2019
DOI: 10.1093/rsq/hdz007
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Tibetan Refugee Journeys: Representations of Escape and Transit

Abstract: This ethnographic study contributes to the scholarly call to increase studies on refugee journeys. It explores Tibetan journeys via Nepal to India and provides a novel case study about the Tibetan refugees who commonly cross the Himalayas at least partly on foot without passports and head to the Tibetan Reception Centre in Kathmandu, Nepal, from where they are assisted to India. Conceptually, the study argues that combining the studies of refugee journeys and transit migration increases understanding of the (T… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The pressure to keep the refugee identity alive and to evolve themselves in sense of their usefulness as a community makes the refugee communities more fragile to a situation like COVID (Junior et al, 2020). The fear of uncertainties due to lockdown and other travel restrictions, the worry of their families left behind in Tibet as well as in various refugee settlements spread across India and other parts of the world increases anxiety, stress and depression among the young people living in the exile (Frilund, 2019). The practice of the physical distancing had socially and culturally separated them from their friends and relatives causing loneliness and emotional detachment (Matthews et al, 2016).…”
Section: Discussion and Analysis: Media Usage And Wellbeingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The pressure to keep the refugee identity alive and to evolve themselves in sense of their usefulness as a community makes the refugee communities more fragile to a situation like COVID (Junior et al, 2020). The fear of uncertainties due to lockdown and other travel restrictions, the worry of their families left behind in Tibet as well as in various refugee settlements spread across India and other parts of the world increases anxiety, stress and depression among the young people living in the exile (Frilund, 2019). The practice of the physical distancing had socially and culturally separated them from their friends and relatives causing loneliness and emotional detachment (Matthews et al, 2016).…”
Section: Discussion and Analysis: Media Usage And Wellbeingmentioning
confidence: 99%