Biannual Print Journal

A biannual interdisciplinary peer reviewed journal on CULTURE, HISTORY, ECONOMY and POLITICS

Price: 200 INR (South Asia)
Library/Institutional: 300 INR (INDIA)

Annual Subscription: INR 350 (Within India. Inclusive of postal charges)

Current Publication

VOLUME VII, ISSUE III

NOTES ON CONSTRIBUTORS: Dr Arambam Noni Meetei is a political commentator and currently holds the post of an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, D.M. University, Manipur. He has two books in his name. Dr K. Indrakumar Singh is an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, Dhanamanjuri University. Dr Indrakumar has…

View issue

An editorial home for critical discourse

Alternative Perspectives is an academic initiative of young researchers from the ‘North-East’ India that brings out original research works on issues concerning the borderlands of South Asia and (Western) South-East Asian region. It encourages critical research, re-reading and writing…

Learn more

Past Publications

View all issues
December 2023

VOLUME VII, ISSUE III

NOTES ON CONSTRIBUTORS: Dr Arambam Noni Meetei is a political commentator and currently holds the post of an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, D.M. University, Manipur. He has two books in his name. Dr K. Indrakumar Singh is an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, Dhanamanjuri University. Dr Indrakumar has…

Open issue
June 2023

Volume VII, Issue II

NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS Arambam Noni Meetei teaches at the Department of Political Science, D. M. University, Manipur, India. He is the co-author of Colonialism and Resistance: Society and Politics in Manipur, 2016 published by Routledge, New Delhi. Arambam has also authored the book entitled 1949: The Story of India’s Takeover of Manipur, 2018 published by CADM,…

Open issue

Latest Writing

See all stories
December 2023

Politics of Trans-national identities: A Study of India and Myanmar Borderlands

Abstract Imperiled identity of a borderland may emerge on the horizon when there are a myriad of historically unsettled questions. Democratic deficiency, militarization, displacement, trans-border affiliations and unauthorized movement of the population make the borderlands a site of perennial conflict. The historically bludgeoned aspirations in India’s northeastern borderlands and the unmet aspirations for autonomy and…

Read story

Start publishing right away

Contact Editorial Team