This article explores the British Empire’s configuration of imprisonment and transportation in the Andaman Islands penal colony. It shows that British governance in the Islands produced new modes of carcerality and coerced migration in which the relocation of convicts, prisoners, and criminal tribes underpinned imperial attempts at political dominance and economic development. The article focuses on the penal transportation of Eurasian convicts, the employment of free Eurasians and Anglo-Indians as convict overseers and administrators, the migration of “volunteer” Indian prisoners from the mainland, the free settlement of Anglo-Indians, and the forced resettlement of the Bhantu “criminal tribe”. It examines the issue from the periphery of B...
Singapore’s past as a penal settlement has been largely based upon the usage of Indian convict labou...
This article reports primary archival data on the colonial penal history of British India and its re...
This article seeks to understand the idea of criminal tribes, which was based on British belief abou...
This article explores the British Empire’s configuration of imprisonment and transportation in the A...
[First paragraph] Between 1789 and 1939 the British transported at least 108,000 Indian, Burmese, Ma...
[First paragraph] Between 1789 and 1939 the British transported at least 108,000 Indian, Burmese, Ma...
[First paragraph] Between 1789 and 1939 the British transported at least 108,000 Indian, Burmese, Ma...
This article explores the transportation of Indian convicts to the port cities of the Bay of Bengal ...
This article explores the transportation of Indian convicts to the port cities of the Bay of Bengal ...
From the seventeenth to twentieth centuries, approximately 380,000 transportation convicts journeyed...
This paper explores practices of kidnap and confinement in the Andamans penal colony, for the period...
British colonial expansion policy had brought the Andaman and Nicobar Islands under its control. As...
C1 - Refereed Journal ArticleCultural analyses of empire inspired by Edward Said’s Orientalism (1978...
This paper explores practices of kidnap and confinement in the Andamans penal colony, for the period...
During the first half of the nineteenth century violent disorder broke out on a number of ships of t...
Singapore’s past as a penal settlement has been largely based upon the usage of Indian convict labou...
This article reports primary archival data on the colonial penal history of British India and its re...
This article seeks to understand the idea of criminal tribes, which was based on British belief abou...
This article explores the British Empire’s configuration of imprisonment and transportation in the A...
[First paragraph] Between 1789 and 1939 the British transported at least 108,000 Indian, Burmese, Ma...
[First paragraph] Between 1789 and 1939 the British transported at least 108,000 Indian, Burmese, Ma...
[First paragraph] Between 1789 and 1939 the British transported at least 108,000 Indian, Burmese, Ma...
This article explores the transportation of Indian convicts to the port cities of the Bay of Bengal ...
This article explores the transportation of Indian convicts to the port cities of the Bay of Bengal ...
From the seventeenth to twentieth centuries, approximately 380,000 transportation convicts journeyed...
This paper explores practices of kidnap and confinement in the Andamans penal colony, for the period...
British colonial expansion policy had brought the Andaman and Nicobar Islands under its control. As...
C1 - Refereed Journal ArticleCultural analyses of empire inspired by Edward Said’s Orientalism (1978...
This paper explores practices of kidnap and confinement in the Andamans penal colony, for the period...
During the first half of the nineteenth century violent disorder broke out on a number of ships of t...
Singapore’s past as a penal settlement has been largely based upon the usage of Indian convict labou...
This article reports primary archival data on the colonial penal history of British India and its re...
This article seeks to understand the idea of criminal tribes, which was based on British belief abou...