering force behind the Center is Subir Chowdhury. Mr. Chowdhury, originally from Chittagong and trained as an engineer, is a renowned business consultant, author of many books, and is one of the world’s leading management gurus particularly known for his emphasis on quality.
In addition to promoting and integrating interdisciplinary scholarship, the Subir and Malini Chowdhury Center will sponsor lectures and conferences and provide the following three scholarships:
- The Subir Chowdhury Fellowship on Quality of Life in Bangladesh for graduate students in any discipline working on Bangladesh studies.
- The Malini Chowdhury Fellowship on Bangladesh Studies for graduate students in any discipline working on Bangladesh studies.
- The Subir Chowdhury Undergraduate Scholarship for undergraduate students concentrating in South and Southeast Asian Studies at UC Berkeley.
Elibility and applications details for these Fellowships can be found on this page.
Library Collections
Berkeley's research and collecting interest in South Asia is a long-standing one, dating back at least to 1906, when Sanskrit was first taught here. At that time, the Library's acquisitions included Indic religion, history, philosophy and literature, in Sanskrit and Western languages. Later collecting added most of the social sciences and humanities, in South Asian and Western languages. The South and Southeast Asia Library (SSEAL) has an extensive collection of specialized reference material for South Asia and a collection of unbound current periodicals and newspapers. Most circulating items for language and literature, history, political science, economics, sociology, government documents, philosophy and religion, South Asian art and art history, women's studies, and the South Asian diaspora are shelved in the Main Stack. Some branches and affiliated libraries have collections of South Asian material including Anthropology, Education/Psychology, Bioscience, Environmental Design, and Music. The number of monographs in all languages, including English, is approximately 450,000 with the current collections in Bangla itself comprising 23,000. The Library subscribes to around 500 serial and newspaper titles in South Asian languages and about 3,300 titles in English and Western languages.
Course Offerings
The philosophy of the Bangla teaching and program at Berkeley is to make the students aware of the incredible depth and range of Bangla culture from the 19th century to the present. Bangla teaching highlights the cultures from pre-Independence Bengal in India, modern West Bengal and Bangladesh, as well as the culture of the diasporic Bangla population in North America. Language, culture, nation, history and politics are brought alive through Bangla teaching at UCB. The Bangla program, since it started in 2005, has already been able to fulfill its unique potential through sustained student participation and scholarly engagement with the Bengali language, culture and society across the borders of the two Bengals. We offer both language focused as well as content based courses in Bangla.
- Language Courses: The goal of the Bangla program is to provide UCB students with comprehensive solutions to learning Bangla language and culture at both the Introductory and Intermediate levels.
- Content Courses: Content courses on Bengal’s culture and history cover a wide range of topics: 19th-century Bengali social and cultural Enlightenment; nationalist and colonial struggle in Bengal and India; the Partition of India and Bengal in 1947; and the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971. Both the Bengali materials in English translation, and the cinema of Bengal have been effective tools of instruction about this regions past and present.
We are strongly committed to both adding as well as enhancing the offerings available through the Subir and Malini Chowdhury Center. Naming opportunities continue to be available in some of the following areas:
- Internship and research opportunities in Bangladesh
- Courses on Bangladesh or the Bangladeshi-American community.
- Lecture series on Bangladesh.
Government Relations
Over the years the Center has had the singular honor of hosting high profile visitors representing the Government of Bangladesh as well as representatives of the United States government in Bangladesh.
Summer 2019: The Center had the distinct pleasure of welcoming Ambassador Mohammad Ziauddin, the current Ambassador to the United States of America in August 2019. Mohammad Ziauddin became ambassador of Bangladesh to the United States on Sept. 18, 2014 having most recently held the post of ambassador-at-large of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina with the rank and status of state minister to the government of Bangladesh (2009-14).
Summer 2018: The Subir & Malini Chowdhury Center for Bangladesh Studies at UC Berkeley was delighted to welcome Bangladeshi politician and former Foreign Minister of Bangladesh, Dr. Dipu Moni to campus in the summer of 2018. Dr. Moni is a Bangladeshi politician who served as Foreign Minister of Bangladesh from 2009 to 2013. She was, at the time, a Member of the 10th National Parliament of Bangladesh; Chairperson of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the All Party Parliamentary Group on Human Rights; Member of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on the Ministry of Defence; one of the four Joint General Secretaries; and one of the four official spokespersons of the Bangladesh Awami League.
Spring 2017: The Center had the distinct pleasure of hosting Ambassador Priyatosh Saha, Consul General of Bangladesh in Los Angeles, Dr. Tawfiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury, Adviser (Minister) to the Prime Minister on Power, Energy & Mineral Resources, and Dr. Zahangir Kabir, Regional Agronomist, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Vacaville Service Center, United States Department of Agriculture on May 10, 2017.
Spring 2015: July 20, 2015: The Chowdhury Center hosted a 12-member delegation of top ranking officials from the Higher Education Quality Enhancement Project (HEQEP), Ministry of Education, Bangladesh, who were visiting institutions of higher learning in the US on a fact-finding mission to gain knowledge of best practices in order to improve the quality of higher education in Bangladesh. The HEQEP is a unique project under the Ministry of Education aimed at improving the quality of teaching-learning and research in Bangladeshi institutions of higher education through encouraging innovation within universities and enhancing technical and institutional capacity of the higher education sector. This project is supervised by the University Grants Commission (UGC) of Bangladesh and is funded by the government of Bangladesh as well as the World Bank.