The protracted exodus of migrants from Hyderabad in the time of COVID-19

The immediate aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic in India saw a mass movement of people, mainly from the cities and large towns to the villages. The lockdown announced by the government abruptly suspended the instrumental value of the city for the millions of migrant workers inhabiting these. As the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of social and economic development 2021-09, Vol.23 (Suppl 2), p.398-413
Hauptverfasser: Sapra, Ipsita, Nayak, Bibhu P.
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Nayak, Bibhu P.
description The immediate aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic in India saw a mass movement of people, mainly from the cities and large towns to the villages. The lockdown announced by the government abruptly suspended the instrumental value of the city for the millions of migrant workers inhabiting these. As the lockdown period extended, with very uncertain means of inter-state public transport, desperate migrant workers took to the streets in large numbers undertaking arduous and often dangerous journeys to their places of origin. The media highlighting the plight of the migrants elicited responses from different sections. This paper is an exploration of the role of the state and its institutions, civil society and the judiciary in responding to the migrant crisis in the city of Hyderabad, a hub of migrant workers. Closely following the silences and pronouncements of the institutions and analysing the role of each of these over the different phases of the migrant crisis, the paper asserts the need for a closer scrutiny of the universal role of the state response during the migrant crisis.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s40847-021-00155-z
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Soc. Econ. Dev</addtitle><addtitle>J Soc Econ Dev</addtitle><description>The immediate aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic in India saw a mass movement of people, mainly from the cities and large towns to the villages. The lockdown announced by the government abruptly suspended the instrumental value of the city for the millions of migrant workers inhabiting these. As the lockdown period extended, with very uncertain means of inter-state public transport, desperate migrant workers took to the streets in large numbers undertaking arduous and often dangerous journeys to their places of origin. The media highlighting the plight of the migrants elicited responses from different sections. This paper is an exploration of the role of the state and its institutions, civil society and the judiciary in responding to the migrant crisis in the city of Hyderabad, a hub of migrant workers. 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subjects Cities
Civil society
COVID-19
Crises
Economic Growth
Economic Policy
Economic Sociology
Economics
Economics and Finance
Judiciary
Migrant workers
Migrants
Organizational Studies
Pandemics
Public health
Public transportation
Research Note
Roads & highways
Social Policy
State government
State role
title The protracted exodus of migrants from Hyderabad in the time of COVID-19
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