The India Migration Report 2017 examines forced migration caused by political conflicts, climate change, disasters (natural and man-made) and development projects. India accounts for large numbers of internally displaced people in the world. Apart from conflicts and disasters, over the years, development projects (including urban redevelopment and beautification), often justified as serving the interests of the people and for public good, have caused massive displacements in different parts of the country, disrupting the lives and livelihoods of millions of people.
The India Migration Report 2017 examines forced migration caused by political conflicts, climate change, disasters (natural and man-made) and development projects. India accounts for large numbers of internally displaced people in the world. Apart from conflicts and disasters, over the years, development projects (including urban redevelopment and beautification), often justified as serving the interests of the people and for public good, have caused massive displacements in different parts of the country, disrupting the lives and livelihoods of millions of people.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
S. Irudaya Rajan is Professor at the Centre for Development Studies, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India. With more than three decades of research experience in Kerala, he has coordinated seven major migration surveys (1998, 2003, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2014 and 2016) in Kerala (with Professor K. C. Zachariah), led the migration surveys in Goa (2008) and Tamil Nadu (2015), and provided technical support to the Gujarat Migration Survey (2010) and Punjab Migration Survey (2011). He has published extensively in national and international journals on demographic, social, economic, political and psychological implications of international migration. He is currently engaged in several projects on international migration with New York University, UAE Exchange Centre, India Centre for Migration of the Ministry of External Affairs and International Labour Migration. He worked closely with the erstwhile Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs, Government of India; Department of Non-Resident Keralite Affairs (NORKA), Government of Kerala and Kerala State Planning Board. He is currently co-chairing the working group on NORKA for the 13th five-year plan (2017-2022) of Kerala State Planning Board, Government of Kerala, and is initiating the Kerala Migration Survey 2018, funded by the Department of NORKA, Government of Kerala. He is editor of the two Routledge series, India Migration Report (annual) since 2010 and South Asia Migration Report (biannual), and the founder and editor-in-chief of the journal Migration and Development.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Figures and Maps. List of Tables. Contributors. Preface. Acknowledgements. 1. Development or Developmental Terrorism? 2. Pushed Aside: Displaced for 'Development' 3. Singur: The Exemplar of Peasant Resistance 4. Forced Displacement: A Gendered Analysis of the Tehri Dam Project 5. Displacing and Relocating Peasant Social Dispositions 6. Urban Development, Smart Cities and Displacement 7. Urban Redevelopment, Neoliberalism and Politics of Displacement in Gujarat 8. Infrastructure Development and Forced Displacement in Kerala: Risks and Vulnerabilities 9. Conflicts and Displacement in the Northeast: Land, Identity and Immigrants 10. Silent Violence and New Bondage in the Urban Informal Sector: A Study of Forced Migrants in West Bengal 11. The Geography of Economic Migrants: Characteristics and Location in Bengaluru 12. New Migrant Question: Exploitative Forms of Transit Labour in Three Regions of Andhra Pradesh 13. Motives for Seasonal Migration and Rights-based Policies: Evidence from Western Odisha 14. Locating Gender, Re-reading Forced Migration: A Study of the Migrant Muslim Women in Delhi 15. International Migration in Tamil Nadu: Results from the Tamil Nadu Migration Survey 2015 16. Concerns about Temporary Migration: Policymaker's Perspective 17. Exploring the Capital-Labour Dynamics: Migrants in the Gold Jewellery-making Industry in Kerala 18. Kerala Migration Survey 2016: New Evidences 19. Dalit Migration, Diaspora and Development: Kerala and Punjab 20. Immigration Policy Reforms in OECD Countries: A Comparative Look at United States 21. Cinema and Migration: Nurses and Patriarchy. Index
List of Figures and Maps. List of Tables. Contributors. Preface. Acknowledgements. 1. Development or Developmental Terrorism? 2. Pushed Aside: Displaced for 'Development' 3. Singur: The Exemplar of Peasant Resistance 4. Forced Displacement: A Gendered Analysis of the Tehri Dam Project 5. Displacing and Relocating Peasant Social Dispositions 6. Urban Development, Smart Cities and Displacement 7. Urban Redevelopment, Neoliberalism and Politics of Displacement in Gujarat 8. Infrastructure Development and Forced Displacement in Kerala: Risks and Vulnerabilities 9. Conflicts and Displacement in the Northeast: Land, Identity and Immigrants 10. Silent Violence and New Bondage in the Urban Informal Sector: A Study of Forced Migrants in West Bengal 11. The Geography of Economic Migrants: Characteristics and Location in Bengaluru 12. New Migrant Question: Exploitative Forms of Transit Labour in Three Regions of Andhra Pradesh 13. Motives for Seasonal Migration and Rights-based Policies: Evidence from Western Odisha 14. Locating Gender, Re-reading Forced Migration: A Study of the Migrant Muslim Women in Delhi 15. International Migration in Tamil Nadu: Results from the Tamil Nadu Migration Survey 2015 16. Concerns about Temporary Migration: Policymaker's Perspective 17. Exploring the Capital-Labour Dynamics: Migrants in the Gold Jewellery-making Industry in Kerala 18. Kerala Migration Survey 2016: New Evidences 19. Dalit Migration, Diaspora and Development: Kerala and Punjab 20. Immigration Policy Reforms in OECD Countries: A Comparative Look at United States 21. Cinema and Migration: Nurses and Patriarchy. Index
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