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ID092020
Title ProperWe are sons of this soil
Other Title Informationendless battle over indigenous homelands in Assam, India
LanguageENG
AuthorVandekerckhove, Nel
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Since the 1990s, the upsurge of multiple "sons-of-the-soil" conflicts all over the world has reopened academic debate about the rise of nativism, the role of ethnicity, and the alleged crisis of citizenship within the postcolonial state. Often the renewed claim for belonging versus exclusion under the vernacular of "autochthony" is seen as a reactionary attempt to counter the de-rooting of identity within the neoliberal globalizing context. This article makes the case that at the base of many homeland disputes lie too powerfully territorialized (ethnic) identities and the enduring but highly selective reaffirmation of such "natural" geo-cultural links -by both local political agents and state. In the Indian state of Assam, the struggle over indigenous homelands has not been a cry for closure within the engulfing globalizing world, but the result of sustained, yet ambivalent politics of identification, classification, and ethnographic mapping through which the colony and post-colony have sought to reshape the political landscape of India's Northeast. This selective but highly mobilizing politics of autochthony has not only extolled fierce struggle between "indigenous" and "fake autochthon" communities over the protection and demarcation of indigenous homeland, it has also engendered fierce conflict amongst autochthon groups about the degree of indigeneity required to claim a separate homeland of their own.
`In' analytical NoteCritical Asian Studies Vol. 41, No. 4; Dec 2009: p.523 - 548
Journal SourceCritical Asian Studies Vol. 41, No. 4; Dec 2009: p.523 - 548
Key WordsEndless Battle ;  Indigenous Homelands ;  Assam ;  India