Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Refugee Appropriation of Inhospitable Urban Terrains: Learning from Jabar-Dakhal Colonies of Kolkata

Version 1 : Received: 22 September 2022 / Approved: 27 September 2022 / Online: 27 September 2022 (10:17:21 CEST)

How to cite: Pal, S.; Mitra, T. Refugee Appropriation of Inhospitable Urban Terrains: Learning from Jabar-Dakhal Colonies of Kolkata. Preprints 2022, 2022090420. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202209.0420.v1 Pal, S.; Mitra, T. Refugee Appropriation of Inhospitable Urban Terrains: Learning from Jabar-Dakhal Colonies of Kolkata. Preprints 2022, 2022090420. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202209.0420.v1

Abstract

Refugee subject position is an evolving topic of contention in the world today with increased migrant and refugee mobilities. Urban refugee spaces are often segregated in the form of colonies, ethnic villages, even ghettos, embodying institutionalised discourses of apathy and violence. These spaces only occupy the cracks and margins of the normative, formal city, as appropriations of inhospitable natural terrains and urban systems. The paper discusses how refugees compete for resources for survival as “bio-political” subjects and are often held summarily responsible for causing ecological stress in host environments. After the 1947 Partition of the Indian subcontinent, millions of Hindu Bengali refugees from East Pakistan flooded the Eastern Indian states of West Bengal, Assam and Tripura. Kolkata particularly drew millions for better livelihood prospects. Facing government apathy and local violence, East-Bengali refugees appropriated the urban fringes of Kolkata and claimed their right to urban space through the political act of squatting or Jabar-Dakhal. The intent of this paper is to investigate and map the spatial distribution of East-Bengali refugee squatters and elaborate on how they transformed the terrain and distributed resources through self-management tactics. This spatial history case-study attempts to uncover locational data from archival government records, existing academic literature and fieldwork to visualise where the 145 pre-1950 and the 123 post-1950 Jabar-Dakhal colonies were located in the Kolkata Metropolitan Area. This case of successful refugee self-settlement is qualitatively read in relation to the major areas of ecological stress in Kolkata. One of the UN sustainable development goals is to make cities and human settlements ‘inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable’. This paper hopes to encourage further studies of urban refugee self-settlement and local integration as a viable but complex socio-political-environmental process.

Keywords

Refugee Self-Settlement; Vulnerability; Post-Partition Kolkata; Jabar-Dakhal colony; Global South; Urban Ecology

Subject

Social Sciences, Geography, Planning and Development

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