Making Refugees in India
Price: 695.00 INR
ISBN:
9780192882974
Publication date:
10/06/2022
Hardback
272 pages
285x220mm
Price: 695.00 INR
ISBN:
9780192882974
Publication date:
10/06/2022
Hardback
272 pages
Ria Kapoor
- Offers a global history of India's refugee regime, both before and beyond the Partition
- Brings human rights and self-determination into tension
- Draws together the bureaucratic categories of refugee, citizen, and minority
- Offers a historical perspective from the so-called 'Global South'
- Demonstrates the history of internationalism as a transition from colonialism to postcolonialism
Rights: OUP UK (INDIAN TERRITORY)
Ria Kapoor
Description
Offering a global history of India's refugee regime, Making Refugees in India explores how one of the first postcolonial states during the mid-twentieth century wave of decolonisation rewrote global practices surrounding refugees - signified by India's refusal to sign the 1951 UN Refugee Convention. In broadening the scope of this decision well beyond the Partition of India, starting with the so called 'Wilsonian moment' and extending to the 1970s, the refugee is placed within the postcolonial effort to address the inequalities of the subject-citizenship of the British empire through the fullest realisation of self-determination. India's 'strategically ambiguous' approach to refugees is thus far from ad hoc, revealing a startling consistency when viewed in conversation of postcolonial state building and anti-imperial worldmaking to address inequity across the former colonies. The anti-colonial cry for self-determination as the source of all rights, it is revealed in this work, was in tension with the universal human rights that focused on the individual, and the figure of the refugee felt this irreconcilable difference most intensely. To elucidate this, this work explores contrasts in Indians' and Europeans' rights in the British empire and in World War Two, refugee rehabilitation during Partition, the arrival of the Tibetan refugees, and the East Pakistani refugee crisis. Ria Kapoor finds that the refugee was constitutive of postcolonial Indian citizenship, and that assistance permitted to refugees - a share of the rights guaranteed by self-determination - depended on their potential to threaten or support national sovereignty that allowed Indian experiences to be included in the shaping of universal principles.
About the author
Ria Kapoor completed a DPhil in History at the University of Oxford in 2019. She is now a Simon Research Fellow at the University of Manchester, and an editorial fellow with History Workshop Online.
Ria Kapoor
Table of contents
Introduction
1. The Refugees' Imperial Past: The Search for Self-Determination in Empire
2. Resisting an Alien Invasion of Principles: The Second World War and the New World of the UN
3. Refugees to (Re)Build the Nation: Partition and the Humanitarianism of Developing the Postcolony
4. A Nation-in-Exile in the Age on Non-Alignment: Rights for the Tibetan refugees in India
5. 10 Million Reasons for Self-Determination: the 1971 East Pakistani Crisis and its many Solutions
Conclusion
Ria Kapoor
Description
Offering a global history of India's refugee regime, Making Refugees in India explores how one of the first postcolonial states during the mid-twentieth century wave of decolonisation rewrote global practices surrounding refugees - signified by India's refusal to sign the 1951 UN Refugee Convention. In broadening the scope of this decision well beyond the Partition of India, starting with the so called 'Wilsonian moment' and extending to the 1970s, the refugee is placed within the postcolonial effort to address the inequalities of the subject-citizenship of the British empire through the fullest realisation of self-determination. India's 'strategically ambiguous' approach to refugees is thus far from ad hoc, revealing a startling consistency when viewed in conversation of postcolonial state building and anti-imperial worldmaking to address inequity across the former colonies. The anti-colonial cry for self-determination as the source of all rights, it is revealed in this work, was in tension with the universal human rights that focused on the individual, and the figure of the refugee felt this irreconcilable difference most intensely. To elucidate this, this work explores contrasts in Indians' and Europeans' rights in the British empire and in World War Two, refugee rehabilitation during Partition, the arrival of the Tibetan refugees, and the East Pakistani refugee crisis. Ria Kapoor finds that the refugee was constitutive of postcolonial Indian citizenship, and that assistance permitted to refugees - a share of the rights guaranteed by self-determination - depended on their potential to threaten or support national sovereignty that allowed Indian experiences to be included in the shaping of universal principles.
About the author
Ria Kapoor completed a DPhil in History at the University of Oxford in 2019. She is now a Simon Research Fellow at the University of Manchester, and an editorial fellow with History Workshop Online.
Table of contents
Introduction
1. The Refugees' Imperial Past: The Search for Self-Determination in Empire
2. Resisting an Alien Invasion of Principles: The Second World War and the New World of the UN
3. Refugees to (Re)Build the Nation: Partition and the Humanitarianism of Developing the Postcolony
4. A Nation-in-Exile in the Age on Non-Alignment: Rights for the Tibetan refugees in India
5. 10 Million Reasons for Self-Determination: the 1971 East Pakistani Crisis and its many Solutions
Conclusion
A Concise History of South India
Noboru Karashima
Text and Tradition in Early Modern North India
Tyler Williams, Anshu Malhotra, John Stratton Hawley
Friendships of ‘Largeness and Freedom’
Uma Das Gupta
Islam and Democracy in the 21st Century
Dr Tauseef Ahmad Parray
Kashmir’s Contested Pasts (OIP)
Chitralekha Zutshi

