Program

Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships, 2019

Project

Economies of the High Plateau: Monasteries, Merchants, and Ulak Transportation in Tibet, 1904-1959

Department

East Asian Languages and Cultures

Abstract

This dissertation explores Tibetan economic institutions and transportation infrastructures during the twentieth century. During this period, Tibetan institutions and actors negotiated their position vis-à-vis Britain and China by asserting economic agency through ulak: a transportation-cum-taxation system that facilitated transport, trade, and communications in Tibet. As opposed to the earlier literature that portrayed ulak as the primary reason for Tibetan economic backwardness, this project demonstrates that ulak was in fact a complex system uniquely suited to a region like Tibet, which was rich in land but poor in labor. Furthermore, due to its highly decentralized and flexible structure, ulak was particularly effective in times of uncertainty and change. Focusing on ulak and the socio-economic world around it, this dissertation examines Tibetan monasteries, merchants, and transnational companies that participated in global economic transformations.

Program

Luce/ACLS Early Career Fellowships in China Studies – Long-Term, 2022

Project

Tibet Incorporated: Institutional Power and Economic Practice on the Sino-Tibetan Borderland 1930-1950

Named Award

This long-term award is made possible with additional funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities

Department

History

Abstract

This book explores Tibet’s twentieth-century economic incorporation into China, arguing that the
economic interconnectedness of the twentieth century and the increased links between Tibet and
China was mediated by increasingly powerful Tibetan economic institutions.