@article{249d4211f7164749b12ecd00e53c7c57,
title = "The 1961 Sikkim subject regulation and {\textquoteleft}indirect rule{\textquoteright} in Sikkim: ancestrality, land property and unequal citizenship",
abstract = "This paper discusses the principles behind the 1961 Sikkim Subject Regulation, the first citizenship law framed in Sikkim. It explores the historical construction of the entanglement of {\textquoteleft}ancestrality{\textquoteright} with land property and political membership, which is central to the issue of citizenship in Sikkim today. It shows how categories of citizens were formed in colonial and post-colonial time, in particular the division between {\textquoteleft}natives{\textquoteright} (Bhutia and Lepcha) and {\textquoteleft}settlers{\textquoteright} (Sikkimese Nepalis). With the revision of the Regulation in 1962, land property and {\textquoteleft}ancestral{\textquoteright} settlement became central criteria to acquire Sikkim Subject status. The paper shows how land property have become a materialisation of belonging to the place, and highlights the inequalities that the dependency created between insidedness and land property engendered. It also argues that a sole analysis of these inequalities in terms of ethnicity is insufficient by showing that other factors have taken part in forming them. ",
keywords = "Land property, Ethnicity, Sikkim, citizenship, ethnicity, indigeneity, land property",
author = "M{\'e}lanie Vandenhelsken",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2020 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1080/14631369.2020.1801338",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "254--271",
journal = "Asian Ethnicity",
issn = "1463-1369",
number = "2",
}