Type | Journal Article - European Bulletin of Himalaya Research |
Title | International and national Migrations from a village in Western Nepal: Changes and Impact on local Life |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 35 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
Page numbers | 43-61 |
URL | https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/file/index/docid/1053921/filename/EBHR_35_36_04.pdf |
Abstract | Today the scale of migratory phenomena in Nepal is such that migrations are part of Nepalese people’s social landscape: every family has a relative who has migrated, either abroad temporarily or permanently to the Terai; a young hill man has a good chance of having to leave his native village at some point in his life, contrary to his ancestors who, for the most part, stayed there from birth to the end of their lives. However, to fully grasp the extent of the migratory phenomena, precise quantitative data are needed. Here, based on such data collected at a fifteen-year interval in an irrigated village in Western Nepal, I analyse both how migratory phenomena have developed in this village, as well as the local impact these migrations have in the field of social organisation, farming and land tenure. The hamlet studied, Aslewacaur, is located in Gulmi, one of the most densely populated districts in the Nepalese hills (258 pers/km² in 2001) and one of the most affected by temporary labour migrations (ICIMOD et al. 2003): the study therefore reflects the strategic adaptation of the population when there is a marked imbalance in the carrying capacity of an area – the carrying capacity is a concept describing the interrelations between population, labour supply, natural resources and technology (Schroll 2001: 129). |
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