The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) – Facing a Credibility Crisis


Context

  • The transfer of archaeologist K. Amarnath Ramakrishna (Keeladi excavation) and controversies over handling of findings have revived debate on the ASI’s credibility.
  • Highlights tension between politics, archaeology, and historical narratives in India.

Case Studies

1. Keeladi Excavations (Tamil Nadu)

  • Began: 2014 → unearthed ~7,500 artefacts.
  • Findings: sophisticated, literate, secular urban society; bridged gap between Iron Age & Early Historic Period (12th–4th BCE).
  • Political controversy:
    • 2017 transfer of lead archaeologist → seen as attempt to downplay findings.
    • ASI halted Phase 3 citing “no significant findings”.
    • Madras HC transferred site to Tamil Nadu State Department of Archaeology → now >18,000 artefacts found.
  • ASI sought revisions of reports; accused of politicisation.

2. Adichanallur & Sivagalai (Tamil Nadu)

  • Excavated 2004 under ASI → artefacts >3,000 years old.
  • Publication of findings delayed 15 years; required court intervention.

3. Bahaj (Rajasthan)

  • Excavation of a paleochannel linked by some archaeologists to Saraswati River & Mahabharata period.
  • ASI embraced speculative, mytho-historical claims → undermines scientific integrity.

Broader Criticisms of ASI

  1. Methodological Nationalism: privileging state-sanctioned civilisational narratives, homogenising India’s past.
  2. Institutional Issues:
    • Arbitrary transfers, bureaucratic delays, poor infrastructure (Avikunthak, 2021).
    • Outdated Wheeler method; lack of holistic research design (Chakrabarti, 1988, 2003).
    • Internal review system → limited peer scrutiny, lack of transparency.
  3. Credibility Concerns:
    • Political influence on findings.
    • Inconsistent treatment: neglect of Tamil Nadu sites vs valorisation of Saraswati-related digs.
    • Comparisons with global institutions (Germany, France, Japan) → ASI lags in publishing findings in peer-reviewed academic platforms.

Implications

  • Knowledge production compromised → public distrust in archaeological findings.
  • Politicisation of history → archaeology used to validate state narratives.
  • Scholarly isolation → limited global collaboration and accountability.

Reform Suggestions

  1. Structural Reforms:
    • Greater financial & functional autonomy.
    • Modernisation of excavation methods & research designs.
  2. Transparency:
    • Regular peer-reviewed publications.
    • Open data sharing with academia & public.
  3. Human Resource Reform:
    • Protect archaeologists from arbitrary transfers.
    • Improve infrastructure, promotions, and incentives.
  4. Pluralistic Epistemology:
    • Embrace India’s diverse, regionally varied pasts.
    • Avoid monolithic civilisational claims.

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