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The Lhotsampa people of Bhutan : resilience and survival / edited by Venkat Pulla.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire : Palgrave Macmillan, 2016Copyright date: ©2016Description: xviii, 184 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781137557216
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 305.8914 23 P966
Contents:
List of illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- 1. Who are Lhotsampa? What caused their flight from Bhutan? / Venkat Pulla -- 2. Around the period of crisis / Venkat Pulla and Prahlad Dahal -- 3. Life in refugee camps / Venkat Pulla and Prahlad Dahal -- 4. "Human rights and inhuman wrongs": the year 1990 in review / Venkat Pulla and Asmita Dhittal -- 5. Settling in Australia / Venkat Pulla and Sarjoh Bah -- 6. Resettlement perspectives of Bhutanese refugees: a place called home with future / Venkat Pulla and Devika Rai -- 7. Spiritualty, Coping and resilience of Lhotshampa / Jennifer Woods and Venkat Pulla -- 8. Beyond Cultural Competence: Working across cultures in a globalized world / Narayan Gopalkrishnan and Venkat Pulla -- 9. Settlement planning for refugees: Australia and the United States / Venkat Pulla and Om Dhungel -- The concluding theme: Survival and resilience through spirituality / Venkat Pulla -- Notes on Contributors -- Index.
Summary: "This book provides insight into one of the world's quietest human rights abuses. In the 1890's the government of Bhutan allowed many ethnic Nepalese people into the country to clear Bhutanese jungles in the south of the country. Barely a century later, the Lhotshampa, meaning people who lived in the South, constituted 45% of the country's population. They lived as an agrarian community, and their position as food suppliers for Bhutan helped them to achieve educational, economic, and political success. With this rise in prosperity, the Bhutenese Drukpa government enacted a number of policies in the 1980s and 1990s designed to expel the Lhotshampa people. For over two decades, more than 100,000 Lhotshampa lived in refugee camps in Nepal, yet the global community remained largely ignorant. The Lhotshampa demonstrated extraordinary handling of adversity through spiritual meaning making, and this book is a testimony to their survival and the resilience that allowed them to build new lives against heavy odds. "-- Provided by publisher.Summary: ""This book provides insight into one of the world's quietest human rights abuses. The story of the Lhotsampa of Bhutan describes their journey of coping and resilience, incorporating qualitative research undertaken in the refugee camps in Nepal and resettlement areas in Australia and elsewhere in the world"--Provided by publisher"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Barcode
Books Books JSW Law Library Taba Branch General Stacks Non-fiction 305.8914 P966 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available See librarian for details. 2018-0177
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

List of illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- 1. Who are Lhotsampa? What caused their flight from Bhutan? / Venkat Pulla -- 2. Around the period of crisis / Venkat Pulla and Prahlad Dahal -- 3. Life in refugee camps / Venkat Pulla and Prahlad Dahal -- 4. "Human rights and inhuman wrongs": the year 1990 in review / Venkat Pulla and Asmita Dhittal -- 5. Settling in Australia / Venkat Pulla and Sarjoh Bah -- 6. Resettlement perspectives of Bhutanese refugees: a place called home with future / Venkat Pulla and Devika Rai -- 7. Spiritualty, Coping and resilience of Lhotshampa / Jennifer Woods and Venkat Pulla -- 8. Beyond Cultural Competence: Working across cultures in a globalized world / Narayan Gopalkrishnan and Venkat Pulla -- 9. Settlement planning for refugees: Australia and the United States / Venkat Pulla and Om Dhungel -- The concluding theme: Survival and resilience through spirituality / Venkat Pulla -- Notes on Contributors -- Index.

"This book provides insight into one of the world's quietest human rights abuses. In the 1890's the government of Bhutan allowed many ethnic Nepalese people into the country to clear Bhutanese jungles in the south of the country. Barely a century later, the Lhotshampa, meaning people who lived in the South, constituted 45% of the country's population. They lived as an agrarian community, and their position as food suppliers for Bhutan helped them to achieve educational, economic, and political success. With this rise in prosperity, the Bhutenese Drukpa government enacted a number of policies in the 1980s and 1990s designed to expel the Lhotshampa people. For over two decades, more than 100,000 Lhotshampa lived in refugee camps in Nepal, yet the global community remained largely ignorant. The Lhotshampa demonstrated extraordinary handling of adversity through spiritual meaning making, and this book is a testimony to their survival and the resilience that allowed them to build new lives against heavy odds. "-- Provided by publisher.

""This book provides insight into one of the world's quietest human rights abuses. The story of the Lhotsampa of Bhutan describes their journey of coping and resilience, incorporating qualitative research undertaken in the refugee camps in Nepal and resettlement areas in Australia and elsewhere in the world"--Provided by publisher"-- Provided by publisher.

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