Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Gorkhaland »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Gorkhaland"

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Khawas, Vimal. « The Project of Gorkhaland ». Social Change 39, no 3 (septembre 2009) : 435–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/004908570903900307.

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Besky, Sarah. « The Land in Gorkhaland ». Environmental Humanities 9, no 1 (mai 2017) : 18–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/22011919-3829118.

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Das, Tapan Kr. « From Mayel Lyang to Gorkhaland ». Contemporary Voice of Dalit 3, no 2 (juillet 2010) : 227–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0974354520100207.

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Yu, Ren, Qianyi Wang et Kee Cheok Cheong. « More than Tea - Environmental Decay, Administrative Isolation and the Struggle for Identity in Darjeeling ». Malaysian Journal of Economic Studies 59, no 1 (14 juin 2022) : 115–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.22452/mjes.vol59no1.6.

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The victim of both geographical, historical and administrative isolation, Darjeeling owed its growth to tea cultivation in the hills by migrants from neighbouring Nepal collectively called Gorkhas. Their contributions notwithstanding, they felt discriminated by West Bengal’s residents to whose state they were administratively attached. Poverty and poor working conditions, with no voice in the tea estates, and poorly maintained infrastructure that brought frequent landslides have fuelled demands for “Gorkhaland”, a homeland separate from West Bengal, where the distinctiveness of their identity and their role as Indian citizens would be fully recognised. It did not help that the Darjeeling district had been administratively detached from the political mainstream. Periodic agitations against the state government have weakened local institutions, disrupted the local economy impacting adversely tea production and tourism on which the local economy and the Gorkhas depend. The West Bengal government had partly recognised Gorkha demands by establishing the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council and the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA) each vested with limited autonomy. But disagreements on autonomy have left the Gorkhaland issue unresolved. In the meantime, Darjeeling continues to experience gradual decay, absent adequate support from the West Bengal government and from Darjeeling’s local government, including the GTA itself.
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Bishokarma, Miriam. « Die Bedeutung imaginativer Geographien im Kampf um „Gorkhaland“ ». PERIPHERIE – Politik • Ökonomie • Kultur 32, no 126-127 (8 août 2012) : 295–315. http://dx.doi.org/10.3224/peripherie.v32i126-127.22824.

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Rumba, Pratik. « Land Question, Ethnicity and the Gorkhaland Movement : The Political Economy Perspective ». Journal of Exclusion Studies 7, no 2 (2017) : 244. http://dx.doi.org/10.5958/2231-4555.2017.00019.5.

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Chhetri, Sharda. « Connect to Conspire : Scope of Social Media in Gorkhaland Statehood Movement ». Media Watch 5, no 1 (janvier 2014) : 43–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0976091120140104.

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Ganguly, Rajat. « Poverty, Malgovernance and Ethnopolitical Mobilization : Gorkha Nationalism and the Gorkhaland Agitation in India ». Nationalism and Ethnic Politics 11, no 4 (décembre 2005) : 467–502. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13537110500379286.

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Chhetri, Nilamber. « Gendered Frames of Mobilization : Differential Participation of Women in Ethno-politics of Darjeeling ». Indian Journal of Gender Studies 28, no 1 (22 janvier 2021) : 46–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0971521520974846.

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While issues related to collective mobilizations have recently attracted considerable attention, little has been done to explore and explain the differential rate of participation of women in different forms of mobilization. While addressing the issues of gender within the charred ethno-politics of Darjeeling, this article will analyse women’s participation in two successive waves of Gorkhaland movements, followed by the recent mobilization for recognition as scheduled tribes. In this regard, the article will highlight how the overt use of violence, followed by the response of the state, contributes significantly towards differential participation in ethnic movements. Looking at the changing ethno-politics of the Darjeeling hills, the article argues that the gender difference within social movements is produced through anchoring frames which use cultural cues to structure the repertoire of the movement.
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Sen, Debarati. « Subnational Enterprise : Militarized Mothering, Women’s Entrepreneurial Labour and Generational Dynamics in the Gorkhaland Struggle ». Journal of South Asian Development 15, no 3 (décembre 2020) : 316–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0973174120987094.

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This article posits that gendered militarized labour, women’s everyday entrepreneurialism and political mobilizations around subnational autonomy are intricately linked. To understand the relationship between these entities, one needs to zero in on the generational dynamics of women’s collective engagement in upholding the martial identity of Gorkhas, and the consequences of such preoccupation on the legibility of Gorkha subjects vis-à-vis the Indian state. To locate the specificity of women’s collective engagements with Gorkhaland, I propose a de-essentialized intersectional perspective in drawing up my framework of ‘subnational enterprise’. I draw from Black Feminist scholarship on the nuances of mothering and community work, strains of Feminist International Relations perspectives that attend to the invisibility of gendered labour in situations of conflict, and the emerging feminist work on entrepreneurialism which emphasize its socio-psychological aspects. My framework of subnational enterprise draws on 16 years of longitudinal ethnographic work in urban and rural areas of Darjeeling, and in this piece, I draw on life history interviews as well as unstructured interviews with men and women in Darjeeling. I advocate for grounded explorations of the relationship between militarization, discourses of belonging and gender identity to explain how right and left agendas jostle within a regional autonomy movement.
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Thèses sur le sujet "Gorkhaland"

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Guha, Anindya. « Regionalism in West Bengal : a study of movement of Gorkhaland ». Thesis, University of North Bengal, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/206.

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Bhagat, Gayatri. « Regionalism in India : A Comparative Study of Gorkhaland and Telengana Movements ». Thesis, University of North Bengal, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2493.

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Dural, Ramesh. « Leadership and protest movement dynamics : study in the context of Gorkhaland and Kamtapuri movements in West Bengal ». Thesis, University of North Bengal, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/207.

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Livres sur le sujet "Gorkhaland"

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Gorkhaland revisited. Newai : Navjeewan Publication, 2007.

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Gorkhaland : Crisis of statehood. New Delhi : Sage Publications India, 2012.

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Gosvāmī, Arjuna. Gorkhaland movement : A military importance. Kolkata : Knowledge Pub. House, 2010.

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Gorkhaland movement : A military importance. Kolkata : Knowledge Pub. House, 2010.

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Samanta, Amiya K. Gorkhaland : A study in ethnic separatism. New Delhi : Khama Publishers, 1996.

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P, Lama Mahendra, dir. Gorkhaland movement : Quest for an identity. Darjeeling : Published by Dept. of Information and Cultural Affairs, Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council, 1996.

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Gorkhaland, evolution of politics of segregation. Raja Rammohunpur, Dt. Darjeeling : University of North Bengal, 1988.

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Buḍāmagara, Harsha Bahādura. Is Gorkhaland a reality or simply mirage ? Kathmandu : Pushpawati Bura Magar, 1994.

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West Bengal (India). Dept. of Information., dir. Gorkhaland agitation : Facts and issues : information document II, January 1987. Calcutta : Director of Information, Govt. of West Bengal, 1987.

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Gorkhaland : A study of ethnity [i.e. ethnicity] from peace approach. Delhi : Kalinga Publications, 2013.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Gorkhaland"

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Chhetri, Bishal. « Geographies of Exclusion, Identity and Gorkhaland Movement ». Dans Darjeeling, 173–97. London : Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003362791-14.

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Sharma, Kabindra, Sanghamitra Choudhury et Debojyoti Das. « The trajectory from Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council to Gorkhaland Territorial Administration ». Dans Autonomy and Democratic Governance in Northeast India, 189–207. London : Routledge India, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003158417-15.

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Wenner, Miriam. « Die ethnifizierte Region ». Dans Die Region - eine Begriffserkundung, 59–70. Bielefeld, Germany : transcript Verlag, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/9783839460108-006.

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Miriam Wenner widmet sich in ihrem Beitrag den Zusammenhängen zwischen Ethnizität und Raum, die sich in dem Phänomen des Ethnoregionalismus spiegeln. Basierend auf einem Fallbeispiel der sozialen Bewegung für »Gorkhaland« aus Nord-Indien untersucht sie wie durch die Verknüpfung gruppenbezogener Identitäten mit einem bestimmten Raum machtvolle raubezogene Identitäten entstehen, die politische Bewegungen und Forderungen nach Autonomie inspirieren und legitimieren. Diese Ethnifizierung des Raums wird als bewusste Handlung gesehen und anhand von drei Prozessen illustriert: die Gestaltung imaginativer Geographien, die Besetzung des Raums durch Symbole und die Ausübung von Herrschaft über Raum durch regionalistische Eliten. Dabei zeigt die Autorin im Sinne einer post-kolonialen Betrachtungsweise die Probleme der ethnoregionalistischen Agenda auf, die in der naturalisierenden Logik des Containerraums sowie der Essentialisierung von Unterschieden verhaftet bleibt.
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Thapa, Namrata, et Jyoti Prakash Tamang. « Ethnic Fermented Foods and Beverages of Sikkim and Darjeeling Hills (Gorkhaland Territorial Administration) ». Dans Ethnic Fermented Foods and Beverages of India : Science History and Culture, 479–537. Singapore : Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-1486-9_18.

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Lacina, Bethany. « Electoral Competition and the Gorkhaland Movement ». Dans Darjeeling Reconsidered, 99–112. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199483556.003.0005.

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This chapter examines movements for greater local autonomy in Darjeeling since India’s independence. Political leaders generally mobilize to demand autonomy during periods of heightened electoral competition. These movements tend to fade when electoral competition is low. When mass movements have won autonomous institutions for Darjeeling, movement leaders have used these institutions to repress local electoral competition. Without electoral pressure, incumbent leaders in Darjeeling are feckless in pressing autonomy demands. Both the national government in New Delhi and the West Bengal state government in Kolkata have encouraged the anti-democratic features of Darjeeling’s autonomous institutions as a means of maintaining stability. I make this case by showing the parallels in the careers of Deoprakash Rai, Subash Ghisingh, and Bimal Gurung. Each leader de-escalated demands for Darjeeling’s autonomy as his personal power consolidated.
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Middleton, Townsend. « Until Gorkhaland : Agitation in the Remains ». Dans Quinine’s Remains : Empire’s Medicine and the Life Thereafter, 76–96. University of California Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/luminos.187.d.

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« 3. Until Gorkhaland : Agitation in the Remains ». Dans Quinine's Remains, 76–96. University of California Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520399136-007.

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Bennike, Rune. « ‘A Summer Place’ ». Dans Darjeeling Reconsidered, 54–73. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199483556.003.0003.

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From the tales of nineteenth century British explorers to contemporary tourism advertising, representations of Darjeeling circulate far and wide. Across more than a century and a half, Darjeeling is repeatedly pictured as ‘a summer place’: a picturesque landscape of misty tea gardens, quaint cottages, and elusive mountain views. This chapter explores the colonial origins and historical persistence of this ‘tourist gaze’ in producing Darjeeling. Approaching this representational history from a vantage point grounded in the questions of belonging forcefully raised by the Gorkhaland movement, the chapter illustrates how commodified Darjeeling is defined more by its scenery than by its inhabitants, pictured as a place you visit rather than a place of belonging, and sold as a consumable good. It argues that, as this tourist gaze leaves notions of inhabitation and belonging obscured, its global reach and historical persistence complicates ongoing quests for local autonomy in Darjeeling.
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« Sub-State-level Power-Sharing in West Bengal : The Creation of Gorkhaland and Empowerment of Panchayats ». Dans Politics and Governance in Indian States, 123–45. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789813208230_0006.

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Chalmers, Rhoderick. « Nepal and the Eastern Himalayas ». Dans Language and National Identity in Asia, 84–99. Oxford University PressOxford, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199267484.003.0004.

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Abstract Questions of language and national identity have coloured the history of Nepal and the eastern Himalayan region for decades. But since the 1980s they have emerged at the forefront of political movements – sometimes violent – which have underscored the ethnic, religious, and social fault lines of the area. The relationship between language and identity is complex even at the level of smaller ethnic groups; when combined with the questions of nation and nationalism it has proved fraught with danger. In the mid-1980s Darjeeling’s separatist Gorkhaland movement played on language as the unifying strand of Indian Nepali society while insisting on a clear separation from the state of Nepal. Nepali finally gained recognition as a national language of India in 1992, the culmination of almost a century of campaigning. By this time Nepal’s own ‘people’s movement’ had brought an end to the monarchist Panchayat regime, opening a Pandora’s box of ethnic and linguistic claims. The collapse of the central autocratic system brought with it a loss of faith in the simple ‘one language, one country’ nationalism that had been promoted for decades. Ethnic grievances and spurned calls for linguistic rights have since been seized on by Maoist insurgents as further aids to recruitment in an intensifying war. In Bhutan, mean-while, the 1980s saw the Dzongkha language deployed as one element of a rigid state nationalism. By the start of the 1990s the teaching of Nepali had been banned and much of Bhutan’s Nepali-speaking population displaced to refugee camps.
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