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Tag Archives: Bangladesh
Bosses, Beggars, and Work on the Streets of Dhaka
“Beggar Bosses on the Streets of Dhaka” (DOI: 10.1080/00472336.2022.2135580) is a new article by David Jackman of the Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford. The abstract for the paper states: Public characterisations of begging tend in two directions: … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged associations, Bangladesh, begging, crime, David Jackman, Dhaka, Labour, savings and credit
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Another 10,000 downloads
Another JCA paper has passed the 10,000 page views milestone. “Patriarchal Investments: Marriage, Dowry and the Political Economy of Development in Bangladesh” is by Sarah C. White Social and Policy Sciences, University of Bath It is an Open Access article. … Continue reading
Issue 4 for 2021 published
Issue number 4 of Volume 51 of the journal has gone to print and is available electronically at the publisher’s site. This issue features six articles and five book reviews. The articles are: Challenging Hegemony: Nurhadi-Aldo and the 2019 Election … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged agriculture, Akiko Horita, Andrew Brown, Bangladesh, China, Clemens Büttner, Cultural Revolution, Indonesia, inequality, Japan, Juliette Schwak, Kevin Hewison, Luca Anceschi, Lutfun Nahar Lata, Malaysia, Pim de Zwart, religion, Southeast Asia, Thailand, Timo Duile, Turkmenistan, USA, Uzbekistan, Vincent K. L. Chang, Zhixi Wang
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Issue 2 for 2021 published
Issue number 2 of Volume 51 of the journal has gone to print and is available electronically at the publisher’s site. This issue has a Feature Section on the Political Economy of Southeast Asia, a tribute to Bruce McFarlane and … Continue reading
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Tagged Bangladesh, Bruce McFarlane, capitalism, Garry Rodan, Howard Brasted, Humphrey McQueen, Imran Ahmed, Jeff Tan, Kevin Hewison, Kosmas Tsokhas, Malaysia, Manoj Misra, Marxism, Michael K. Connors, Military, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, Southeast Asia, Thailand, Toby Carroll, Ukrist Pathmanand
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Issue 1 for 2021 published
Issue number 1 of Volume 51 of the journal has gone to print and is available electronically at the publisher’s site. This issue has a Feature Section on South Korea, Inequality and Labour. The articles in this feature are: Rising … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Bangladesh, Bilal Tawfiq Hamamra, China, class, game industry, Hagen Koo, higher education, Inaya Rakhmani, Indonesia, inequality, Jun Youn Kim, Kevin Hewison, Labour, Melissa Crouch, migration, Myanmar, Neo-liberalism, Palestine, populism, protest suicide, Rohingya, Saleh Shahriar, Samantha K. Watson, Song Hee Kang, South Korea, Sun-Chul Kim, Thailand, Thérèse Blanchet, Turkey, women, Yaprak Gürsoy, Yoonkyung Lee
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The Making of the Chin Hills
In a new review at JCA, Ngamtinlun Touthang of the Department of Political Science at Manipur University in India looks at Pum Khan Pau’s Indo-Burma Frontier and the Making of the Chin Hills: Empire and Resistance, published by Routledge. The … Continue reading
Bangladesh’s Urban Poor in and the Right to the City
“To Whom Does the City Belong? Obstacles to Right to the City for the Urban Poor in Bangladesh” (DOI: 10.1080/00472336.2020.1791934) is an article by Lutfun Nahar Lata of the School of Social Science, The University of Queensland in Australia. The … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Bangladesh, governance, Lutfun Nahar Lata, public space, right to the city, street vending, urban poor
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Neo-Liberal Agriculture and Smallholder Indebtedness in Bangladesh
“Commercial Micro-Credit, Neo-Liberal Agriculture and Smallholder Indebtedness: Three Bangladesh Villages” (DOI: 10.1080/00472336.2019.1696386) is a new JCA article. It is authored by Manoj Misra of the Department of Social Sciences, Western Connecticut State University, Danbury, USA. The abstract for the paper … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged agrarian reform, Bangladesh, indebtedness, Manoj Misra, Micro-credit, Neo-liberalism, rural financing, smallholder
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Bangladeshi Women and Migration
“Learning to Swim in Turbulent Waters: Women’s Migration at the Agency-Exploitation Nexus” (DOI: 10.1080/00472336.2019.1612935) is a new article by Thérèse Blanchet of the Drishti Research Centre in Dhaka, Bangladesh and Samantha K. Watson of the Department of Geography and Environment, … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged anti-trafficking, Bangladesh, ethnographic evaluation, gender, Labour, migration, Samantha K. Watson, Thérèse Blanchet
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Issue 3 of 2019 published
Issue number 3 of Volume 49 of the journal has gone to print and is available electronically at the publisher’s site. This is a regular issue of seven research articles and five book reviews. The research articles are: “Extremely Rightful” … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Alec Gordon, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Caroline Hughes, China, David Hundt, India, Jessica Walton, Kanishka Jayasuriya, Kevin Hewison, Kosmas Tsokhas, Lam Minh Chau, Lee Jones, M. Omar Faruque, Malaysia, Myanmar, Neil Webster, Netra Eng, Scandinavia, Shahar Hameiri, Soo Jung Elisha Lee, Soohyun Christine Lee, South Korea, Tanya Jakimow, Thailand, Timo Fleckenstein, Vietnam, Zou Yizheng
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