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Refugees and Borders in South Asia

Book

Refugees and Borders in South Asia

DOI link for Refugees and Borders in South Asia

Refugees and Borders in South Asia book

The Great Exodus of 1971

Refugees and Borders in South Asia

DOI link for Refugees and Borders in South Asia

Refugees and Borders in South Asia book

The Great Exodus of 1971
ByAntara Datta
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2012
eBook Published 26 July 2012
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203104613
Pages 240
eBook ISBN 9780203104613
Subjects Area Studies, Politics & International Relations
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Datta, A. (2012). Refugees and Borders in South Asia: The Great Exodus of 1971 (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203104613

ABSTRACT

The crisis in East Pakistan in 1971, which preceded the birth of Bangladesh, led to ten million refugees crossing the border into India. This book argues that this massive influx of refugees within a few short months changed ideas about citizenship and belonging in South Asia.

The book looks at how the Indian state, while generously keeping its borders open to the refugees, made it clear that these refugees were different from those generated by Partition, and would not be allowed to settle permanently. It discusses how the state was breaking its ‘effective’ link between refugees and citizenship, and how at the same time a second ‘affective’ border was developing between those living in the border areas, especially in Assam and West Bengal. Moving beyond the refugee narratives created by Partition, this book argues that these ‘effective’ and ‘affective’ borders generated by the refugee crisis in 1971 form part of the longer historical trajectory of the current political debate regarding ‘illegal infiltration’ from Bangladesh . It goes on to analyse the aftermath of the 1971 war and the massive repatriation project undertaken by the governments of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh to examine ways in which questions about minorities and belonging remained unresolved post-1971.

The book is an interesting contribution to the history of refugees, border-making and 1971 in South Asia, as well as to studies in politics and international relations.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|26 pages

The World at War: India, Pakistan, and the United Nations

chapter 2|42 pages

Welcome but Unwanted: India and the Refugee Crisis of 1971

chapter 3|37 pages

‘We Are Citizens, Not Foreigners’: the Refugee Crisis in

chapter 4|32 pages

City of Joy? Calcutta and the Refugees

chapter 5|24 pages

The Subcontinental Repatriation of 1973

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