• Home
  • Search
  • Browse Collections
  • My Account
  • About
  • DC Network Digital Commons Network™
Skip to main content
Georgia Southern Commons Georgia Southern University
  • Home
  • About
  • FAQ
  • My Account
  1. Home
  2. >
  3. Research
  4. >
  5. Project Nirbhaya
  6. >
  7. Photos

Project Nirbhaya Photos

 

Project Nirbhaya Research Archive

This archive collects photographs produced by Project Nirbhaya.

The Goal of Project Nirbhaya

The goal of this project is to explore how digital devices and platforms contributed to the processes of civil resistance that unfolded after the Nirbhaya case study. This peace research project seeks to identify how applications and access to social media platforms enable the creation of self-forming, self-organizing resistance movements capable of sharing alternative discourses in advocating for diverse social agendas. After all, widespread participation and a networked environment increases the likelihood of the success of campaigns of nonviolent resistance and shapes the individual’s identity and awareness as an activist and the relationship to both power and resistance.

Project Nirbhaya Collections

  • Project Nirbhaya Home Page
  • Project Nirbhaya Oral Histories

Need Help?

Have a question about GS Commons? Need additional description, text alternatives, or captions for GS Commons resources? Contact us or request accessible formats (opens in new tab).

Printing is not supported at the primary Gallery Thumbnail page. Please first navigate to a specific Image before printing.

Follow

Switch View to List View Slideshow
 
  • Venue- Victoria Memorial Hall by Nalanda Roy

    Venue- Victoria Memorial Hall

 
  • 1
  • 2
 
 

Search GS Commons

Advanced Search

  • Notify me via email or RSS

Browse GS Commons

  • Authors
  • Collections
  • Disciplines
  • GS Scholars

About GS Commons

  • Author FAQ

Links

  • The Nirbhaya Tragedy

    In 2012 a 23-year old female was brutally gang-raped by six other passengers riding in a private bus in Delhi. Although she managed to survive the initial assault, she eventually succumbed to her injuries thirteen days later. Since publishing a rape victim’s name is illegal in India, the victim was called Nirbhaya, or fearless. Often regarded as India’s Arab Spring, the “Nirbhaya case” was marked by unprecedented public outrage on the ground and on social media, and an immediate backlash against the government.

Gallery Locations

  • View gallery on map
  • View gallery in Google Earth
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
 
Elsevier - Digital Commons

Home | About | FAQ | My Account | Accessibility Statement

Privacy Copyright