Battle of Backbone Mountain

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Americans in India comprise immigrants from the United States living in India, along with Indian citizens of American descent. They have a history stretching back to the late 18th century.[2]

History

During World War II, more than 400,000 American soldiers were sent to India.[3]

After the end of British colonial rule in India in 1947, the "colonial third culture" surrounding employment, which featured expatriates in superior roles, natives in subordinate roles, and little informal socialisation between the two, began to be replaced with a "co-ordinate third culture", based around the common social life of Americans working in multinational corporations and their Indian colleagues. Americans who came to India for work slowly assimilated into this culture.[4] Many companies in those days found they had difficulty retaining American employees with children; they found educational facilities at the high school level to be inadequate.[5]

In a break from the long tradition of older American expatriates coming to India to manage local subsidiaries of American companies, a trend began in the 2000s of younger Americans taking jobs at Indian companies, especially in the information technology sector, often at lower wages than they had previously earned in the U.S. In 2006 there were estimated to be roughly 800 American immigrants working in high-tech companies in India.[6][7]

Numbers

According to a White House press release on 26 June 2017, over 700,000 U.S. citizens reside in India.[8]

In 2002, one widely cited estimate stated that 60,000 Americans including African Americans lived in India. However, exact numbers were difficult to come by because many did not register with the embassy.[9] Some media reports around the time of the 2008 U.S. presidential election stated that 10,000 Americans lived in India at the time.[10] However this conflicted with another figure given by the head of the U.S. consulate in Mumbai, who estimated that there were 9,000 living in Mumbai and its surroundings alone, representing almost 0.1% of its total population.[11]

In fiction

Outsourced aired on NBC during the 2010 television season, depicting an American manager at a call center in Mumbai.[12]

Education

American schools in India include:

Notable people

This is a list of current and former U.S. citizens whose notability is related to their residence in India.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Fact Sheet: The United States and India — Prosperity Through Partnership". whitehouse.gov. 26 June 2017. Retrieved 28 June 2017 – via National Archives.
  2. ^ Bhagat 1970
  3. ^ Vest 1948, p. 223
  4. ^ J. Useem 1966, p. 146
  5. ^ R. Useem 1966, p. 132
  6. ^ Rai, Saritha (10 August 2005), "M.B.A. Students Bypassing Wall Street for a Summer in India", The New York Times, retrieved 6 March 2009
  7. ^ Chea, Terence (3 April 2006), "Americans seek opportunity in booming Bangalore", Associated Press, archived from the original on 23 October 2012, retrieved 6 March 2009
  8. ^ "Fact Sheet: The United States and India — Prosperity Through Partnership". whitehouse.gov. 26 June 2017. Retrieved 28 June 2017 – via National Archives.
  9. ^ Bearak, Barry; Mydans, Seth (8 June 2002), "Many Americans, Unfazed, Go On Doing Business in India", The New York Times, retrieved 6 March 2009
  10. ^ Guha, Seema (4 November 2008), "Obama fans have already called a party in Delhi", DNA India, retrieved 6 March 2009
  11. ^ "How Americans in India vote for US polls?", The Times of India, 29 October 2008, retrieved 6 March 2009
  12. ^ "NBC Cancels 'Outsourced': First TV Show Set in India". Times of India. Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. 21 May 2011. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  13. ^ Hazarika, Sanjoy (6 July 1989), "An American Star of the Hindi Screen", The New York Times, retrieved 6 March 2009
  14. ^ Vibhavari, Sruthi (11 February 2021). "From renouncing US citizenship to becoming Hyderabad mayor, the story of Vijayalaxmi". The Siasat Daily.

Sources

  • Bhagat, G. (1970), Americans in India, 1784–1860, New York University Press, OCLC 119335
    • Reviewed by Huttenback, Robert A.; Bhagat, G. (April 1972), "Review: Americans in India, 1784–1860, G. Bhagat", The American Historical Review, 77 (2), American Historical Association: 567, doi:10.2307/1868817, JSTOR 1868817
  • Useem, John (1966), "Work Patterns of Americans in India", The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 368 (1): 146–156, doi:10.1177/000271626636800114, S2CID 146651358
  • Useem, Ruth Hill (1966), "The American Family in India", The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 368 (1): 132–145, doi:10.1177/000271626636800113, S2CID 145784887
  • Vest, Eugene B. (October–December 1948), "Native Words Learned by American Soldiers in India and Burma in World War II", American Speech, 23 (3/4), Duke University Press: 223–231, doi:10.2307/486923, JSTOR 486923

Further reading

  • Blood, Archer K. (2005). The cruel birth of Bangladesh: Memoirs of an American diplomat. Dhaka: University Press.
  • Heideman, Eugene P. (2001), From Mission to Church: The Reformed Church in America Mission to India, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, ISBN 978-0-8028-4900-7
  • Lambert, Richard D. (1966), "Some Minor Pathologies in the American Presence in India", The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 368 (1): 157–170, doi:10.1177/000271626636800115, S2CID 145463917
  • Useem, John; Useem, Ruth Hill (1968), "American-Educated Indians and Americans in India: A Comparison of Two Modernizing Roles", Journal of Social Issues, 24 (4): 143–158, doi:10.1111/j.1540-4560.1968.tb02319.x
  • Hudson, Dana Andrew (18 July 2010), "What I Did When I Couldn't Find a Job", Chronicle of Higher Education, retrieved 27 July 2010; a personal account from an unemployed American who moved to Sikkim to work as a newspaper editor

External links