[CSH-CPR Urban Workshop #124 – ONLINE] Confining the margins, marginalising the confined (R. de Bercegol, A.Goreau-Ponceaud)

[CSH-CPR Urban Workshop #124 – ONLINE] Confining the margins, marginalising the confined (R. de Bercegol, A.Goreau-Ponceaud)


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The Centre de Sciences Humaines (CSH) & Centre for Policy Research (CPR)

are pleased to invite you to an Urban Workshop (n°124):

Rémi de Bercegol (CSH / CNRS) & Anthony Goreau-Ponceaud (IFP / CNRS)

Confining the margins, marginalising the confined:
The Distress of Neglected Lockdown Victims in Indian Cities

Image source: Anthony Goreau-Ponceaud

Tuesday 26 May 2020, From 3:45 pm onwards

The session will be online via Zoom. To register, kindly fill this form *

Abstract:

The sudden implementation of the national lockdown caused considerable panic among underprivileged populations. Dramatic images of migrant workers desperately fleeing the big cities to return home have circulated around the world. But not all of them left, far from it, and many had no choice other than to remain confined to the margins. How has the lockdown worked as a health protection for populations that are already experiencing a first-of-its-kind of containment, living as they are on the margins of urban worlds?

This presentation will compare two situations in which margin containment processes are expressed to varying degrees — that of a slum in the middle of  R.K. Puram district in the centre of South Delhi, and that of a Sri Lankan refugee camp located approximately 20km from Pondicherry; two spaces that are distant from each other but whose characteristics and, above all, situations in the face of the pandemic, tend to bring closer together.

Through various testimonies, we will present the very harsh conditions of confinement of poor populations, whose marginality was further reinforced by the crisis. In addition to the fact that the protective measures against the virus are impossible to respect there, due to congestion and insufficient access to water, the brutal disappearance of their everyday livelihoods strongly aggravates the low standard of living of the inhabitants.

By revealing the paradoxical effects of a confinement that is not adapted to poor neighbourhoods, this presentation argues for a better consideration of the latter during and after the pandemic crisis.

Speakers:

Rémi de Bercegol is an urban geographer at Centre National de la Recherche Française (CNRS) and Centre de Sciences Humaines (UMIFRE  20 CNRS MEAE).  His research focuses on socio-technical transition of basic urban services (water, sanitation, waste, energy) in India as well as in East Africa and South East Asia. On top of publishing his work, Dr. Rémi de Bercegol has been also involved in exhibitions and film making to disseminate his research work.

Anthony Goreau-Ponceaud is Associate Professor in Geography at the University of Bordeaux and a research fellow at the French Institute of Pondicherry (UMIFRE  21 CNRS MEAE) from 2018-2020. His PhD research focused on Sri Lankan Tamil migration and diaspora in France. Since then, he has published widely on the Sri Lankan Tamil issue and the Sri Lankan Tamil refugees in India. He is now working on the interactions between domestic tourism and urban changes in Pondicherry.

More info:

telle{dot}olivier{at}gmail{dot}com

remi{dot]debercegol{at}gmail{dot}com

mukta{at]cprindia{dot}org

marie-helene{dot}zerah{at}ird{dot}fr

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