European Bulletin of Himalayan Research
The European
Bulletin of Himalayan Research (EBHR) was founded by the late Richard
Burghart in 1991 and has appeared twice yearly ever since. It is edited on a
rotating basis between France (CNRS),
Germany (South Asia
Institute) and the United Kingdom (SOAS).
From 2019 to 2023, the EBHR is hosted at the Centre for Himalayan Studies at CNRS in France.
Co-editors:
Tristan Bruslé (CNRS), Stéphane Gros (CNRS), Philippe Ramirez (CNRS)
Associate editor:
Arik Moran (University of Haifa), Book reviews editor
Copyeditor:
Bernadette Sellers (CNRS)
The EBHR publishes in English with the aim of reaching a large audience around the world. The subjects covered by the journal range from geography and economics to anthropology, sociology, philology, history, art history, archaeology, and history of religions. This multidisciplinarity has so far defined the journal in its mission to be a publication outlet for Himalayan studies at large, across areas of specialty within the field of human and social sciences.
In terms of geographical scope, the journal has published material that covers the Himalayas within a broad definition and not limited to the geological region, but taken to include the Karakorum, Hindukush, Ladakh, southern Tibet, Kashmir, north-west India, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, and north-east India.
Publishing with and reading the EBHR is free of charge and all journal content is licensed under the Creative Commons License CC BY 4.0. We are now publishing open access and online exclusively on the OpenEdition Journals platform. General information about the EBHR, submission formats, and instructions for authors can be found on the journal's website https://journals.openedition.org/ebhr/.
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- Full Download (10.8 MB)
- Cover, contents (399 kb)
- Ecological Crisis and Social Movements in the Indian Himalayas (2.77 MB)
author: Antje Linkenbach - Decline of the Rong-Folk: Reflexions on A.R.Foning's: Lepcha, My Vanishing Tribe (1.73 MB)
author: R. K. Sprigg - Himalayan Archives in Paris, Part Two (1.63 MB)
author: Lucette Boulnois - Early Christian Missions in the Himalayas: Including a Note on the Location of Missionary Archives in Italy (1.72 MB)
author: Dipak Raj Pant - On the Topicality of History:An Interview with Mahesh Chandra Regmi (1.40 MB)
author: Martin Gaenszle - Internal and External Conceptualization of Social Change in North-East Nepal: The Study of Individuality in a Traditional Community (691 kb)
author: Michael Mühlich - Human Rights Violations in the Himalaya - The Domination of Elites, 6-10 December 1991, Kathmandu (1.71 MB)
author: Ludmilla Tüting - Ladakh History and Culture, SOAS Conference, June 1-2,1992 (1.71 MB)
author: Maria Phylactou - Structure and Transition: Society, Poverty, and Politics in Nepal, 4-6 September 1992, Kathmandu (1.71 MB)
author: Joanna Pfaff-Czarnecka and Martin Gaenszle - The Anthropology of Nepal: People, Problems and Processes, 7-14 September 1992, Kathmandu (1.71 MB)
author: Charles Ramble - The Himalayan Forum at London School of Oriental & African Studies, Autumn Term, 1992 (1.71 MB)
author: Michael Hutt - Politics, Identity, and Cultural Change in the Himalayan Region, 1992, University of Oxford (1.71 MB)
author: David Gellner - Martin Hoftun and Bill Raeper (1.71 MB)
author: David Gellner - Bhutan: A Traditional Order and the Forces of Change, A Conference at the School of Oriental and African Studies, March 1993 (902 kb)
author: Michael Hutt - Himalayan Research as Part of a Global Effort for the Mountains- A Note on 'Mountain Agenda' (902 kb)
author: Rudolf Högger - Annapurna Sattrek Map, Nepal (902 kb)
author: none - Notes on Contributors (393 kb)