Humanities Council funded London School of Economics/University of Cambridge research project on 'the Bengal

in #life6 years ago (edited)

()The Bangla story was inaugurated by the three-year Arts and Humanities Council funded by the London School of Economics / Cambridge Research Project in Bengal Daspora. Since 1947, the project has adopted a versatile and comparative method to understand the historical transformation of migrants from the Delta region of Bengal and the transfer of Muslims of the Delta region of Bengal. The research team combines an historian, a sociologist, an anthropologist and a developmental research researcher. Explore both ways in the transfer experience, and by way of interactions between large-scale historical events and small Cambridge University collegesscale separation, family and community choices, networks and resources. This project compares the immigrant experience within the Delta region, which goes to India / Bangladesh border and those (very few) join the United Kingdom. We focus mainly on the experience of Muslims, since it is the largest part of the Bengali immigrants in the UK.
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First Boishakh 2009, Tower Hamlets Project is centered around eight places - four in India / Bangladesh and four in the United States. As well as with these comparative analysis at the international level, we hope to examine more about the settlement patterns between the particular nation-state borders and regime and to understand how the communities draw in different regional and local settings. The project engages in a mix of methods, including the works of historical archives, visual methods, depth and life history interviews and participation of participants. We have collected 180 life history of migrants - men and women of all ages and backgrounds, who have been in different times and in different situations. The objective is to collect stories of ordinary people, who are often invisible and inadequate in the widely speculative and policy-based lectures about migration and through them they have to spread the light on 'below' migration.Pohela_Boishaka_2009.jpg

Ram Shajar Lake, Dinajpur, has played an important role in the development of this material, and to prevent the acceptance of acceptable and inhuman ideas about the role and role of the role of relocation in the contemporary world, the project team is looking for ways to spread these stories to a larger audience. We were particularly interested in reaching a young audience - young people whose lives probably only withdrew from the direct experience of migration, its communities and multicultural life are individually associated with this history and struggle. We were fortunate to be able to draw the experience and skills of Runnymede to present the fortunate story here.

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thank you represent the " bdbot" tag 👍

  • powerful post in bangla (29/03/2018) link

supported by @nmb82ig & you got 4 upVote free

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