Ms Noel Mariam George

Ms Noel Mariam George

PhD Student

Department of International History

Languages
English, Hindi, Malayalam, Tamil
Key Expertise
Tamil and Tibetan refugees in India, Constituent Assembly Debates

About me

Before joining LSE, I did my Masters in International Relations at Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi and my M. Phil in Political Science at the University of Hyderabad. This training, along with several political changes in India, piqued my research interest in Indian citizenship and minorities. Later,  through my engagement with Tibetscapes in IIT Madras, I began to re-work minority histories outside the framework of national citizenship and through the lens of refugees and transregional migration.

Provisional Title: Refugees, Identity and the State: Post-partition histories of citizen becoming in India

My project places the ‘fuzzy’ figure of the – refugee – juggling international, regional, national and even sub-national regimes; as central to rethinking Indian citizenship. Through a comparative case study of the two largest post-partition refugee communities in India: Tamil ‘repatriates’ from Sri Lanka vis-à-vis Tibetan ‘foreign guests’, I examine the paradoxes in the changing definitions of Indian citizenship in the fifties, sixties and early seventies. 

 

Expertise Details

Tamil and Tibetan refugees in India; Constituent Assembly Debates on Citizenship/Federalism/Minorities; Himalayan Borderlands; Transregional migration

Publications

Conference Papers

  • (2021), Indigeneity, refugees and the state: Citizen-Refugee encounters along the Inner Line Permit, Reimagining Citizenship in South Asia, organised in collaboration with the University of York, Political Studies Association and the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), UK
  • (2021), Exceptional Laws and Legitimate Protest in the wake of the Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019 (un)Making the Nation: Religious (un)orthodoxies, Secular (un)certainties and Minorities Conference organized by the Centre de Sciences Humaines (CSH, Delhi) and Centre d’Études de l’Inde et de l’Asie du Sud  (CEIAS - EHESS, Paris). 
  • (2021), Statelessness in ‘Indigenous’ Borderlands, King’s India Institute Graduate Conference 2021: Understanding Contemporary South Asia Belonging, Functioning, Renegotiating
  • (2021), How do we ‘contemporise’ theory?: Ambedkar and the rights/religion synthesis  2021 Global Souths Conference, the University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Awards

  • London Arts and Humanities Partnership (LAHP) studentship