ICCR ties up with Melbourne University for visiting faculty
The new visiting chair will be housed at the Australia India Institute, based at the University of Melbourne.
The memorandum of understanding which was signed by Indian High Commissioner Biren Nanda on behalf of Indian Council for Cultural Relations here yesterday, will formalise one of five ICCR visiting chairs to be established in Australia.
The initiative is in line with the announcement by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi in October which coincided with Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard's official visit to India.
The new visiting chair will be housed at the Australia India Institute, based at the University of Melbourne.
The agreement lays down a framework under which visiting Indian professors will teach subjects in their areas of expertise for a period of one semester each or for longer durations by agreement.
The visiting professors will also deliver at least one "ICCR Lecture on India" during their stay.
The rotating ICCR Chair is in addition to the permanent Chair in Indian Studies at the University of Melbourne funded by the Victorian government.
The inaugural permanent Chair will commence from May 1. Australia India Institute (AII) is also negotiating with Indian Ministry of Culture to establish a Tagore Centre, envisaged as an important gateway for cultural and scholarly dialogue and exchanges between the two countries.
Their teaching curriculum will be decided in consultation with the university, according to AII statement.
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