scholarly journals Treading Poetic Borders in Southwest China and Northeast India

Prism ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 431-455
Author(s):  
Mark Bender

Abstract Since the 1980s ethnic minority poets writing in the borderlands of Southwest China and Northeast India emerged on the world stage from within currents of dramatic environmental, political, economic, and demographic change, cresting in momentum by the 2010s. Within these borderlands of the Eastern Himalayas, burgeoning populations, propelled by sociopolitical agendas, ecological disasters, and other factors, stress borders and resources in areas increasingly open to exploitation by regional and international corporations and governments. Minority poetic voices throughout the region often respond to these radical environmental and cultural shifts with imagery of the environment delivered in very personal terms. Poets not only assume individual voices but also take on metonymic personae, speaking for concerns of their own groups via print, live performance, and digital formats. Mutual awareness of these cross-border poetries is slowly emerging, revealing that themes of poems from within these border areas are often parallel, with common concerns, though local characteristics. Cultural shifts and accommodation to new or revised modes of living and reactions to increasingly severe challenges to the local and regional environments surface repeatedly in the poetry. Some poems tread boundaries between the human and nonhuman inhabitants of these border areas, speaking for—or as—plants, animals, and geographic features.

2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 68-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Collier

AbstractThis paper reframes debates about gender equality in the legal professions by interrogating the practices of men and interconnections between fatherhood, gender and parenting within the specific context of large corporate law firms. Drawing on interviews with male lawyer-fathers, it argues that closer exploration of fatherhood reveals much about the gendered dynamics of identity formation as a legal professional in this sector. A set of ideas about fatherhood, the paper suggests, shape how men's work can define a distinctive gender identity as a ‘family man’ and good lawyer. Political-economic and cultural shifts around fatherhood, however, are reconfiguring and adapting gender relations in law in a number of contradictory ways with implications for understanding the place of men in relation to gender-equality agendas. Ideas about fatherhood, family, work and career, I argue, are mobilised and enmeshed within the reproduction of distinctive law-firm cultures and gendered ideas of organisational commitment. What, in short, might it mean to bebotha ‘good father’ and a ‘good lawyer’?


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4763 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
A.P. RANJITH ◽  
SERGEY A. BELOKOBYLSKIJ ◽  
DHARMA RAJAN PRIYADARSANAN ◽  
PUNNATH ASWAJ ◽  
M. NASSER

Worldwide species of the genus Spathius Nees with reduced wings are reviewed. A new micropterous species, Spathius himalayicus Ranjith et Belokobylskij, sp. nov. from Northeast India is described and illustrated. A key to all known brachypterous, micropterous and apterous Spathius species is provided. Images of seven species not previously imaged, viz., S. apotanus Wilkinson, 1931, S. canariensis Hedqvist, 1976, S. critolaus Nixon, 1939, S. cursor Wilkinson, 1931, S. maderi Fahringer, 1930, S. pedestris Wesmael, 1838 and S. turneri Nixon, 1943, are provided. 


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-121
Author(s):  
Purna Cita Nugraha

”The COVID-19 pandemic creates political, economic, social, and cultural shifts that change the global landscape. Legal infrastructure should be prepared and well-adapted to respond to it, to further anticipate these massive shifts. The changing in international community behavior requires some adjustment and fine-tuning in the legal department. In this regard, the need of the hour is to ensure that legal infrastructure is well-adapted to the changing global landscape, and in turn, will support global efforts to stop the pandemic and prevent economic collapse. How well countries navigate through these challenges or capture opportunities and strengthen international cooperation will eventually determine success in defeating this common enemy. Thus, the global community must stand under one same norm: cooperation. This research is considered as a legal research focusing on examining existing rules and regulations, as well as a legal futuristic research in nature in trying to find which legal instrument should be developed in the future.”


Author(s):  
Muhammad Haris Zulkarnain ◽  
Kholis Roisah

Indonesia is the largest archipelagic country that has several border areas, one of which is Malaysia. The border region has a strategic role as the main gateway of a country and representation of political, economic, socio-cultural, defense and security aspects. Social and economic problems that are often faced in the border areas of Indonesia-Malaysia. The research aims to analyze defense management policies and the impact of its policies in the Indonesia-Malaysia border region. The research method used is normative juridical and the data used is secondary data with qualitative analysis. The results of this study that: First, the last decade since the reform era, the state is seriously trying to strengthen defense as one of the important elements to safeguard the sovereignty of the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia. The efforts are made through various methods such as formal, institutional and practical legal. The approach used in the country's defense and security concept in the border region is through Sishankamrata. Second,  Second, the defense policies to safeguard national sovereignty at the border in its implementation have a number of obstacles, as limited infrastructure, length of state borders, limited security personnel, and overlapping authority between institutions and ministries in managing border areas. Indonesia merupakan negara kepulauan terbesar yang memiliki beberapa  daerah perbatasan, salah satunya dengan Malaysia. Wilayah perbatasan memiliki peran strategis sebagai pintu gerbang utama dari suatu negara dan representasi dari aspek politik, ekonomi, sosial budaya, pertahanan dan keamanan. Permasalahan sosial dan ekonomi yang sering dihadapi di daerah perbatasan Indonesia dan Malaysia. Penelitian bertujuan untuk menganalisis kebijakan pengelolaan pertahanan dan dampak kebijakannya di wilayah perbatasan Indonesia-Malaysia. Metode penelitian yang digunakan adalah yuridis normatif dan data yang digunakan adalah data sekunder dengan analisa kualitatif. Hasil penelitian ini bahwa: Pertama, dekade terakhir sejak era reformasi,  negara serius berupaya memperkuat pertahanan sebagai salah satu elemen penting untuk menjaga kedaulatan Negara Kesatuan Republik Indonesia. Upaya yang dilakukan melalui beragam cara seperti legal formal, institusional, dan praktis. Pendekatan yang digunakan dalam konsep pertahanan keamanan negara di wilayah perbatasan adalah melalui Sishankamrata. Kedua, kebijakan pertahanan untuk menjaga kedaulatan negara di perbatasan dalam implementasinya tidak lepas dari sejumlah kendala yang dihadapi, yaitu keterbatasan sarana prasarana, panjangnya batas wilayah negara, keterbatasan personil aparat keamanan, dan tumpang tindih kewenangan antar lembaga dan kementerian dalam mengelola wilayah perbatasan.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (10) ◽  
pp. e0240733
Author(s):  
Jiangrong Li ◽  
Wenzhou Yu ◽  
Zhixian Zhao ◽  
Lei Zhang ◽  
Qiongyu Gong

ZooKeys ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 864 ◽  
pp. 147-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quan Li ◽  
Xue-You Li ◽  
Stephen M. Jackson ◽  
Fei Li ◽  
Ming Jiang ◽  
...  

The flying squirrels of the tribe Pteromyini (Family Sciuridae) currently include 15 genera of which the genus Biswamoyopterus comprises two recognized species, B.biswasi Saha, 1981 and B.laoensis Sanamxay et al., 2013. These two species were each described from only one specimen that are separated from each other by 1,250 kilometres in southern Asia, where they occur in northeast India and central Lao PDR respectively. In 2017 and 2018, two specimens of Biswamoyopterus were discovered from Mount Gaoligong, west Yunnan province, southwest China (between the type locality of the two recognized species). This study aimed to evaluate the taxonomic status of these two newly acquired specimens of Biswamoyopterus by comparing their morphology with the two described species of the genus. The results of this study showed that the specimens from Yunnan province (China) differed from both B.laoensis and B.biswasi in both pelage colour and craniology, and should be recognised as a distinct species, B.gaoligongensissp. nov., which is formally described here. This study contributes to the understanding of the flying squirrels of southern Asia and identifies an additional species that appears to be endemic to southwest China; however, more research is required to provide details of its ecology, distribution, and conservation status.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Khonamai Sewa Nakhuru ◽  
Adani Lokho ◽  
Mridusmita Barman ◽  
Jayshree Das ◽  
Sanjai Kumar Dwivedi

Ethnobotany deals with the usage of plants by different ethnic communities throughout the world for various purposes such as food, shelter, clothing, medicine, tools etc. North East India region is a part of eastern Himalayas with rich plant diversity. About 250 ethnic tribes inhabit the region with diverse cultures and traditional practices. Most of the ethnic communities in the region depend on natural resources directly for their daily needs and wild edible plants are one of them as they live in the vicinity of forests. This study deals with 20 wild edible plants, traditionally used by indigenous people. 18 genera belonging to 15 families with 3 species represented by family Lamiaceae. Different parts of plants are traditionally consumed as vegetables, of which 19 species represented with leaves as edible part. Berry, petiole and rootstalk constitute other edible parts. Most of the plant species were found to be rich source of vitamin C. Vitamin C content ranges from 6.24±0.34 mg to 79.91±1.52 mg/100 g fresh weight and maximum was recorded in Alocasia indica (leaves) and Oxalis corniculata and the least in Tamarindus indica. The findings indicated that these ethno-botanicals can be grown in homestead as sources of vitamin C in regular diet.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tianlong Cai ◽  
Qing Quan ◽  
Gang Song ◽  
Yongjie Wu ◽  
Zhixin Wen ◽  
...  

Abstract Strong correlations between species diversity and climate have been widely observed, but the mechanism underlying this relationship is unclear. Here, we explored the causes of the richness–climate relationships among passerine birds in China by integrating tropical conservatism and diversification rate hypotheses using path models. We found that assemblages with higher species richness southwest of the Salween–Mekong–Pearl River Divide are phylogenetically overdispersed and have shorter mean root distances (MRDs), while species-rich regions northeast of this divide (e.g., north Hengduan Mountains–south Qinling Mountains) are phylogenetically clustered and have longer MRDs. The results of the path analyses showed that the direct effect of climatic factors on species richness was stronger than their indirect effects on species richness via phylogenetic relatedness, indicating that neither tropical conservatism nor diversification rate hypotheses can well explain the richness–climate relationship among passerines in China. However, when path analyses were conducted within subregions separately, we found that the tropical conservatism hypothesis was well supported in the southwestern Salween–Mekong–Pearl River Divide, while the diversification rate hypothesis could explain the richness–climate relationship well in the northeastern divide. We conclude that the diversity patterns of passerines in different subregions of the Eastern Himalayas-Mountains of Southwest China may be shaped by different evolutionary processes related to geological and climatic histories, which explains why the tropical conservatism or diversification rate hypothesis alone cannot fully explain the richness–climate relationships.


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