Shamita Das Dasgupta (Bengali : শমীতা দাশ দাশগুপ্ত, born 1949) is an Asian Indian scholar, activist, wife and mother.[1] A social activist since early 1970s, she co-founded Manavi in 1985.[2] It is the first organization of its kind that focuses on violence against South Asian women in the United States. A part-time teacher and full-time community worker, she has written extensively in the areas of ethnicity, gender, immigration, and violence against women. Her books include: A Patchwork Shawl: Chronicles of South Asian Women in America, Body Evidence: Intimate Violence Against South Asian Women in America, and Mothers for Sale: Women in Kolkata’s Sex Trade.[3]
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Married at an early age, she moved to the US at the age of 19. She did her undergraduate and graduate studies at The Ohio State University and received her PhD in developmental psychology. She moved to NJ and taught at Rutgers University for several years. Her deep interest in issues relating to domestic violence led her to head a women’s agency in Pennsylvania. From her association with various women’s organizations, she realized that the issues that are unique to South Asian women were generally ignored by the mainstream domestic violence organizations. So she decided to establish an organization that would focus on South Asian women. She cofounded Manavi in New Jersey with five other women.
Although, Shamita would like to describe herself as a community worker,[4] she is one of the few community workers, who have established herself as an academic through her research work and teaching. She has written numerous articles on south Asian women’s issues and collaborated with her physician daughter, Sayantani DasGupta, on mother-daughter experiences. Currently she is an adjunct faculty at the New York University School of Law. She serves on the editorial board of Violence against Women journal.[5] Recipient of many awards including Bannerman Fellowship, she is on the board of several national organizations.