In the wake of Partition - the break-up of British India in 1947 - millions of people moved across the new borders between Pakistan and India. Although much has been written about these 'Partition refugees,' a comprehensive picture remains elusive. This paper advocates a rethinking of the study of cross-border migration in South Asia. It argues especially for looking at categories of cross-border migrants that have so far been ignored, and for employing a more comparative approach. In the first section, we look at conventions that have shaped he literature on Partition refugees. The second section explores some patterns of post-Partition migration to East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), and he third uses oral evidence from cross-border migrants ...
The partitioning of British India in August 1947 into its principal successor state, Hindu-majority ...
This innovative study explores the interface between nation-building and refugee rehabilitation in p...
The book chapter provides a comparative account of the forced migration in the Punjab and Bengal reg...
Partitioned States offers new perspective in the histories of Partition and its aftermath by connect...
The Partition of the Indian sub-continent on its western and eastern flanks in 1947 led to the creat...
The British divided and quit India in 1947. The Partition of India and the creation of Pakistan upro...
The study aims to discover the heteroclite and cohabitation of society comprising of Sikhs, Muslims ...
Sindhi Hindus comprise the world’s most widespread South Asian diaspora. When the British divided th...
In the era of globalisation, where opening of borders is being advocated all over the world, there i...
The article draws on first-hand accounts of the violence, migration and resettlement which accompani...
The paper wishes to address one of the key themes of the volume—the representation of the self and t...
In the aftermath of the 1971 war, nearly 250,000 people found themselves stranded in various parts o...
Partition, the break-up of colonial India in 1947, has been the subject of considerable serious hist...
The partitioning of British India in August 1947 into its principal successor state, Hindu-majority ...
The partitioning of British India in August 1947 into its principal successor state, Hindu-majority ...
The partitioning of British India in August 1947 into its principal successor state, Hindu-majority ...
This innovative study explores the interface between nation-building and refugee rehabilitation in p...
The book chapter provides a comparative account of the forced migration in the Punjab and Bengal reg...
Partitioned States offers new perspective in the histories of Partition and its aftermath by connect...
The Partition of the Indian sub-continent on its western and eastern flanks in 1947 led to the creat...
The British divided and quit India in 1947. The Partition of India and the creation of Pakistan upro...
The study aims to discover the heteroclite and cohabitation of society comprising of Sikhs, Muslims ...
Sindhi Hindus comprise the world’s most widespread South Asian diaspora. When the British divided th...
In the era of globalisation, where opening of borders is being advocated all over the world, there i...
The article draws on first-hand accounts of the violence, migration and resettlement which accompani...
The paper wishes to address one of the key themes of the volume—the representation of the self and t...
In the aftermath of the 1971 war, nearly 250,000 people found themselves stranded in various parts o...
Partition, the break-up of colonial India in 1947, has been the subject of considerable serious hist...
The partitioning of British India in August 1947 into its principal successor state, Hindu-majority ...
The partitioning of British India in August 1947 into its principal successor state, Hindu-majority ...
The partitioning of British India in August 1947 into its principal successor state, Hindu-majority ...
This innovative study explores the interface between nation-building and refugee rehabilitation in p...
The book chapter provides a comparative account of the forced migration in the Punjab and Bengal reg...