Die ländlichen Newar-Siedlungen im Kāṭhmāṇḍu-Tal: eine vergleichende Untersuchung sozialer und ökonomischer Organisationsformen der Newar
In: Giessener geographische Schriften Heft 56
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In: Giessener geographische Schriften Heft 56
In: Nepal Research Centre publications 21
In: Entwicklungsethnologie: Zeitschrift der Arbeitsgemeinschaft Entwicklungsethnologie e.V, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 19-35
ISSN: 0942-4466
World Affairs Online
In: Erdwissenschaftliche Forschung 33
In: Erdwissenschaftliche Forschung 33
In: European bulletin of Himalayan research: EBHR, Heft 55, S. 7-37
In: Asian and Pacific migration journal: APMJ, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 339-361
Labor migration to India is the most important source of income for people in Far West Nepal. To better understand the effects of labor migration, a research analyzing why and how migrants invest their money in financial self-help organizations was undertaken. Fieldwork was conducted in the communities of origin in Nepal and migrant communities in India. Based on the study, the paper provides an overview of the existing financial self-help associations, their strengths and weaknesses, accessibility and possibilities of benefits and losses for the migrants and their families. The major conclusion is that migration helps to improve income or security but can also undermine a household's financial situation by perpetuating debt and dependency.
In: Asian and Pacific migration journal: APMJ, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 339-362
ISSN: 0117-1968
In: Africa Spectrum
ISSN: 1868-6869
This article draws insights from access, claim-making and critical environmental justice scholarships to reveal how community-based conservation (CBC) may provide strategic openings for marginalised individuals to claim recognition. Empirically, we ground it in the context of a Sustainable Charcoal Project in rural Kilosa, Tanzania. In our study villages, Ihombwe and Ulaya Mbuyuni, the project provided an opening for the marginalised to claim recognition based on contested migration-and-settlement histories. These histories produced intra-community differentiation as firstcomers (mis)used the project for political domination, cultural status and material benefits. When the project opened governance spaces, latecomers embraced CBC institutions and processes as strategic openings to contest their marginalisation and claim for recognition. We suggest that CBC may produce political benefits where (mal)recognition of rights to resource access occurs as some people hold a sense of belonging more to the land than others.
In: Critical Asian studies, Band 43, Heft 4, S. 661-665
ISSN: 1472-6033
In: Critical Asian studies, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 23-47
ISSN: 1472-6033
In: Critical Asian studies, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 23-48
ISSN: 1467-2715
In Nepal, international labor migration to India and overseas, as well as internal migration to the rural Nepalese lowlands, is of high socioeconomic significance. Scholarly debates about migration in Nepal have gradually shifted from an economic to a more holistic perspective, also incorporating social dimensions. However, little evidence has been generated about internal migration to urban destinations and the potential linkages between international and internal migration. This article draws on Bourdieu's "Theory of Practice" and sees migration as a social practice. Accordingly, migration practice is regarded as a strategy social agents apply to increase or transfer capitals and ultimately secure or improve their social position. Evidence for this argument is based on a qualitative case study of ruralto- urban migrants in Far West Nepal conducted in July and August 2009. The study at hand addresses linkages between internal and international migration practices and provides insight about a social stratum that is often neglected in migration research: the middle class and, more precisely, government employees. The authors show that social relations are crucial for channeling internal migration to a specific destination. Furthermore, they unveil how internal migration is connected to the international labor migration of former generations. Finally, the authors examine how migration strategies adopted over generations create multi-local social networks rooted in the family's place of origin. (Crit Asian Stud/GIGA)
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