Réfugié(e)s et Déplacé(e)s : Droit, Littérature et Migration
  • À propos
  • Actualités
  • Événements
  • Appels à contributions
  • Liens
  • Bibliographie
  • Partenaires
  • Contact

RÉFUGIÉ(E)S et DÉPLACÉ(E)s : droit, littérature et Migration

Projet de recherche

À lire dans The Economist : The Gujarati way : Going global

1/5/2016

0 Commentaires

 
AS BRITISH imperialists were trudging through African jungles to secure their newly conquered empire, some of the empire’s subjects were also roaming far and wide, under the cover of the Union flag. One was Allidina Visram, from Kutch, in what is now Gujarat state in India. He arrived penniless in Zanzibar (now part of Tanzania) on the east African coast in 1863, aged 12. He opened his first small shop 14 years later, and soon afterwards spotted his great opportunity. He opened a store at every large railway station along the 580 miles of railway track being laid down through Kenya to Uganda in the early 1900s, providing supplies to thousands of railway workers. He then opened more stores at Jinja on Lake Victoria.

Flush with success, Visram was later joined by another Gujarati, Vithaldas Haridas. He arrived in 1893 and was, if anything, even more adventurous than his mentor; he stomped 24 miles through the jungle to the small town of Iganga, where he started his own shop. More followed. These were the beginnings of some of the larger fortunes to be made in colonial Africa.

Gujaratis have never been put off by small matters such as distance or temperature. Nowadays they form one of the most prominent immigrant communities in Canada, and at the other end of the Earth they constitute a large proportion of the 155,000 immigrants of Indian origin in New Zealand. And at all points of the compass in between, from Fiji to Britain, from Myanmar to Uganda, they have built flourishing communities. It may even be true, as one Gujarati organisation has claimed, that the only countries where they have not settled are “those which are very small, undeveloped or are merely small islands without much business opportunity”.
​
Business, indeed, is the principal business of Gujaratis. Everywhere, they are to be found running businesses, from corner-shops to hotels, from tech start-ups to some of the world’s largest conglomerates. Like the Jews, Chinese, English, Scots and Lebanese, they have come to form an impressive global commercial network. In proportion to their numbers (about 63m live in India, and there could be anything from 3m to 9m abroad), they could even claim to be the most successful. They bestride entire sectors of the global economy and have been at least partly responsible for the rise and fall of nations. Their influence on some advanced economies is now substantial.

Pour lire l'article en entier : http://www.economist.com/news/christmas-specials/21683983-secrets-worlds-best-businesspeople-going-global
0 Commentaires



Laisser une réponse.

    La page Actualités est réalisée en collaboration avec la Chaire Oppenheimer en droit international public et avec François Crépeau (Université McGill).

    Archives

    Juillet 2017
    Mars 2017
    Septembre 2016
    Février 2016
    Janvier 2016
    Décembre 2015
    Novembre 2015
    Octobre 2015
    Janvier 2015

    Photo
    Photo

    Flux RSS

À propos
Actualités
Contact

Projet de recherche basé à Montréal et à Toronto se penchant sur l'écart entre les représentations des migrants et des réfugiés et leur réalité juridique.
  • À propos
  • Actualités
  • Événements
  • Appels à contributions
  • Liens
  • Bibliographie
  • Partenaires
  • Contact