CSOH Welcomes 2025 Oslo Scholars Summer Interns

The Center for the Study of Organized Hate (CSOH) is pleased to announce the selection of 12 students for its 2025 summer internship program. Ten students were selected through the prestigious Oslo Scholars Program (OSP), while two were chosen through CSOH’s independent open application process.

The OSP offers university students the opportunity to intern with some of the world’s most impactful human rights defender-led organizations. Through highly selective placements based on academic background, regional knowledge, and thematic interest, interns work for 9–12 weeks on projects relating to democracy and human rights across the globe.

A partner organization of the Oslo Scholars Program (OSP), CSOH provides a platform for scholars to engage directly with critical research on hate, extremism, violence, and disinformation. CSOH Executive Director Raqib Hameed Naik is honored to serve as one of the ten mentors for this year’s Oslo Scholars cohort, joining a group of globally recognized human rights leaders.

This summer, our interns from Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, Tufts, Princeton, and other universities will contribute to CSOH’s research on organized hate, online harmful content, and disinformation in South Asia and across the South Asian diaspora.

We are excited to welcome the following scholars:

  • Talulah Ratcliffe – Harvard University

Talulah Ratcliffe is studying Government and Sociology at Harvard College. Her primary academic interests include international law, the protection of human rights, and the social integration of marginalized groups—particularly refugees and those impacted by forced migration.

  • Graysen Kirk Linn – Columbia University

Graysen Kirk is currently pursuing a Bachelor’s degree in Human Rights with a minor in Political Science at Columbia University in New York City. She serves as the Peace and Conflict representative for Columbia Academics on Foreign Affairs (CAFA), regularly contributing in-depth research articles to both the Columbia Political Review and the Undergraduate Journal on Foreign Affairs.

  • Scarlett Gamble – Stanford University

Scarlett Gamble is currently pursuing a degree in International Relations at Stanford University. Her research interests include organized hate and disinformation, with a regional focus on China and Latin America.

  • Arya Patri – Tufts University

Arya Patri is an incoming junior at Tufts University, majoring in International Relations and Middle Eastern Studies with a minor in Arabic. Her research interests include human rights in the Middle East, North Africa, South Asia, and the South Asian diaspora. 

  • Hanshika Neupane – Tufts University

Hanshika Neupane is majoring in International Relations and Economics, with a focus on South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at Tufts University. Her academic interests lie in transitional justice across the Global South, with particular attention to caste, gender, and the politics of memory and resistance.

  • Delina Ogbe – University of Virginia

Delina Ogbe is a second-year student in Global Development Studies and Foreign Affairs at the University of Virginia.

  • Mayukha Rajupalepu – University of Virginia

Mayukha Rajupalepu is pursuing a major in Global Development Studies and a minor in Social Entrepreneurship at the University of Virginia. Her research interests focus on building community resilience and empowerment against all forms of hate.

  • Gabriela Yon Morales – University of Virginia

Gabriela Yon Morales is a third-year undergraduate at the University of Virginia, double majoring in Global Development Studies and Anthropology on a pre-law track. Her interests include pursuing a JD to build a career in public interest and civil law, with a focus on community resilience, empowerment, and the intersection of law, organizing, and advocacy in international human rights.

  • Sarayu Bethamcherla – Columbia University

Sarayu Bethamcherla (she/her) is a rising senior at Columbia University, studying Human Rights, Political Science and Economics. Focused on migration and economic development, Sarayu’s research interests lie within the effects of caste-based discrimination across the diaspora. 

  • Sreepreya Srinivasan – Dartmouth College / Sai University

Sreepreya Srinivasan is a final-year undergraduate at Sai University, majoring in Cognitive Neuroscience with a minor in International Relations. She is currently an exchange student intern at Dartmouth College.

  • Tanish Bijur – The George Washington University*

Tanish Bijur is studying International Affairs and Journalism at the George Washington University. His research interests include Indian foreign policy and international relations theory.

  • Ranveer Singh – Princeton University*

Ranveer Singh is studying Computer Science at Princeton University. His primary research interests include the online spread of misinformation and hateful rhetoric targeting Sikhs.

(*Selected through CSOH’s open application process.)

We look forward to a summer of learning, impact, and collaboration with these remarkable students.

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