Dr Louise Tillin is Reader in Politics and Director, King’s India Institute, King’s College London. Her research interests span federalism, democracy and territorial politics in India, and the history and politics of social policy design and implementation. Her books include Remapping India: New States and their Political Origins (Hurst & Co/Oxford University Press, 2013); Politics of Welfare: Comparisons across Indian States, edited with Rajeshwari Deshpande and K K Kailash (New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2015); Indian Federalism (New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2019); and The Politics of Poverty Reduction in India: The UPA Government, 2004 to 2014 (with James Chiriyankandath, Diego Maiorano and James Manor) (New Delhi, Orient Blackswan, 2020).
Since 2011, Dr Tillin has led research projects on subnational comparative politics and social policy in India (British Academy International Partnership, with Lokniti/CSDS); on explaining electoral change in urban and rural India (Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC); and on India’s Political Economy (United Kingdom (UK)-India Education and Research Initiative Trilateral Partnership with UC Berkeley and Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research. Between 2013 and 2017, she was part of a multi-country research programme on the politics of reducing poverty and inequality across Brazil, China, India and South Africa supported by the ESRC. Dr Tillin held a Leverhulme Trust Research Fellowship (2018-19) to conduct research and write a monograph on Welfare and Capitalism in India: A Political History.
Dr Tillin is also a former BBC South Asia analyst, and a regular commentator on Indian politics in the UK, and on Indian and international media. She is an editor of the journal, Regional and Federal Studies.
Email : |
Louise.Tillin@kcl.ac.uk |
Designation : |
Reader in Politics and Director, King’s India Institute, King’s College London |
Email : |
Louise.Tillin@kcl.ac.uk |
Designation
:
|
Reader in Politics and Director, King’s India Institute, King’s College London |