A Bibliographic Guide on Bangladeshis in UK (Compiled by Claire Alexander, Shahzad Firoz & Naaz Rashid) 1. Oral History of Bangladeshis in UK Adams, C. (1987) Across seven seas and thirteen rivers: life stories of pioneer Sylhetti settlers in Britain. London: Thap. Banerjee, A. (1997) From the banyan tree to the north Tees: a few scrappy pages of life, Orpington: distributed by Grantha Neer. British Broadcasting Corporation ( n.d.) Where I live: Gloucestershire Voices: Our Untold Stories, Asian Stories, The Asian Community‐ An Historical Perspective, www.bbc.co.uk/gloucestershire/untold_stories/asian/bangladeshi_community.shtml accessed 18 February 2010 Choudhury, Y. (1995) Sons of the soil, Birmingham: Sylhet Social History Group. Choudhury, Y. (1993) The roots and tales of Bangladeshi Settlers, Birmingham: Sylhet Social History Group. Eade, J, Ullah, A., Iqbal, J., Hey, M. (2006) Tales of three generations of Bengalis in Britain, Swadhinata/CRONEM Surrey and Roehampton Universities, www.swadhinata.org.uk/oralhistbook.htm accessed 18 February 2010 Hussain, U. (2003). Our untold stories: the Asian community in Gloucestershire. Gloucester: Gloucestershire County Library, Arts and Museum Service. 2. Bangladeshi Communities in the UK Ahmed, N. (2005) ‘Tower Hamlets: Insulation in Isolation’ in T. Abbas (ed.) Muslim Britain: Communities Under Pressure, London: Zed Books. Alam, F. (1988) Salience of homeland: Societal polarization within Bangladeshi population in Britain. Coventry: University of Warwick Centre for Research in Ethnic Relations. Asghar, M. A. (1996) Bangladeshi community organisations in East London, London: Bangla Heritage Ltd Banton, M. (1955) The Coloured Quarter, London: Cape. Begum, H. and Eade, J. (2005) ‘All Quiet on the Eastern Front? Bangladeshi reactions in Tower Hamlets’ in T. Abbas (ed.), Muslim Britain Communities under Pressure, London: Zed Press. Blakey, H., Pearce, J. and Chesters, G. (2006) Minorities within Minorities: Beneath the Surface of South Asian Participation, York: Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Brown, JM. (2006) Global South Asians: Introducing the Modern Diaspora, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1 © LSE 2010 Carey, S. and Shukur, A (1985) ‘A Profile of the Bangladeshi Community in East London’, New Community, XII, 3. Choudhury, Y. and Drake, P. (2001) From Bangladesh to Birmingham: The History of Bangladeshis in Birmingham, Birmingham: Birmingham City Council, Department of Leisure and Culture. Coward, H. G., J. R. Hinnells, et al. (2000) The South Asian Religious Diaspora in Britain, Canada, and the United States, Albany: State University of New York Press. Department of Communities and Local Government (2009) The Bangladeshi Muslim Community in England: Understanding Muslim Ethnic Communities www.communities.gov.uk/publications/communities/bangladeshimuslimcommunity Eade, J. (1989) The Politics of Community: The Bangladeshi Community in East London, Aldershot: Avebury. Eade, J. (1990) Nationalism and the Quest for Authenticity: The Bangladeshis in Tower Hamlets, New Community, 16:4. Eade, J., Momen, R. (1995) Bangladeshis in Britain: a national database, Centre for Bangladeshi Studies. Eade, J., Peach, C. and Vamplew, T. (1996) ‘Bangladeshis in Britain: The Encapsulated Community’, C. Peach (ed.), Ethnicity in the 1991 Census, London: HMSO, pp150‐160. Gardner, K. & Shukur, A. (1994) ‘I’m Bengali, I’m Asian, and I’m living here’. In R. Ballard (ed) Desh Pardesh: The South Asian Presence in Britai,. UK: C. Hurst & Co. Gardner, K. (2002) Age, Narrative, and Migration: The Life Course and Life Histories of Bengali Elders in London, Berg, Oxford. Gavron, K. (1997) Migrants to Citizens: Changing Orientations among the Bangladeshis of Tower Hamlets, London, unpublished PhD thesis, London School of Economics. House of Commons (1987) Bangladeshis in Britain. Report from the Home Affairs. Committee Session 1986‐ 1987, London: House of Commons. Hussain (2008) Muslims on the Map: A National Survey of Social Trends in Britain, I B Tauris & Co. Owen, D. (1994) ‘South Asian people in Great Britain: social and economic circumstances’, 1991 Census Statistical Paper No 7, Centre for Research in Ethnic Relations. Peach, C (ed) (2006) The Ethnic Minority Populations in Britain, London: HMSO. Srinivasan, S. (1995) The South Asian Petty Bourgeoisie in Britain: an Oxford case study, Aldershot: Avebury. Tinker, H. (1977) Under the Banyan Tree: Overseas emigrants from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, OUP. 3. Family Ara, S. and Chatterjee, D. (1995). Ghara theke ghare ‐ Home to home: reminiscences of Bangladeshi women in Sheffield, Sheffield: Sheffield City Libraries. 2 © LSE 2010 Basu, A. and Altinay, E. (2003) Family and work in minority ethnic businesses, York: Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Barn, R., Ladino, C. and Rogers, B. (2006) Parenting in Multi‐Racial Britain, York: Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Becher, H., F. Husain, et al. (2003) Supporting Minority Ethnic Families: South Asian Hindus and Muslims in Britain: Developments in Family Support, London: National Family and Parenting Institute. Beishon, S., Modood, T. & Virdee, S. (1994). Ethnic Minority Families, Policy Studies Institute. Chamba, R, Ahmad, W., Hirst, M., Lawton, D. and Beresford, B. (1999) On the edge: Minority ethnic families caring for a severely disabled child, Bristol: Policy Press. Eade, J. and Samad, Y. (2002) Community Perceptions of Forced Marriage, London: Foreign and Commonwealth Office, 114pp. Gardner, K. (2006) 'The Transnational work of kinship and caring: Bengali British marriages in historical perspective', Global Networks 6(4): 373‐387. Grant, L. (1997) ‘Moyenda Black Families Talking, Exploring Parenthood’, in J. Rex and B. Drury (eds) Ethnic Mobilisation in a Multi‐Cultural Europe, Aldershot: Avebury. Minhas, N. (2002) South Asian women's experience of domestic abuse: pillar of support, Sheffield: Survey and Statistical Research Centre, Sheffield Hallam University. Pollen, R. (2002) Bangladeshi Family Life in Bethnal Green, Unpublished PhD Thesis, University of London. Qureshi, T., Berridge, D. and Wenman, H. (2000) Where to turn? Family support for South Asian communities, York: Joseph Rowntree Foundation Shah, R. (1995) The Silent Minority: Children with Disabilities in Asian Families, London: National Children’s Bureau. 4. Gender Ahmed, N., Philipson, C. and Latimer, J. (2001) Transformation of Womanhood Through Migration, Working paper No 8, Centre for Social Gerontology, Keele University. Ahmed, N. (2008) Language, Gender and Citizenship: Obstacles in the Path to Learning English for Bangladeshi Women in London's East End Sociological Research Online, Volume 13, Issue 5, www.socresonline.org.uk/13/5/12.html. Aitkens, L. (2002) The Establishment of Free Legal Services for Bangladeshi Women in London,’ Carr Centre for Human Rights Policy, Harvard University. Alexander, C.E. (2004) ‘Re‐Imagining the Asian Gang: ethnicity, masculinity and youth after “the riots”’, Critical Social Policy No.24, Vol. 4 (pp526‐49). 3 © LSE 2010 Alexander, C.E. (2010) ‘Culturing Poverty? Ethnicity, Religion, Gender and Social Disadvantage amongst South Asian Communities in the UK’ in S. Chant (ed) International Handbook of Gender and Poverty, Edward Elgar. Aston, J., Hooker, H., Page, R. and Willison, R. (2007) Pakistani and Bangladeshi women's attitudes to work and family, Department for Work and Pensions, Report #458. Bagguley, P. and Hussain, Y. (2007) The role of higher education in providing opportunities for South Asian women, York: Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Begum, H (2008) Geographies of Inclusion/Exclusion: British Muslim Women in the East End of London Sociological Research Online, Volume 13, Issue 5, www.socresonline.org.uk/13/5/10.html (accessed 3 December 2008). Berthoud, R., (2001) Teenage births to ethnic minority women, Essex: Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of Essex. Botcherby, S. (2006) Moving on Up? Ethnic minority women and work: Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Black Caribbean women and employment survey: aspiration, experiences and choices, Manchester: Equal Opportunity Commission. Brah, A. and S. Shaw (1993) Working choices: South Asian young women and the labour market, Sheffield: Employment Department. Clarke, E. (2004) ‘Girls beyond Brick Lane’, Times Education Supplement, 7 May, p.7. www.tes.co.uk/article.aspx?storycode=394373 accessed 18 February 2010. Dale, A. (2000) Routes into education & employment for young Pakistani & Bangladeshi women in the UK. Manchester: Cathie Marsh Centre for Census and Survey Research. Dale, A. (2005) Labour Market Prospects for Pakistani and Bangladeshi Women, London: ESRC. Dale, A., Shaheen, N., Kalra, V. and Fieldhouse, E. (2000). `Routes into Employment for Young Pakistan and Bangladeshi Women in the UK’, Working Paper 10. Dale, A., Shaheen, N., Kalra, V. and Fieldhouse, E. (2000) ‘Labour Market Prospect for Pakistani and Bangladeshi Women, Working Paper 11. Desai, P. (1999) Spaces of Identity, Cultures of Conflict: The development of new British Asian masculinities, PhD Thesis, Goldsmith College, University of London. Dwyer, C (1999) Contradictions of community: questions of identity for young British Muslim women in Environment and Planning volume 31, pages 53‐68. Gardner K (1998) Identity, Age & Masculinity amongst Bengali Elders in East London, from 'A Question of Identity' ed. Anne J Kershen, Ashgate: Aldershot. Gupta, R (ed) (2003) From Homebreakers to Jailbreakers: Southall Black Sisters London: Zed Books. Kabeer, N. (2000) The power to choose: Bangladeshi
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