Vaishali Mamgain PhD
SHE | HER | HERS
- Director, Bertha Crosley Ball Center for Compassion
- Associate Professor of Economics
Education
- Ph.D. in Economics, University of North Carolina, 1997
Dr. Vaishali Mamgain is an Associate Professor of Economics and the Director of the Bertha Crosley Ball Center for Compassion at the University of Southern Maine.
She received her Ph.D. in Economics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and her past research focused on the contributions of (im)migrants and refugees in the Maine economy. Her current research is in contemplative pedagogy; she is passionate about deconstructing epistemology by using embodiedness and immersive practices in the natural world as ways to undo internalized oppression and the “colonization” of contemplative practices.
As the Director of the Bertha Crosley Ball Center for Compassion, Vaishali facilitates workshops to help people develop greater awareness and the tools necessary to unseat oppression in all its forms. Based on years of contemplative retreats, she encourages participants to draw on everyday experiences to have greater self-compassion, empathy, and openness to change. Such training can help people engage and overturn systemic problems such as racism with a sense of joy and purpose.
A working contemplative, Vaishali has meditated, wandered and ‘retreat’ed for many years. In 2017, she completed a 3 year meditation retreat at Samten Ling Retreat Center in Crestone, Colorado and now lives in beautiful, coastal Maine where she enjoys swimming in the sea, admiring seaweed, running, hiking and cooking.
Selected Publications
“Feeling the Wounds of January 6: Embodiment as an Anti-Racism Practice,” Jan 2021, Portland Press Herald
“Can Wisdom Traditions be Colonized,” Oct 2020, Lion’s Roar magazine
“The Final Alert on Ethics in AI Based Technology,” book chapter in T.V Kumar and K. Sud, ed. AI and Robotics in Disaster Studies, Palgrave Macmillan, 2020
“Ripples from the East Coast Stream: Migrant Hispanic Workers Contributions to the Maine Blueberry Industry,” Maine Policy Review, 2013, vol.22, no.2. 2013
"Asians in the Maine Economy: Opportunities for Growth," researcher, Maine Center for Economic Policy, 2011
“Ethical Consciousness in the Classroom: How Buddhist Practices can Help Develop Empathy and Compassion,” Journal of Transformative Education, vol. 8(1), 2010
Education
- Ph.D. in Economics, University of North Carolina, 1997