Mizos in unexpected places: Northeast Indian travellers in the Raj and beyond, 1870s–1930s
The Indian Economic & Social History Review
Published online on February 03, 2026
Abstract
The Indian Economic and Social History Review, Volume 63, Issue 1, Page 5-53, January–March 2026.
In the late nineteenth century, British officials characterised tribal populations in Northeast India as rural, primitive and place-bound. State-sanctioned forms of migration into the region—of tea-plantation labourers, missionaries, scientists, ...
In the late nineteenth century, British officials characterised tribal populations in Northeast India as rural, primitive and place-bound. State-sanctioned forms of migration into the region—of tea-plantation labourers, missionaries, scientists, ...