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The Northeast border region of India is a crossroads of Southeast Asia, where India meets China and the Himalayas, and home to many ethnic minorities from across the continent. The area is also the birthplace of a number of secessionist and insurgent movements and a hotbed of political fervor and violent instability. In this trailblazing new study, Duncan McDuie-Ra observes the everyday lives of the thousands of men and women who leave the region every year to work, study, and find refuge in Delhi. He examines how new migrants navigate the rampant racism, harassment, and even violence they face upon their arrival in Delhi. But McDuie-Ra does not paint them simply as victims of the city, but also as contributors to Delhi's vibrant community and increasing cosmopolitanism. India's embrace of globalization has created employment opportunities for Northeast migrants in many capitalistic enterprises: shopping malls, restaurants, and call centers. They have been able to create their own 'map' of Delhi and their own communities within the larger and often unfriendly one of the metropolis.
Anthropology -- History. --- Geography. --- Migrations. --- Migration, Internal --- Rural-urban migration --- Sociology, Urban --- Anthropology --- Business & Economics --- Demography --- Population geography --- Internal migration --- Mobility --- Human geography --- Internal migrants --- E-books --- Anthropology. --- Cities and towns, Movement to --- Country-city migration --- Migration, Rural-urban --- Rural exodus --- Rural-urban relations --- Urbanization --- Urban sociology --- Cities and towns --- Human beings --- Primitive societies --- Social sciences
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Political participation --- Civil society --- Democratization --- National security --- National security policy --- NSP (National security policy) --- Security policy, National --- Economic policy --- International relations --- Military policy --- Democratic consolidation --- Democratic transition --- Political science --- New democracies --- Social contract --- Citizen participation --- Community action --- Community involvement --- Community participation --- Involvement, Community --- Mass political behavior --- Participation, Citizen --- Participation, Community --- Participation, Political --- Political activity --- Political behavior --- Political rights --- Social participation --- Political activists --- Politics, Practical --- Government policy --- Meghalaya (India) --- Politics and government.
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In crisp, engaging prose, McDuie-Ra recognizes the rich resource that skateboarding video provides for tracing urban transformation at a variety of scales. In framing such media as an unparalleled window on how our city spacesfrom the quotidian to the spectacularare experienced, McDuie-Ras analysis does what only the best urban research can achieve, offering a profound and previously ignored vantage point for understanding the intimacies that evolve between humans and their shared built environments. And it does so in the context of media and performances of urban skateboarding that are in turn masterful, subversive, obnoxious, artful, problematic, beautiful, and startling. John Carr, UNSW, Australia In this engaging and provocative work McDuie-Ras metaphor is powerful; here is a culture that documents itself "from below." By adopting the video camera as a ritual item, skateboarders have created an informal archive of urban life and social change. In studying these videos, the author invites us to become intimately familiar with the overlooked corners of cities across the globe, presenting an informal index of development and austerity, and an extraordinary resource for academic study. This clear and accessible voice questions the central tenets of skateboard culture, showing that through video, skateboarders can be responsible delinquents, and inclusive elitists who cherish and honour their history. A remarkable text that urges the reader to reconsider the ways we archive urbanism, occupy space, and think of race. Paul OConnor, author of Skateboarding and Religion In an era when footage speaks louder than words, McDuie-Ra convinces us that we can perceive and understand cities from an alternative, yet novel perspective. This is a highly readable and intriguing work for urban sub-cultural scholars interested in conducting media-based archival research or content analysis, as well as for those seeking an in-depth depiction of skaters embodied and socio-cultural experience. Chihsin Chiu, National Taiwan University Duncan McDuie-Ra is Professor of Urban Sociology, University of Newcastle, Australia. He is the author of Skateboarding and Urban Landscapes in Asia: Endless Spots (2021).
Sociology, Urban. --- Cities and towns. --- Skateboarding --- Video recordings --- Videorecordings --- Videos --- Audio-visual materials --- Roller skating --- Global cities --- Municipalities --- Towns --- Urban areas --- Urban systems --- Human settlements --- Sociology, Urban --- Urban sociology --- Cities and towns --- Social aspects.
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'In crisp, engaging prose, McDuie-Ra recognizes the rich resource that skateboarding video provides for tracing urban transformation at a variety of scales. In framing such media as an unparalleled window on how our city spaces-from the quotidian to the spectacular-are experienced, McDuie-Ra's analysis does what only the best urban research can achieve, offering a profound and previously ignored vantage point for understanding the intimacies that evolve between humans and their shared built environments. And it does so in the context of media and performances of urban skateboarding that are in turn masterful, subversive, obnoxious, artful, problematic, beautiful, and startling.' -John Carr, UNSW, Australia 'In this engaging and provocative work McDuie-Ra's metaphor is powerful; here is a culture that documents itself "from below". By adopting the video camera as a ritual item, skateboarders have created an informal archive of urban life and social change. In studying these videos, the author invites us to become intimately familiar with the overlooked corners of cities across the globe, presenting an informal index of development and austerity, and an extraordinary resource for academic study. This clear and accessible voice questions the central tenets of skateboard culture, showing that through video, skateboarders can be responsible delinquents, and inclusive elitists who cherish and honour their history. A remarkable text that urges the reader to reconsider the ways we archive urbanism, occupy space, and think of race.' -Paul O'Connor, author of Skateboarding and Religion 'In an era when footage speaks louder than words, McDuie-Ra convinces us that we can perceive and understand cities from an alternative, yet novel perspective. This is a highly readable and intriguing work for urban sub-cultural scholars interested in conducting media-based archival research or content analysis, as well as for those seeking an in-depth depiction of skaters' embodied and socio-cultural experience.' -Chihsin Chiu, National Taiwan University Duncan McDuie-Ra is Professor of Urban Sociology, University of Newcastle, Australia. He is the author of Skateboarding and Urban Landscapes in Asia: Endless Spots (2021).
Philosophy and psychology of culture --- Sociology of culture --- Sociology --- Environmental planning --- Social geography --- ruimtelijke ordening --- sociologie --- cultuur --- steden --- Human geography. --- Sociology, Urban. --- Culture. --- Culture --- Human Geography. --- Urban Sociology. --- Sociology of Culture. --- Cultural Studies. --- Study and teaching.
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'In crisp, engaging prose, McDuie-Ra recognizes the rich resource that skateboarding video provides for tracing urban transformation at a variety of scales. In framing such media as an unparalleled window on how our city spaces-from the quotidian to the spectacular-are experienced, McDuie-Ra's analysis does what only the best urban research can achieve, offering a profound and previously ignored vantage point for understanding the intimacies that evolve between humans and their shared built environments. And it does so in the context of media and performances of urban skateboarding that are in turn masterful, subversive, obnoxious, artful, problematic, beautiful, and startling.' -John Carr, UNSW, Australia 'In this engaging and provocative work McDuie-Ra's metaphor is powerful; here is a culture that documents itself "from below". By adopting the video camera as a ritual item, skateboarders have created an informal archive of urban life and social change. In studying these videos, the author invites us to become intimately familiar with the overlooked corners of cities across the globe, presenting an informal index of development and austerity, and an extraordinary resource for academic study. This clear and accessible voice questions the central tenets of skateboard culture, showing that through video, skateboarders can be responsible delinquents, and inclusive elitists who cherish and honour their history. A remarkable text that urges the reader to reconsider the ways we archive urbanism, occupy space, and think of race.' -Paul O'Connor, author of Skateboarding and Religion 'In an era when footage speaks louder than words, McDuie-Ra convinces us that we can perceive and understand cities from an alternative, yet novel perspective. This is a highly readable and intriguing work for urban sub-cultural scholars interested in conducting media-based archival research or content analysis, as well as for those seeking an in-depth depiction of skaters' embodied and socio-cultural experience.' -Chihsin Chiu, National Taiwan University Duncan McDuie-Ra is Professor of Urban Sociology, University of Newcastle, Australia. He is the author of Skateboarding and Urban Landscapes in Asia: Endless Spots (2021).
Philosophy and psychology of culture --- Sociology of culture --- Sociology --- Environmental planning --- Social geography --- ruimtelijke ordening --- sociologie --- cultuur --- steden
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As urban development in Asia has accelerated, cities in the region have become central to skateboarding culture, livelihoods, and consumption. Asia's urban landscapes are desired for their endless supply of 'spots'. A spot is assemblage of objects, surfaces and obstacles holding the possibilities to perform skateboarding manoeuvres (tricks). Spots are not built for skateboarding; they are accidents of urban planning and commercial activity; glitches in the urban machine. Skateboarders and filmers chase these glitches searching for spots to make skate video, the currency of the industry and skateboarding's primary cultural artefact. Once captured, performances at Asia's spots circulate rapidly through digital platforms to millions of skateboarders, enrolling spots from Shenzhen, Dubai and Ramallah into an alternative cartography of the region. By focusing on this alternative way of desiring and consuming urban Asia, this book explores the ways skateboarding resets relational and comparative hierarchies of urban development within Asia and between Asia and the West.
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India's vibrant civil society sector has become a powerful symbol of political participation in the country. It comprises a wealth of media organizations, caste and religion based associations, farmers groups, labor unions, social service organizations, and an almost limitless number of development organizations. Given this vibrancy, it is difficult to grasp the characteristics of civil society at the transnational or even the national level. Delving beneath the progressive surface to the local level, one finds a murky and multifaceted world of competing interests, compromises, uneasy alliances and erratic victories. The Politics of Collective Advocacy in India critically examines the enormous gap between the ways collective action in India is studied and the ways it operates "on the ground". It identifies what influences the relative success or failure of different movements; the tools activists use to overcome obstacles; the traps that derail efforts to frame, politicize, and act on certain issues and assumptions about particular forms of action. The authors synthesize the experiences of a number of organizations and movements to identify the most effective tools that civil society actors at all levels can use to achieve positive social change.
Pressure groups --- Political activists --- Groupes de pression --- Activistes --- Activists, Political --- Advocacy groups --- Interest groups --- Political interest groups --- Special interest groups (Pressure groups) --- Political participation --- Functional representation --- Political science --- Representative government and representation --- Lobbying --- Policy networks --- Political action committees --- Social control --- Persons
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