Foreword - Roberta Cohen and Francis Deng
Introduction - Paula Banerjee, Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury and
Samir Kumar Das
Afghanistan - Mossarat Qadeem
The Long Way Home
Pakistan - Atta ur Rehman Sheikh
Development and Disaster
India - Samir Kumar Das
Homelessness at Home
India′s Northeast - Subir Bhaumik
Nobody′s People in No Man′s Land
Bangladesh - Meghna Guhathakurta and Suraiya Begum
Displaced and Dispossessed
Burma - Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury
Escape To Ordeal
Nepal - Manesh Shreshtha and Bishnu Adhikari
A Problem Unprepared For
Sri Lanka - Joe William
A Profile of Vulnerability
Resisting Erasure - Paula Banerjee
Women IDPs in South Asia
Epilogue - David Fisher
International Law on the Internally Displaced Persons
Paula Banerjee specializes in issues of border and borderlands in
South Asia. She has published extensively on issues of gender,
forced migration and peace politics. Her recent publications
include a volume entitled Borders, Histories, Existences: Gender
and Beyond (2010). S he has edited a volume entitled Women in Peace
Politics (2008) and co-edited books on Internal Displacement in
South Asia (2005), Autonomy beyond Kant and Hermeneutics (2007) and
Marginalities and Justice (2009). S he has been working on themes
related to women, borders and democracy in South Asia, and has
published extensively in journals such as International Studies and
Canadian Women’s Studies on issues such as histories of borders and
women in conflict situations. S he was the former Head of the
Department in the Department of South and Southeast Asian Studies,
University of Calcutta, and is currently Associate Professor in the
same Department. She is also the Vice President of International
Association for Study of Forced Migration.
Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury is Professor at the Department of
Political Science, Rabindra Bharati University, Kolkata, and
member, Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group. He is known for his
work on international political theory, politics of globalisation,
democracy, rights and justice in South Asia. His recent
publications include Indian Autonomies: Keywords and Key Texts
(co-edited with Ranabir Samaddar and Samir Kumar Das, 2005) and
Internal Displacement in South Asia: The Relevance of UN’s Guiding
Principles (co-edited with Paula Banerjee and Samir Kumar Das,
2005).
Prof. Samir Kumar DAS is presently the Vice-Chancellor of the
University of North Bengal. A Professor of Political Science at the
University of Calcutta, Kolkata (now on lien) he is a member and an
Honorary Senior Researcher of the Calcutta Research Group (CRG).
Besides being the Coordinator of the UGC-DRS Programme on
‘Democratic Governance: Comparative Perspectives’, he was a
Post-Doctoral Fellow (2005) of the Social Science Research Council
(South Asia Program) based in New York. He specializes in and
writes on ethnicity, security, migration, rights, justice and
democracy and lectured widely in premier academic institutions in
the USA, Finland, France, Italy, Sweden, Belgium and many other
countries on various assignments.
"Suicidal Honor will most certainly appeal to a wide audience of
readers not only in literary criticism, but also in cultural
history, anthropology and other disciplines."
*Herald Salomon*
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