In the aftermath of the 1971 war, nearly 250,000 people found themselves stranded in various parts of the subcontinent. These 'trapped minorities' became hostages in a complex negotiation process that highlighted how questions of citizenship and belonging remained unresolved in post-Partition South Asia. By studying three groups - the non-Bengalis, the Bengalis and the prisoners of war in a comparative perspective, this paper re-visits the question of who was welcome within certain borders and on what terms. It argues that these decisions depended not just on the state's policies towards 'outsiders' but also upon its own relationship with its minority communities
Defining the relationship between displaced populations and the nation state is a fraught historical...
Abstract The former border enclaves of Bangladesh and India, which were small pieces of one state e...
sixty years of independence from British rule. Nevertheless, the celebrations of the three nations ’...
In the wake of Partition - the break-up of British India in 1947 - millions of people moved across t...
Partitioned States offers new perspective in the histories of Partition and its aftermath by connect...
The paper wishes to address one of the key themes of the volume—the representation of the self and t...
This paper focuses on the relation between state policies and ethnicisation in the borderland of Ben...
The Partition of the Indian sub-continent on its western and eastern flanks in 1947 led to the creat...
International audienceThis paper deals with a comparison between two groups of Sri Lankan Tamils who...
A relatively large number of Pakistanis known as the Bihari community have been stranded in Banglade...
The fiftieth anniversary of Indian Independence became an occasion for the publication of a huge bod...
A large number of Biharis who migrated to the former East Pakistan after 1947 have been stranded the...
My dissertation discusses refugee rights and post-repatriation integration in South Asia in the cont...
This innovative study explores the interface between nation-building and refugee rehabilitation in p...
Defining the relationship between displaced populations and the nation state is a fraught historical...
Defining the relationship between displaced populations and the nation state is a fraught historical...
Abstract The former border enclaves of Bangladesh and India, which were small pieces of one state e...
sixty years of independence from British rule. Nevertheless, the celebrations of the three nations ’...
In the wake of Partition - the break-up of British India in 1947 - millions of people moved across t...
Partitioned States offers new perspective in the histories of Partition and its aftermath by connect...
The paper wishes to address one of the key themes of the volume—the representation of the self and t...
This paper focuses on the relation between state policies and ethnicisation in the borderland of Ben...
The Partition of the Indian sub-continent on its western and eastern flanks in 1947 led to the creat...
International audienceThis paper deals with a comparison between two groups of Sri Lankan Tamils who...
A relatively large number of Pakistanis known as the Bihari community have been stranded in Banglade...
The fiftieth anniversary of Indian Independence became an occasion for the publication of a huge bod...
A large number of Biharis who migrated to the former East Pakistan after 1947 have been stranded the...
My dissertation discusses refugee rights and post-repatriation integration in South Asia in the cont...
This innovative study explores the interface between nation-building and refugee rehabilitation in p...
Defining the relationship between displaced populations and the nation state is a fraught historical...
Defining the relationship between displaced populations and the nation state is a fraught historical...
Abstract The former border enclaves of Bangladesh and India, which were small pieces of one state e...
sixty years of independence from British rule. Nevertheless, the celebrations of the three nations ’...