Vijaya Ramadas Mandala is an Assistant Professor at the University of Hyderabad in India. He earned his PhD in History from The University of Manchester in the UK and was awarded the prestigious Dorothy Hodgkin Award from the Research Councils UK, now UKRI. From 2014 to 2016, he worked as a Junior Fellow at the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library in New Delhi, India. Vijaya Ramadas is a historian who has published in the field of Indian history and British imperial and commonwealth history, including an acclaimed book, "Shooting a Tiger: Big Game Hunting and Conservation in Colonial India", with OUP. Some of the notable titles of his research articles include: "Colonialism and the Spatial Dimension of Play - Education and the Creation of Middle-Class Space at Schools and Colleges in Modern India (1790-1910)", published in The Historian (2018), "The Raj and the Paradoxes of Wildlife Conservation: British Attitudes and Expediencies" featured in The Historical Journal (2015), "The Making and Unmaking of the Gonds: History of Hunting Mores in Colonial India" published in Global Environment (2017), and "Tiger Huntresses in the Company Raj: Environmentalism and exotic imaginings of Wildlife, 1830–45" which was published in the International Review of Environmental History (2019).