India Think Tank Forum 2026: Building Resilience in a Changing World Order

The Observer Research Foundation, in collaboration with Nalanda University, is hosting the eighth India Think Tank Forum in Bihar. The 2026 edition, themed "India in a Changing World: Building Inner Resilience," brings together over 80 participants from 75 think tanks nationwide. The forum aims to examine shifting global dynamics and assess India's policy preparedness across geopolitics, economy, and technology. It serves as a platform for critical dialogue to strengthen analytical independence and build a collaborative roadmap for policy innovation.

Key Points: India Think Tank Forum 2026 at Nalanda University

  • Pan-India think tank collaboration
  • Assessing policy frameworks for global shifts
  • Focus on strategic foresight & innovation
  • Bridging ideas, institutions, and influence
3 min read

India Think Tank Forum's eighth edition begins at Nalanda University, experts discuss shifting global dynamics and India's response at ORF event

ORF hosts 8th India Think Tank Forum at Nalanda University. Experts discuss global shifts, India's policy response, and building strategic foresight.

"India in a Changing World: Building Inner Resilience - Forum Theme"

Rajgir Januar, y 12

The Observer Research Foundation, in collaboration with Nalanda University, is hosting the eighth edition of the India Think Tank Forum at Nalanda University, Bihar.

The Forum, where experts are discussing shifting global dynamics and India's response to them, is being held on January 12 and 13.

The India Think Tank Forum is ORF's flagship annual initiative, conceived as a pan-India platform to bring together the country's diverse and rapidly expanding think-tank community.

Conceived as an "intellectual gym", the India Think Tank Forum provides a space to reflect, challenge assumptions, and sharpen perspectives, a release said.

The 2026 edition is centred on the theme "India in a Changing World: Building Inner Resilience".

Hosted at Nalanda--one of the world's earliest centres of learning--this edition underscores the Forum's commitment to regional diversity and intellectual decentralisation, reinforcing the idea that India's policy conversations must emerge from across the country.

ITTF serves as a convening point for cross-sectoral collaboration, critical dialogue, and knowledge exchange among policy researchers, academics, and institutional leaders from across the country, the release said.

With each edition, ORF seeks to purposefully expand this network--bringing new institutions into conversation to build a more connected, regionally representative, and purpose-driven ecosystem of ideas, it said.

The 2026 edition is bringing together leading think tanks, researchers, and policy institutions to collectively examine shifting global dynamics and India's responses to them. The focus is on moving beyond commentary towards clarity--bridging reflection and action, and strengthening the link between ideas, institutions, and influence.

Through a series of sessions on geopolitics, the economy, sustainability, technology, and social transformation, the Forum aims to assess whether India's current policy frameworks and think-tank ecosystem are equipped for the complexity of the decade ahead.

The Forum also aims to encourage cross-pollination of ideas to strengthen analytical independence and intellectual rigour and examine how India's domestic preparedness--economic, institutional, and societal--intersects with an evolving global landscape.

It seeks to build a collaborative roadmap for think tanks as enablers of strategic foresight and policy innovation.

The Forum is featuring over 80 participants from 75 think tanks across India, reflecting the breadth and diversity of the country's policy research ecosystem.

Distinguished speakers and participants include Samir Saran, President, Observer Research Foundation; Sachin Chaturvedi, Vice Chancellor, Nalanda University; Harsh V. Pant, Vice President, ORF; Pradeep Chauhan, Director General, National Maritime Foundation; T.P. Sreenivasan, Director General, Kerala International Centre; Laveesh Bhandari, President and Senior Fellow, Centre for Social and Economic Progress.

The participants also include D Dhanuraj, Founder-Chairman, Centre for Public Policy Research; RPS Bhadauria, Additional Director General, Centre for Land Warfare Studies; Raul V Rodriguez, Vice President, Woxsen University; Priyanka Bhide, Co-founder, Kubernien Initiative; Biren Nanda, Senior Fellow, Delhi Policy Group; Ruhee Neog, Security and Foreign Policy Analyst, Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies and Guru Prakash Paswan, Visiting Fellow, India Foundation.

All sessions of the India Think Tank Forum are being released on the ORF YouTube channel, with key insights and discussion highlights shared on ORF's official X handle (@orfonline).

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Great to see such a diverse group of think tanks! 75 institutions is impressive. But I hope the discussions lead to actionable points for our local economies and job creation, not just high-level geopolitics. The common citizen needs to feel the impact of these ideas. 🤞
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Aman W
"Intellectual gym" is a nice phrase. We definitely need to challenge our assumptions, especially on technology and sustainability. The world is changing fast and our policies can't be from the last century. Will tune into the ORF YouTube channel.
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Rahul R
While the intent is good, I have a respectful criticism. The participant list, while diverse in institutions, still seems like the usual suspects from the policy circuit. Would love to see more young entrepreneurs and grassroots innovators in such forums to get a real ground-level perspective.
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Meera T
The focus on regional diversity is crucial. India's challenges in Bihar are different from those in Kerala or Gujarat. Policy made in Delhi often misses these nuances. Hope the sessions on social transformation address education and healthcare gaps meaningfully.
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David E
Following this from abroad. India's think tank ecosystem is becoming increasingly vibrant and important for global debates. The choice of Nalanda, with its history of international scholarship, sends a powerful message about India's place in the world. Looking forward to the insights.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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