Political Economy of Migration in the India–Bangladesh Borderlands: Identity, Labour and Affect in the Former Chhit Mahals in Cooch Behar
Anuradha Sen Mookerjee ()
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Anuradha Sen Mookerjee: Institute of Human Development
The Indian Journal of Labour Economics, 2024, vol. 67, issue 1, No 6, 109-128
Abstract:
Abstract Large number of people from villages in the India–Bangladesh borderlands are migrants to Indian cities, particularly to the National Capital Region (NCR) of Delhi. Migration from Cooch Behar, an industrially backward district in the northern part of the state of West Bengal in India sharing border with Bangladesh and the Indian state of Assam, has been a regular practice as subsistence agriculture fail to provide the landless agricultural labourers continuous employment and competitive wages . This paper is based on ethnographic study in Delhi NCR and the former 'Chhit Mahals' (as the former border enclaves of Bangladesh and India were called in Bengali) in Cooch Behar district, in the period immediately following their exchange, of historically marginal migrant households whose members work in the construction industry. With the implementation of the 1974 Land Boundary Agreement between India and Bangladesh and the finalisation of the India-Bangladesh land boundary, the former Chhit Mahals, that is border enclaves of Bangladesh and India, were exchanged between the two states in August 2015. The former Bangladeshi Chhit Mahals in Cooch Behar are now Indian villages, whose residents had opted for Indian citizenship. This paper explores migration from these former Chhit Mahals with a relational political economy perspective. It analyses both broader socio-cultural, economic, and political processes and interests and the migrants’ own feelings which interact with migration to demonstrate how the migrant’s labour value is determined at the intersection of identity, affect and the international border, with marginalisation of the migrants from the India–Bangladesh borderlands emerging as a product of layered struggles and a dynamic of continuous cultural reconstruction.
Keywords: Affect; Identity; Labour; Circular Migration; India-Bangladesh Border; Political Economy; Chhit Mahals (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: O18 P25 R1 R2 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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DOI: 10.1007/s41027-024-00473-w
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