Identity, location and network are intertwined concepts that have always been difficult to define or observe in modern transnational study. How self-identification has become muddled in a world where individuals can shift their cultural, religious or geographical identity to their current location, is of interest. Sikhs, with modern conditions such as the reinforcement of the communicational network, are able to reinvent the concepts that influence their identity and behaviours in different localities. This paper presents how traveling to the homeland and back may engage a Sikh in new locational networks and play on one\u2019s personal identification. In the meantime, those who are connected with Sikh values outside Punjab, the homeland, c...
Diaspora, a term used to refer to the dispersal of Jewish people across the world, is now expanded t...
The Sikh cultural narrative was explored using social representations in the public sphere. To this ...
Despite living in Britain in significant numbers since the 1950s, there has been very little in-dept...
This paper was first delivered as the keynote address at the ‘Transnational Punjabis in the 21st Cen...
This research discusses the post-migration lived experience of the Peraktown Sikhs, a diaspora commu...
Although past anthropological research on Britain’s religious minority communities, such as Sikhs – ...
The assumption that minorities and migrants will demonstrate an exclusive loyalty to the nation-stat...
Sikhs constitute a high proportion of the ethnic minority population in Britain. Yet, social psychol...
Drawing upon transnational research in the UK and India, primarily over 150 semi-structured intervie...
Sikhs constitute a high proportion of the ethnic minority population in Britain. Yet, social psychol...
Punjabiyat or Punjabi identity evokes simultaneous contradictory images of a splintered identity, ye...
When studying a diasporic population, understanding the relationship between dispersed peoples and t...
peer reviewedThis paper examines a diaspora group's claiming and contesting of physical space and ac...
This paper explores geographies of Punjabiness within Britain in order to engage critically with rec...
This paper forms part of the first aut hor's doctoral thesis, "Indian Diaspora to Spain: Demo-Spatia...
Diaspora, a term used to refer to the dispersal of Jewish people across the world, is now expanded t...
The Sikh cultural narrative was explored using social representations in the public sphere. To this ...
Despite living in Britain in significant numbers since the 1950s, there has been very little in-dept...
This paper was first delivered as the keynote address at the ‘Transnational Punjabis in the 21st Cen...
This research discusses the post-migration lived experience of the Peraktown Sikhs, a diaspora commu...
Although past anthropological research on Britain’s religious minority communities, such as Sikhs – ...
The assumption that minorities and migrants will demonstrate an exclusive loyalty to the nation-stat...
Sikhs constitute a high proportion of the ethnic minority population in Britain. Yet, social psychol...
Drawing upon transnational research in the UK and India, primarily over 150 semi-structured intervie...
Sikhs constitute a high proportion of the ethnic minority population in Britain. Yet, social psychol...
Punjabiyat or Punjabi identity evokes simultaneous contradictory images of a splintered identity, ye...
When studying a diasporic population, understanding the relationship between dispersed peoples and t...
peer reviewedThis paper examines a diaspora group's claiming and contesting of physical space and ac...
This paper explores geographies of Punjabiness within Britain in order to engage critically with rec...
This paper forms part of the first aut hor's doctoral thesis, "Indian Diaspora to Spain: Demo-Spatia...
Diaspora, a term used to refer to the dispersal of Jewish people across the world, is now expanded t...
The Sikh cultural narrative was explored using social representations in the public sphere. To this ...
Despite living in Britain in significant numbers since the 1950s, there has been very little in-dept...