Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sara Shneiderman is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sara Shneiderman.


Journal of Global History | 2010

Are the Central Himalayas in Zomia? Some scholarly and political considerations across time and space

Sara Shneiderman

This article examines the applicability of the Zomia concept for social scientific studies of the Himalayan region, with a focus on the Central Himalayas. While for both empirical and political reasons the term Zomia itself may not be entirely appropriate to the Himalayan Massif, the analytical imperatives that underlie James C. Scott’s usage of it – particularly the emphasis on the ethnic, national, and religious fluidity of highland communities, and their intentionality and agency vis-A -vis the states with which they engage – can be of great utility to those working in the Himalayan region. Through a historical review of the area tradition of ‘Himalayan studies’, as well as an ethnographic sketch of the cross-border Thangmi community of Nepal, India, and China’s Tibetan Autonomous Region, I argue that the potential power of the Zomia concept hinges on its ability to provide an additional framework for analysis (and perhaps political struggle), that adds value to, rather than replaces, ‘traditional’ nation-state rubrics.


Modern Asian Studies | 2015

Restructuring States, Restructuring Ethnicity: Looking Across Disciplinary Boundaries at Federal Futures in India and Nepal

Sara Shneiderman; Louise Tillin

India and federalizing Nepal represent distinct types of federal polity: their origins lie not in the unification of previously autonomous states, but in the devolution of power by a previously centralized state. The boundaries of their constituent sub-units are therefore open to debate, and settling their contours is central to the project of state-building. Written by a political scientist and an anthropologist, this paper presents a comparative exploration of the reciprocal relationship between state structuring and ethnicity in India and Nepal, with a focus on the effects of territorial versus non-territorial forms of recognition. It pushes against recent tendencies within South Asian Studies to see ethnic identity as called into being solely by state practices or ‘governmentality’ on the one hand, or as a newly commoditized form of belonging produced through neoliberal reforms on the other. Instead it argues that ethnicity must be understood as a multivalent concept that is at once embedded in specific histories of state and sub-state formation, and generative of them. Comparative in scope yet driven by qualitative data collected over years of engagement across the region, the paper charts a middle way between detailed ethnographic studies and large-scale comparative endeavours.


Modern Asian Studies | 2016

Nepal's Ongoing Political Transformation: A review of post-2006 literature on conflict, the state, identities, and environments *

Sara Shneiderman; Luke Wagner; Jacob Rinck; Amy Johnson; Austin Lord

This review article provides a reading guide to scholarly literature published in English about Nepals political transformation since 2006, when Nepals decade-long civil conflict between Maoist and state forces formally ended. The article is structured around four major themes: (1) the Maoist insurgency or ‘Peoples War’; (2) state formation and transformation; (3) identity politics; and (4) territorial and ecological consciousness. We also address the dynamics of migration and mobility in relation to all of these themes. Ultimately, we consider the Maoist movement as one element in a much broader process of transformation, which with the benefit of hindsight we can situate in relation to several other contemporaneous trajectories, including: democratization, identity-based mobilization, constitutional nationalism, international intervention, territorial restructuring, migration and the remittance economy, and the emergence of ecological and other new forms of consciousness. By looking across the disciplines at scholarship published on all of these themes, we aim to connect the dots between long-standing disciplinary traditions of scholarship on Nepal and more recent approaches to understanding the countrys transformation.


Archive | 2004

Women and the Maobadi: ideology and agency in Nepal’s Maoist movement

Judith Pettigrew; Sara Shneiderman


Political Geography | 2013

Himalayan border citizens: Sovereignty and mobility in the Nepal–Tibetan Autonomous Region (TAR) of China border zone

Sara Shneiderman


Dialectical Anthropology | 2009

The formation of political consciousness in rural Nepal

Sara Shneiderman


Anthropology Today | 2004

Relationships, complicity and representation conducting research in Nepal during the Maoist insurgency

Judith Pettigrew; Sara Shneiderman; Ian Harper


Focaal | 2013

The practices, policies, and politics of transforming inequality in South Asia: Ethnographies of affirmative action

Alpa Shah; Sara Shneiderman


Archive | 2008

reservations, Federalism and the politics of recognition in Nepal

Townsend Middleton; Sara Shneiderman


Asian Survey | 2012

Nepal and Bhutan in 2011: Cautious Optimism

Sara Shneiderman; Mark Turin

Collaboration


Dive into the Sara Shneiderman's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark Turin

University of Cambridge

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ian Harper

Center for Global Development

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge