Monday, January 2, 2012

Hechinger Report | A global university rises in one of India’s most remote corners

Hechinger Report | A global university rises in one of India’s most remote corners:

A global university rises in one of India’s most remote corners

A new university intended to draw students from around the world is slated to be built in Bihar near Nalanda, the ruins of one of the world's oldest universities. (Photo by Sarah Garland)

Residents of Bihar, India’s poorest state, often remind visitors that their home was not always known for high levels of poverty and illiteracy. It used to be the cradle of Southeast Asian civilization and a place to which scholars from all over the world flocked. In the next few years, many are hoping that Bihar will regain some of this reputation when the Indian government constructs Nalanda International University, a project that is drawing interest and funding from countries across Asia.

The school is named after after an ancient Buddhist university that operated from the 5th to the 12th centuries A.D., until invaders burned it down. The new Nalanda will open on a 500-acre site near the brick ruins of its


In India, a college building boom

Ravi Sarma, an assistant professor of property law, points out new buildings going up at Chanakya National Law University, one of several new higher education institutions in Bihar, India's poorest state. (Photo by Sarah Garland)

PATNA, India – On the outskirts of this sprawling city in one of India’s poorest states, the whitewashed columns and domes of Chanakya National Law University rise next to a deep and murky swamp. To get there, visitors