ABSTRACT

This book reconceptualizes migration studies in India and brings back the idea of citizenship to the center of the contested relationship between the state and internal migrants in the country. It interrogates the multiple vulnerabilities of disenfranchised internal migrants as evidenced in the mass exodus of migrants during the COVID-19 crisis. Challenging dominant economic and demographic theories of mobility and relying on a wide range of innovative heterodox methodologies, this volume points to the possibility of reimagining migrants as ‘citizens’.  

The volume discusses various facets of internal migration such as the roles of gender, ethnicity, caste, electoral participation of the internal migrants, livelihood diversification, struggle for settlement, and politics of displacement, and highlights the case of temporary, seasonal, and circulatory migrants as the most exploited and invisible group among migrants. Presenting secondary and recent field data from across regions, including from the northeast, the book explores the processes under which people migrate and suggests ways for ameliorating the conditions of migrants through sustained civic and political action.

This book will be essential for scholars and researchers of migration studies, politics, governance, development studies, public policy, sociology, and gender studies as well as policymakers, government bodies, civil society, and interested general readers.  

chapter 1|16 pages

Internal migration and citizenship in India

An emerging perspective

part I|31 pages

Migrants and citizenship

part II|66 pages

Migrants and electoral politics

chapter 6|21 pages

Inclusive exclusions

Citizenship practices and circular migrants in India after 1989

chapter 7|13 pages

Indigene, outsider, and the citizen

Politics of migration in Assam

chapter 8|5 pages

Migrant voters and political parties

Notes on an analytical framework

part III|112 pages

Migrants, development, and social change

chapter 9|20 pages

Livelihood diversification and out-migration

An appraisal of rural Bihar

chapter 10|18 pages

Domestic migration and multiple deprivations

Cycle rickshaw pullers in Delhi

chapter 12|19 pages

Role of caste in migration*

Some observations from Beed District, Maharashtra

chapter 13|10 pages

Struggle for settlement

The case of Nomadic Dombari community in Aurangabad District, Maharashtra

chapter 14|16 pages

Migration and the politics of citizenship

An ethnography at the borderlands of Rajasthan

chapter |8 pages

Epilogue

Migrants, memories, and mythologies