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IIT Hyderabad hosts international workshop on reframing the biological clock

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Researchers from the institute are working on a pilot research looking at the how age and ageing are conceptualised in assisted reproduction

Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad hosted an international workshop on ‘Reframing the Biological Clock’ as part of a project funded under Wellcome Foundation UK Small Projects Grant for 2018.

Researchers from the Institute are working on a pilot research looking at the how age and ageing are conceptualised in assisted reproduction. Principal Investigator Dr Anindita Majumdar, Assistant Professor, Department of Liberal Arts, IIT Hyderabad, is researching ageing and IVF (In vitro fertilisation) in rural North India where she interviewed couples above a certain age regarding their experiences with IVF and birthing children. The outcomes from the field research were presented at ‘Remaking Reproduction’ conference at Reproductive Sociology Group, University of Cambridge, UK, in June 2018, and European Conference on South Asian Studies, Paris, in July 2018.

The Department of Liberal Arts, IIT Hyderabad, coordinated the workshop, held recently and brought together a set of scholars exploring the dynamics of ageing and reproduction through the lens of egg freezing, menopause, male infertility and sex ratio deficit.

Addressing the workshop, the chief guest Prof Ravinder Kaur, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT Delhi, said, “This was a great conference, and extremely topical. Engaging with new reproductive technologies, this conference brought together papers that are looking at its relationship with kinship and the family. Some of the conversations here were futuristic, engaging with issues that are going to become relevant as we forge ahead, such as egg freezing. But, most importantly, this conference brought together voices from different parts of the world and from within India, giving us a comparative perspective on the issue of ageing and reproduction.”

The outcomes from the workshop include:

Ø Proposed journal special issue bringing together ongoing and established research

Ø Proposed joint research engagements with epidemiologists and social scientists on questions of environmental toxicity and bodily changes

Ø Conversations on the need to understand the linkages between ageing and a socio-cultural body clock

Speaking later, Dr Lucy van de Wiel, Reproductive Sociology Group, Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge, said, “I have met people from all over the world, with discussions on how reproduction is organised, and the kind of inequalities it carries in countries like Mexico, US, and the UK. I’m really glad that there is finally a conference on reproductive ageing.”

This workshop brought together a diverse set of scholars working in the fields of reproductive medicine, epidemiology, assisted reproduction, anthropology, sociology and demography. Egg freezing, erectile dysfunction, infertility, changing meaning and ages for menopause, sperm banking, changing paternal and maternal ages became important nodes of discussion and analysis.

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