Dear friends, colleagues, honoured guests, invitees,
My good friend and colleague Dr. Pawan Kumar Sen will defend his PhD thesis Transforming Nepal’s Political System: Party Positions and Public Opinion (2004-2012) at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands on April 24th, 2025. The original defence date, November 27th, 2024, had to be cancelled to visa application and approval issues. Hopefully all of you did receive the cancellation announcement in time.
See the link for a summary of Pawan’s thesis: Transforming_Nepal_s_Political_System_Summary. I will act as his paranymph i.e. ceremonial assistant during his defence. A reception with drinks will be organised after the event at the same location (see programme below).
For this defence and ceremony, and to meet acquaintances and friends prior to, during and after this event, I have invited Pawan to stay at my home address during his visit between April 21st and April 28th.
You are welcome to attend Pawan’s defence of his PhD thesis in the public gallery on the 24th. See the programme below (see otherwiseNB: any alterations of the programme will be sent to you as soon as I know these.PhD defence
Transforming Nepal’s Political System: Party Positions and Public Opinion (2004-2012)
P.K. SenDate: Thursday 24 April 2025Time 13:00 – 14:00Location: Academy Building
Rapenburg 73, 2311 GJ LeidenSupervisor(s)
Prof.dr. J. van Holsteyn
Prof.dr. R.B. Andeweg †
Summary
This PhD study analyses the structure and dynamics of opinions of the general public of Nepal with the radical transformation of the country’s political system in the recent past, with a particular focus on the four major state restructuring issues (i.e. four major political reforms: republicanism, secularism, multilingualism and federalism), and compares them with the positions taken by Nepal’s major political parties on these reforms. The four reforms together made up the transformation that was eventually codified into the new Constitution of the country in September 2015. However, even when the new Constitution was promulgated, the public opinion had not preferred to all four reforms. This research reveals that there is a dominant role of political elites from the major political parties in the transformation of country’s political system. However, the parties also moderated their positions to some extent on some of the issues. This is clearest on the abolition of the Hindu state. The elites maintained their decision to move to a secular state, but added to the constitution a definition of ‘secularism’ that included protection for traditional religious practices. With regard to language policy, the eventual implementation of multilingualism in which Nepali remains the administrative language at the national level and other languages can be recognized as administrative languages in each province, can also be interpreted as a concession to public opinion. The promulgation of the 2015 Constitution formally proved that the political elites of Nepal were the benevolent guardians of political tolerance and minority rights.PhD dissertations
Approximately one week after the defence, PhD dissertations by Leiden PhD students are available digitally through the Leiden Repository, that offers free access to these PhD dissertations. Please note that in some cases a dissertation may be under embargo temporarily and access to its full-text version will only be granted later.Press enquiries (journalists only)
+31 (0)71 527 1521
nieuws@leidenuniv.nlGeneral information
Beadle’s Office
pedel@bb.leidenuniv.nl
+31 71 527 7211With high regards,
Caspar ten Dam, conflict analyst, executive editor Forum of EGP