Admissions Open 2024

Dr. Sweta Sen

Dr. Sweta Sen

Assistant Professor

B.A. (Presidency College, Calcutta);

M.A. (University of Calcutta);

Ph.D. (Kent State University)

: sweta@jgu.edu.in 

Dr. Sweta Sen is a comparativist whose research explores the internal and external facets of contemporary armed conflicts, with a focus on organizational behaviors of non-state armed groups, humanitarian access during situations of conflict, and the essential roles of grassroots, indigenous organizations in rebel negotiations.

Presently, she is an Assistant Professor of International Relations and Comparative Politics at Jindal School of International Affairs where she teaches courses on international organizations, comparative politics, law and ethics in international relations, and politics of civil wars. Previously, she was a fulltime, visiting lecturer at Butler University (Indianapolis, US). Prior to her association with academia, she worked in an anti-human-trafficking project, administered by the European Union through the Group Development Association of France, as a case officer. During her tenure there, she was actively involved in restoration, rehabilitation, and reintegration of trafficking survivors into mainstream society. 

Her research has been supported by several grants and fellowships, including the Senesh fellowship administered by the International Peace Research Association, Kent State Research Fellowship, and XCEPT.

  • 2024. Rebel network theory: The case of Moro Islamic Liberation Front.Conflict Management and Peace Science, . https://doi.org/10.1177/07388942231222213 
  • 2019. Peace as a tool of war: non-state armed actors and humanitarian agreements. In: Local peacebuilding and legitimacy. Routledge, 161–179. 

Under Review:  

  • Mazzei, J. and S. Sen, “Process Tracing and Non-State Violent Actors: ensuring methodological rigor in the study of Non-State Violent Actors (without getting yourself killed).”
  • Co-PI. “ Women, Conflict and Healthcare: Access, Negotiation and Agency in the Indo- Myanmar Borderland. Funded by Cross-Border Evidence, Policy, and Trends (XCEPT).
  • Co-PI. Conflict Data Mapping Project: North-East India.
  • PI, Rebel Negotiation through Women’s Eyes.