Srijan Sandip Mandal is a historian keen on researching and teaching legal history, the philosophy of history, and public history.
He developed his research interests over the nine years that he studied at the University of Hyderabad, where he earned an M.A., M.Phil., and Ph.D. degrees in History as well as two awards – the Andhra Bank Medal for “having secured the first rank in the M.A. History examination” and the Dr. (Mrs.) Sheela Raj Memorial Medal for the “best Ph.D. thesis” of the year in History.
Dr. Mandal pursued his interest in the philosophy of history through his M.Phil. dissertation, which drew on Tipu Sultan’s historiography to demonstrate a Kantian epistemology of history.
In the same way, he pursued his interest in legal history through his Ph.D. thesis, which demonstrated that the restrictions on the right to freedom of speech and expression in the Constitution of India were deliberately designed to preserve colonial laws criminalising speech and expression.
He developed a keen interest in public history at the University of Hyderabad as well. Still, it was only at the Centre for Public History at the Srishti Manipal Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bengaluru, where he was on the faculty for five-and-a-half years, that he learnt about the discipline of public history. That is what led to his election to the Steering Committee of the International Federation for Public History as its Secretary for a four-year term in 2021.
He has presented his research on legal history to academic audiences in India and abroad and is currently preparing a book proposal based on that research. And his research on public history, he has (co)written about in an article for the journal Public History Review and in chapters for edited volumes, What is Public History Globally? (Bloomsbury, 2019) and Practices of Digital Humanities in India: Learning by Doing (Routledge, 2025).
Beyond academic audiences, he has presented his research on legal history to lay audiences as well through articles in The Print and Seminar and through a conversational video bot named ‘Hukam Singh’.

