Suchergebnisse
Filter
4 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Unread History of an Erstwhile Manual Scavenging Community: From Being an Urban to a Marginalized
In: Journal of social inclusion studies, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 115-133
ISSN: 2516-6123
The article is based on an ethnography of community who had been historically manual scavengers in the Bengal Province later even in the state of Bihar and continued until the parliament enacted a law prohibiting this practice. The history of manual scavengers are well written in the context of their rehabilitation and occupational engagements but one community that merely got any attention was Hadi jati (caste), who have been doing the menial job for generations in the Jharkhand region. Off beat, they are referred as Safai Karamchari on the roll of municipal administration for technical purposes but the people living in the town popularly refer them as Hadis. This article is an attempt to bring the historical existence of Hadis in the region who served in the kingdom, royal and feudal families and later, in the independent India, continues in the contemporary urban settlements. An inquiry into the historicity of Hadis brings a sociological insights to a neglected and marginalized section of the urban India and shows the tyranny and continuation of caste-based traditional in a town that could see the earliest public sector steel conglomerate established in 1968. In view of this background, there is a humble attempt to examine the process of marginalization of Hadis in the historical and contemporary social structure.
Sanitation, health and workers involved in traditional occupations: Nuances and concerns in clean India mission
The occupational structure of people involved in various traditional occupations and works in India has been a vital point of discussion for decades and centuries. The paper is out of the study on the clean India mission and how people involved in various jobs that remained their traditional occupation even after significant policy initiatives by the government of India across the country. Is caste more powerful by not allowing people to escape their caste-based occupations or their inability to rehabilitate to other new works in cities? Hope to reduce the human hands from menial jobs is one objective of the clean India Mission that demands a macro study to understand the current sociological relevance of the policy.
BASE