Navigation überspringen
Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Standort: ---
Exemplare: ---
heiBIB
 Online-Ressource
Verfasst von:Zehmisch, Philipp [VerfasserIn]   i
Titel:Can migrants be indigenous?
Titelzusatz:affirmative action, space, and belonging in the Andaman Islands
Verf.angabe:Philipp Zehmisch
E-Jahr:2022
Jahr:05 October 2022
Umfang:26 S.
Fussnoten:Gesehen am 09.12.2022
Titel Quelle:Enthalten in: Modern Asian studies
Ort Quelle:Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1967
Jahr Quelle:2022
Band/Heft Quelle:56(2022), 5, Seite 1489-1514
ISSN Quelle:1469-8099
Abstract:In India, the contested category of Scheduled Tribes (STs) is enacted in order to socially uplift certain indigenous communities. This article concentrates on analysing the intersection between modes of indigenous self-definition, political assertion, and localized conceptualizations of space and belonging. My ethnographic example from the Andaman Islands focuses on the Ranchis, aboriginal labour migrants from the Chotanagpur plateau in central India. Being classified as STs, both in their homelands and other localities to which they migrated, Ranchi activists seek to accomplish coeval recognition in the Andamans. Their demands to be rewarded for the labourers’ contribution to the islands’ development are complicated by their occupation of non-ancestral lands that were originally inhabited by indigenous hunter-gatherer communities. By narrowing the notion of indigeneity, and hence ST status, down to communities who live on ancestral lands and who are culturally, socially, and economically different to migrant communities, state authorities and activists reject the Ranchis’ demands for affirmative action as Adivasis from but not of the Andamans. Reflecting on the existential relationship between land and people in popular understandings of indigenousness, this article aims to investigate the Ranchis’ claims of being migrants, yet also indigenous, in order to explore alternative possibilities to think through the notion of indigeneity. In so doing, I focus on the Ranchis’ subaltern history of racialized labour migration, their lack of voice within the post-colonial welfare regime, and their striving for autonomy and autarky by applying principles of indigenous knowledge and cosmologies from their homelands to the Andamans.
DOI:doi:10.1017/S0026749X2100038X
URL:Volltext: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X2100038X
 Volltext: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/modern-asian-studies/article/can-migrants-be-indigenous-affirmative-action-space ...
 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X2100038X
Datenträger:Online-Ressource
Sprache:eng
Sach-SW:Andaman Islands
 Chotanagpuri Adivasis
 human-environment relations
 Indigeneity
 migration
K10plus-PPN:1826738312
Verknüpfungen:→ Zeitschrift
 
 
Lokale URL UB: Zum Volltext

Permanenter Link auf diesen Titel (bookmarkfähig):  https://katalog.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/titel/68995315   QR-Code
zum Seitenanfang