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Home rule : national sovereignty and the separation of natives and migrants

Title
Home rule : national sovereignty and the separation of natives and migrants / Nandita Sharma.
ISBN
147800245X
9781478002451
1478000775
1478000953
9781478000778
9781478000952
Publication
Durham : Duke University Press Books, 2020.
Physical Description
1 online resource (xi, 372 pages)
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Description based on print version record.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
"In HOME RULE Nandita Sharma examines the twentieth-century transition from a world system based on empires to one based on nations. The UN Charter of 1945 endorsed the rights of self-governance to peoples on their land. At the end of World War II many people were displaced or had become refugees. Sharma asks why such migrants would not have the same rights as those still on their land. She traces the history of the development of the categories of migrants, local residents, and indigenous peoples back through colonial administration, showing what these categories actually were designed to accomplish. She argues that while the desire for national self-governance might have seemed like an answer to colonial rule, it has done more for liberal capital than it has for actual decolonization. Accounts of settler colonialism and indigenous nationhood have often depended on this same self-rule on the land. Sharma's account will complicate such claims in seeing them as part of a wider moment in world history. HOME RULE begins with a historical investigation into the transition from direct rule to indirect rule in imperial British India. Sharma then explores the transitions in the way that European Empire exercised control through the periods of colonization, independence, and neoliberalism. While moving through this history, Sharma catalogues the various laws and economic policies that regulated the mobility of labor, and the nationalist messages that justified those laws and policies. Sharma then demonstrates in chapters 5-7 how nationalism, though originating in Euro-American nation-states, became a prominent feature in movements against colonization and for self-determination. It is in these chapters that Sharma shows how the adoption of the nation-state model contained the potential of these movements for self-determination. Sharma concludes HOME RULE with the proposal to reject borders and nations as a whole as a means of questioning more deeply the limits of nationalism in achieving liberation for former colonies. This book will be of interest to scholars of postcolonial theory, history, social theory, sociology, anthropology, and geography"-- Provided by publisher.
Variant and related titles
e-Duke books scholarly collection 2020.
Other formats
Print version: Sharma, Nandita Rani, 1964- Home rule. Durham : Duke University Press Books, 2020
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
November 08, 2021
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Home Rule: The National Politics of Separation
The Imperial Government of Mobility and Stasis
The National Government of Mobility and Stasis
The Jealousy of Nations: Globalizing National Constraints on Human Mobility
The Postcolonial New World Order and the Containment of Decolonization
Developing The Postcolonial New World Order:
Global Lockdown: Postcolonial Expansion of National Citizenship and Immigration
Controls:
National Autochthonies and the Making of Postcolonial National-Natives
Post-Separation and the Struggle for a Decolonized Commons.
Genre/Form
Electronic books.
Citation

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