The Indian Science Congress Is Too Big to Succeed

Most science-related events and conferences in India present a common puzzle. The 106th Indian Science Congress that recently concluded in Jalandhar did it too. This puzzle has two pieces – two questions – and attempting to answer them could tell us more about what really ails these events.

  1. Why do we have a conference where so many disparate fields are brought together without a purposeful basis?
  2. Has the event benefited by the presence of politicians?

To answer the first question, let’s revisit the Indian Science Congress Association’s (ISCA’s) origins. It was the brainchild of two British chemists who thought “scientific research in India might be stimulated if an annual meeting of research workers somewhat on the lines of the British Association for the Advancement of Science could be arranged” (source).

Although the body’s creation represented progress at the time, we must today consider reassessing that remit. And the longer we put this off, the more the ISCA will seem trapped in its colonial cradle.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Also read: How to React to Stupidity at the Science Congress

The ISC is a big event that has participants and attendees from around the country. And the ISCA’s undertaking is as such public-spirited, and has the following goals (quoted verbatim):