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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | King's College London |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Sep 01, 2025 |
| End Date | Aug 31, 2030 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101164500 |
The South Asian diaspora in the UK and USA is estimated to be 10 million strong.
The dominant images that represent this diverse community are those of high-skilled professionals in IT, medicine, and engineering, with a rising profile of the model minority diasporic South Asian politician.
These images obscure a dark underbelly of the global circulation of South Asian labour facilitated by the centuries old caste system.
While the persistence of caste in shaping labour relations within the subcontinent is well-documented, the continued relevance of caste in diasporic labour relations is starkly understudied.
In the past decade, a growing number of instances have come to light wherein the legal regimes of host countries have come into conflict with caste(d) labour practices, thereby bringing locally situated questions of caste oppression into direct conversation with globally legible rights-based frameworks.
This research project will investigate the caste dimensions of diasporic labour migrations in three sectors construction, domestic work, and commercial kitchens - across the UK and USA, and assess their impact on socio-spatial mobility at home.
Through this, the project will map the intersections of law, labour, and mobilities to construct a critical global geography of caste.RQs: How does caste shape the global circulation of South Asian labour? How do these labour relations relate to legal regimes in the host countries? How do caste(d) labour migrations relate to socio-spatial mobility at home?
The objectives of the project are:To document the role of caste in diasporic labour practicesTo investigate how these labour practices relate to extant legal protections in host countriesTo explore how social mobility is facilitated and/or impeded by these caste(d) labour practicesTo archive the diasporic life of caste and disrupt dominant narratives of the SA diasporaTo compile a manifesto for anti-caste jurisprudence and fair labour practices
King's College London
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