british bangladeshi
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2022 ◽  
pp. 003802292110631
Author(s):  
Abdul Aziz

This study explores historic class-based obstacles in the dispensation of secular pedagogy in the Bengal region with the objective of presenting a better understating of the present pedagogical positioning of the British Bangladeshi diaspora of Tower Hamlets. This study charts the visitation of symbolic violence in the historical development of pedagogy under colonial rule and continues into the East Pakistan period. Through the application of Pierre Bourdieu’s primary thinking tools the discussion asserts Muslim Bengalis were educationally marginalised by both colonialists and local elites in the realisation of human capital consumption.


Languages ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 121
Author(s):  
Francesco Goglia

This article discussed language use and language maintenance among the Italian-Bangladeshi community in London, considering in particular the effects of onward migration on the reorganisation of their linguistic repertoire. Drawing on focus groups and interviews with the second-generation members of Italian-Bangladeshi families, initial findings revealed that Italian is maintained through communication with same-age friends and siblings, with older siblings acting as the main agents of language maintenance. English is considered the most important language and, together with a British education, functions as a pull-factor for onward migration to improve the second generation’s future prospects. Bengali, on the other hand, is spoken by parents among themselves and children are not always fluent in the language. Bengali also represents a marker of identity for the Italian-Bangladeshi community as opposed to the larger Sylheti-speaking British-Bangladeshi community.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-47
Author(s):  
Francesco Della Puppa

Based on a multi-sited ethnography in Italy and the United Kingdom, this contribution focuses on the onward migration of Italian-Bangladeshis to London, that is, Bangladeshi migrants who acquired EU citizenship in Italy and then moved to the British Capital. After the presentation of the reasons for this onward migration, the article will analyse the representation, constructed by the Italian-Bangladeshis interviewed in London, of the relationships between them (coming from different districts of Bangladesh) and the members of the “historical” British Bangladeshi community, in London since generations (originating primarily from the Bangladeshi district of Sylhet). Specifically, it will focus on the on mistrust – sometimes a fully-fledged hostility – between the two communities as it was narrated by the Italian-Bangladeshi respondents, framing it as a dichotomy between British citizens and (Southern) European citizens; as a wider dichotomy between residents of Bangladeshi origin in London, but originating from different regional contexts in Bangladesh; as an effect of the social stratification of the “Bangladeshi Diaspora” in the world.


SAGE Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 215824402110030
Author(s):  
Abdul Aziz

The discussion paper is presented to be read in three simultaneous and different modalities. At one level, it is first a study of a repeat study from 1957 and 2006, examining the disconnection between history and methodology in locating the British Bangladeshi communities’ past social story in today’s shifting landscape. At another level it intervenes; asserting globalization, as spatial-temporal phenomena under a neo liberal consensus, has produced an uneven distribution of common diversity. Permeating into every facet of social life, the construct of community and constructions of belongingness, finally apprehending the pitfalls of research without direct engagement of subjects.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas Smith ◽  
Lynnette Leidy Sievert ◽  
Shanthi Muttukrishna ◽  
Khurshida Begum ◽  
Lorna Murphy ◽  
...  

AbstractBackground and objectivesLow levels of vitamin D among dark-skinned migrants to northern latitudes and increased risks for associated pathologies illustrate an evolutionary mismatch between an environment of high ultraviolet (UV) radiation to which such migrants are adapted and the low-UV environment to which they migrate. Recently, low levels of vitamin D have also been associated with higher risks for contracting COVID-19. South Asians in the UK have higher risk for low vitamin D levels. In this study, we assessed vitamin D status of British-Bangladeshi migrants compared to white British residents and Bangladeshis still living in Bangladesh (‘sedentees’).MethodologyThe cross-sectional study compared vitamin D levels among 149 women aged 35-59, comprising British-Bangladeshi migrants (n=50), white UK neighbors (n=54) and Bangladeshi sedentees (n=45). Analyses comprised multivariate models to assess serum levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D), and associations with anthropometric, lifestyle, health and migration factors.ResultsVitamin D levels in Bangladeshi migrants were very low: mean 25(OH)D = 32.2nmol/L ± 13.0, with 29% of migrants classified as deficient (<25nmol/L) and 94% deficient or insufficient (≤50nmol/L). Mean levels of vitamin D were significantly lower among British-Bangladeshis compared to Bangladeshi sedentees (50.9nmol/L ± 13.3), presumably due to less exposure to sunlight following migration; levels were also lower than in white British women (55.3nmol/L ± 20.9). Lower levels of vitamin D were associated with increased body mass index and low iron status.Conclusions and implicationsRecommending supplements to Bangladeshi migrants could prevent potentially adverse health outcomes associated with vitamin D deficiency.Lay summaryVitamin D deficiency is one example of mismatch between an evolved trait and novel environments. Here we compare vitamin D status of dark-skinned British-Bangladeshi migrants in the UK to Bangladeshis in Bangladesh and white British individuals. Migrants had lower levels of vitamin D and are at risk for associated pathologies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reinhard Stöger ◽  
Minseung Choi ◽  
Gregory Leeman ◽  
Richard D. Emes ◽  
Khurshida Begum ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundMigration from one environment to another often causes marked changes in developmental conditions. Here we compare epigenetic ageing and stability of the epigenetic maintenance system among British-Bangladeshi women who grew up in Bangladesh (adult migrants), where there are higher pathogen loads and poorer health care, to second-generation Bangladeshis who grew up in the UK. In our previous studies of these migrants, those who spent their childhoods in Bangladesh also had lower levels of reproductive hormones and a shorter reproductive lifespan compared to those who grew up in the UK, suggesting life history trade-offs during development. In the present study, we hypothesised that women who grew up in Bangladesh would have i) an older epigenetic/biological age compared to the women with a childhood in the UK and ii) that differences in the pace of epigenetic ageing might also be reflected by altered stability of DNA methylation marks.ResultsIllumina EPIC array methylation data from buccal tissue was used to establish epigenetic age estimates from 15 adult migrants and 11 second-generation migrants, aged 18-35 years. Using residuals from linear regression of DNA methylation-based biological age (DNAm age) on the chronological age, the results showed significant differences (p=0.016) in epigenetic age estimates: women whose childhood was in Bangladesh are on average 6.02 (± 2.34) years older, than those who grew up in London. We further investigated the efficiency of the epigenetic maintenance system which purportedly is reflected by epigenetic clocks. Methylation states of CpGs at the LHCGR/LHR locus, which contributes to Horvath’s multi tissue epigenetic clock were evaluated. Based on the Ratio of Concordance Preference (RCP) approach that uses double-stranded methylation data, we find that maintenance of epigenetic information is more stable in women who grew up in Bangladesh.ConclusionsThe work supports earlier findings that adverse childhood environments lead to phenotypic life history trade-offs. The data indicate that childhood environments can induce subtle changes to the epigenetic maintenance system that are detectable long after exposure occurred. The implication of such a finding warrants further investigation as it implies that a less flexible epigenetic memory system established early in life could reduce the capacity to respond to different environmental conditions in adult life.


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