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UK Mong Marma

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PhD Student

Address:
Institute of Development Research and Development Policy
Ruhr-University Bochum
Universitätsstr. 105
D-44789 Bochum
Germany

Fax: +49 (0)234 / 32-14294

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PhD Project

Forced Migration and Land: An Expulsion in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) of Bangladesh

Forced-migration emerges as crucial crisis in global-south. However, It hardly connects with socio-economic and political dimensions of forced migration. Consequently, forced migration has been perpetuated in different parts of global south alike Bangladesh. This research project intends to examine how forced migration of Indigenous Peoples is embedded in local context of Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) in relation wider context. Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT), geographically hilly, ethnically diversified, politically volatile region in southeastern Bangladesh. The socio-economic and politics have been transformed since colonial period in CHT. These changes are more visible in demographic alteration of Indigenous and non-Indigenous, insurgent movement, and emerging middle class and continuously land loss. In-migration, forcedmigration and transmigration (settlement) are the three migratory processes in CHT. In particular, two major Indigenous Peoples exodus were take place in 1960s and 1980s and they were become either refugees in India or Internal Displaced People (IDPs) in CHT. Nevertheless, in recent days, Indigenous Peoples are migrating to neighbour countries or within region, while every day form of land loss has been proliferated for the projects of privatization, development and securitization in CHT. It has been exacerbated and perpetuated for the contested notion over land entitlement: state and private land vs common or customary land. In such context, this empirical research with historical perspective aim to explore what are the endogenous and exogenous factors of forced migration in CHT; what are the forced migratory pattern in CHT; and how displace peoples copping in changing socio-economic transformation?. These research questions will examine intersecting forced migration with land alienation and politics of land, ethnicity, conflict, development and state formation and nation building of Bangladesh. A qualitative ethnographic method will apply in data collection.

Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Eva Gerharz

How to contact us

Institute of Development Research and Development Policy
Ruhr University Bochum

Room 2.04
Universitaetsstr. 105
D-44789 Bochum

E-Mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Phone:   +49-(0)234 / 32-22418
or   32-22243
Fax:   +49-(0)234 / 32-14-294

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Latest Publications

Sadik-Zada, E.R. Gatto, A. (2023). Frontiers and Best Practices in Bio, Circular, and Green Growth and Eco-Innovation.
available online

Sadik-Zada, E.R., Gatto, A., Weißnicht, Y. (2024). Back to the Future: Revisiting the Perspectives on nuclear fusion and juxtaposition to existing energy sources. Energy, Volume 290, 129150. 
available online

Britta Niklas, The effect of South African wine certifications on price premiums and marginal costs: A two-stage hedonic approach, Economic Modelling Volume 132, March 2024
available online

More information: "Publications / New Publications"

IEE on Tour

Feb 26.2. - 1.3.2024
Prof. Wilhelm Löwenstein, Gabriele Bäcker, Muhammad Saleh, Akua Martinson, Natalia Zakharchenko, Irene Among, Simon Rahn 
ADAPTED Annual Meeting, Centre d'Économie de la Sorbonne, Paris 1 University, France

Nov 13.11. - 14.11.2023
Simon Rahn
Development Dialogue Konferenz (DD19), International Institute of Social Studies (ISS), The Hague, NL

May 28.5. - 31.5.2023
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Apr 16.4. - 22.4.2023
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Apr 3.4. - 7.4.2023
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UK, Studies Conference

Mar 18.3. - 4.4.2023:
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South Africa, Cape Twon, UWC, Lecture

Feb 11.02. - 27.02.2023:
Wilhelm Löwenstein
South Africa, Cape Twon, UWC, Lecture

Jan 07.01. -25.01.2023:
Elkhan Sadik-Zada
South Africa, Cape Town, UWC, Lecture