Livelihood Challenges of the Muga Silk Saree Weaving Community: A Case Study of Sualkuchi, Assam (India)

Authors

Abstract

Muga silk, known as the golden thread, has been reared from a peculiar type of silkworm called muga since time immemorial. The silk is widely grown in Sualkuchi, renowned as Manchester of Assam, as a large population is engaged in handloom industry there. The antique, and mesmerising muga products like mekhela chadar, and saree have occupied the hearts of people from all walks of life as these products carry unique characteristics. Sualkuchi silk is a symbol of the fact that centuries change, eras change, but faith remains eternal. However, the cottage industry faces headwinds from global spillovers in protracted, and intensifying COVID-19 due to informal nature of the industry. Increased temperature, and humidity are one of the major threats to the muga silkworm in the coming decades. The development of the weaving community is the future, not the past; its solution is self-reliance.

Keywords

Sualkuchi, Climate Change, Geographical Indications, Sericulture, Livelihood

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Author Biographies

Shahid Jamal, DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY

SHAHID JAMAL is an Assistant Professor of Geography, Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi, India. His research interests include geographical indications, tribal affairs, migration, contemporary environmental issues, nomads, cultural heritage, cultural economy, regional planning, and natural resource management. He has completed several research projects, the most recent of which is Documentation of Grazing and Medicinal Plant Resources and their Ecological Importance in Kishtwar High Altitude National Park, of which he is the main field researcher.

Mohammed Baber Ali

MOHAMMED BABER ALI is an Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi, India. His research interests include understanding the demographic variables of societies, such as growth (over, under, and optimum), age, gender, workforce, dependency, and aging. On the other hand, to understand how and where nature's crisis is calling economic humans to be ecological human and have a keen interest in environmental geography. His latest publications are Land Use Dynamics and Impact on Regional Climate Post-Tehri Dam in the Bhilangana Basin, Garhwal Himalaya (Sustainability, 2022). The Idea of Geospatial-Gender- Based Data Infrastructure for Protecting Women Living in Post Covid-19 Created Global Village (Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal, 2022).

Khusro Moin

KHUSRO MOINis an Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi, India. His focus of research study has been quite diverse, including agricultural geography, economic geography, emerging environmental issues, urbanisation and its challenges, and gender issues. His latest publications are “Protecting the Poor: Strategies for Socioeconomic Development of Monabarie Tea Estate Workers of Biswanath, Assam” (The Deccan Geographer, 2024). Climate Change and Livelihood Sustainability in Kishtwar, Jammu and Kashmir (Indi@logs- Spanish Journal of India Studies, 2025). 

Karuna Shree

Karuna Shree is an Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi, India. Her interests lie in human geography, especially social and cultural geography, political geography, regional planning, development studies, disaster management and gender studies.     Teaching cartography for many years and has helped students in creating thematic atlases. Her latest publications are Urban Governance for Sustainable Development: A Case Study of CBD of Delhi (The Deccan Geographer, 2024). Navigating Maritime Landscape Geographies: The Rise and Fall of Cambay in the 16th and 17th Centuries (The Deccan Geographer, 2024)

Published

2025-10-19

How to Cite

Jamal, S., Baber Ali, M., Moin, K., & Shree, K. (2025). Livelihood Challenges of the Muga Silk Saree Weaving Community: A Case Study of Sualkuchi, Assam (India). Indialogs, 12(2), 101–125. https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/indialogs.307

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