Our Projects Visiting Fellowship in Indentureship Studies The Ameena Gafoor Institute and the University of Cambridge has set up a visiting fellowship in indentureship studies. This programme allows a scholar to spend eight weeks at the University, conducting research, it will run for an initial five years.Selwyn College, Cambridge, has appointed Professor Gaiutra Bahadur, author of Coolie Woman: The Odyssey of Indenture, as its first visiting bye-fellow in Indentureship Studies. Find out more Journal of Indentureship and its Legacies The Ameena Gafoor Institute is working on publishing the Journal of Indentureship and its Legacies, the purpose of which is to create a unique and unprecedented academic space where the study of indentureship, as a distinct form of unfree labour, can be analysed in all its forms. No such Journal currently exists anywhere in the world, in spite of the critical importance of indentureship to world history. It will be led, initially, by academics Professor David Dabydeen, Dr Maria del Pilar Kaladeen and Professor Amar Wahab. Find out more The Annual International Conference on Indentureship and its Legacies The Ameena Gafoor Institute is currently organising an Annual International Conference on Indentureship and its Legacies in London, which will aim to bring together scholars, and create a platform for them to share their work to a wider audience. Find out more The Oral History Project The Ameena Gafoor Institute is grateful to veteran filmmaker Arlen Harris and his team for creating the Oral History Project by way of conducting, editing and enhancing through visual materials, the various interviews. Arlen Harris has worked on and produced programmes that have received Sony and Royal Television Society (RTS) awards. The RTS recognises excellence in Television and its awards set the gold standard for Film and Television productions. Find out more Research by Young Scholars The Ameena Gafoor Institute is grateful to Find out more Photos sourced from: The National Archives UK, The National Library of Jamaica and Louis Renaudineau on Unsplash