01705nam a22001697a 4500999001900000008004100019100005100060245011800111260002700229300003300256520099300289650009901282773002701381906001301408942000701421952010701428 c521666d521666230222b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aCoelho, Joanna P. and Somayaji, Ganesha937392 aTibetan nationalism and cultural homogenisation in exile: An interpretation of institutions and the public sphere aSociological Bulletin  a 71(2), Apr, 2022: p.272-288 aThe 20th century was the century of refugees. Several wars and territorial aggrandisement policies of nascent nation–states were responsible for the exodus of persecuted people across the world. Tibet, an isolated Himalayan nation, lost its freedom and thousands of Tibetans along with their leader, the 14th Dalai Lama, fled Tibet and took refuge in India after a long walk in the month of March 1959. The exodus has been an example not only of forced de-territorialisation of a people but also of their government. When the traditional Tibetan polity consisting of diverse cultural and regional elements came in contact with the modern democratic political institutions of the host nation–state, attempts are being made to consolidate their diverse identities through homogenising nationalistic programmes. Such attempts are fraught with multiple responses in the institutions and the public sphere among the Tibetan refugees which the article attempts to interpret. – Reproduced  aNationalism, De-territorialisation, Cultural homogenization, Ethinie, Cultural nation. 935825 aSociological Bulletin  aREFUGEES cAR 00102ddc40709396137aIIPAbIIPAd2023-02-22h71(2), Apr, 2022: p.272-288pAR128048r2023-02-22yAR