As the resettled Bhutanese diaspora matures, formal and informal professional networks have emerged connecting Bhutanese Americans and their counterparts in Australia, Canada, and Europe across fields including healthcare, technology, public health, education, and entrepreneurship. These networks serve as mentorship platforms, employment referral systems, and vehicles for diaspora-led community development.
When the first large cohorts of Lhotshampa refugees arrived in the United States and other resettlement countries beginning in 2007, the community's economic profile was shaped almost entirely by the circumstances of its arrival: adults entering entry-level jobs in warehouses, meatpacking plants, and cleaning services; families navigating housing assistance and English-language programmes; and a professional class largely absent because educational credentials accumulated in Nepal's refugee camps were not recognised in Western labour markets. By the mid-2010s, a discernible shift had begun. A 1.5 generation — those who had arrived as children and teenagers and moved through American schools — was reaching university age and beginning to enter professional careers. Simultaneously, a subset of the first generation was translating its resilience, multilingualism, and community knowledge into roles in healthcare support, social work, interpreting, and community organisation.
By the 2020s, Bhutanese Americans were represented across a strikingly diverse range of professional fields. Professional networks — some formally constituted, many informal — have developed to connect these dispersed professionals, facilitate mentorship, and direct collective expertise toward community benefit.
Healthcare
Healthcare has emerged as one of the most significant professional pathways for Bhutanese Americans, partly because of direct pathways through community health worker and medical interpreter roles and partly because of the healthcare system's documented need for culturally competent providers serving diverse patient populations. Community members have entered healthcare as certified nursing assistants, licensed practical nurses, registered nurses, and — among the more educationally advanced members of the 1.5 generation — physicians, pharmacists, and physical therapists. Public health research has emerged as another significant pathway: Dr. Bhuwan Gautam of Harvard and Boston College has established a national reputation for research on refugee health and ageing, and PK Subedi has contributed to community mental health infrastructure. The Boston-based organisation Bhutan Beyond Boundaries explicitly aims to connect diaspora health professionals with opportunities to give back through voluntary services, telemedicine, and specialised surgical camps in Bhutan.
Technology
Technology has proven an equally significant professional sector. Hari Dahal, who came to Cleveland, Ohio as a refugee and subsequently worked as a software developer at Microsoft, represents the trajectory of a broader cohort of Bhutanese Americans who have entered the technology industry. Community members work across software development, information technology, data analysis, and cybersecurity in companies across the United States. The mentorship networks that Dahal and others have built — including Nebham LLC, a technology company staffed by diaspora members and focused on building apps for nonprofits — illustrate how individual professional success has been translated into community-level technology capacity.
Education and Social Work
Teaching, social work, and community organisation represent the professional sectors in which Bhutanese Americans have most consistently leveraged their bilingual skills and cultural knowledge as professional assets. Bhutanese-American teachers in school districts with significant Lhotshampa student populations, social workers at resettlement agencies, and community navigators employed by hospitals and public health departments bring an irreplaceable combination of professional training and community trust. Several Bhutanese Americans have moved into administrative roles within resettlement organisations and social service agencies.
Entrepreneurship
Small business ownership has been a significant economic pathway since the earliest years of resettlement. Bhutanese-owned restaurants, grocery stores specialising in South Asian products, tailoring and clothing businesses, and transportation firms have become features of Bhutanese diaspora cities. Tilak Pokwal is among the diaspora entrepreneurs who have built businesses serving both the community and broader markets.
Emerging Formal Networks
Formal professional networking organisations are at an early stage of development within the diaspora. Bhutan Beyond Boundaries (bhutanbeyondboundaries.org) operates as a platform aimed specifically at non-resident Bhutanese professionals seeking to maintain connections and contribute to Bhutan's development. Within the Lhotshampa refugee diaspora specifically, professional networking has been mediated primarily through community associations and social media groups rather than standalone professional organisations — a situation that is gradually changing as the diaspora's professional class grows.
See also
- Bhutanese Refugee Social Service Professionals
- Road Network of Bhutan
- Bhutan Domestic Air Network
- Bhutanese Diaspora Youth in Higher Education
- Lhotshampa Name Reclamation in the Diaspora
References
- "Home — Bhutan Beyond Boundaries." https://bhutanbeyondboundaries.org/
- "Bhutan Qualifications and Professionals Certification Authority proposes tapping diaspora health professionals." Bhutan Broadcasting Service. https://www.bbs.bt/233574/
- "A Study of Bhutanese Refugees' Adaptation in the US." Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities (BRPI), vol. 5, no. 2, December 2017. https://jssw.thebrpi.org/journals/jssw/Vol_5_No_2_December_2017/11.pdf
- Cultural Orientation Resource Center. "Bhutanese Refugees in the United States." https://coresourceexchange.org/
See also
Bhutanese Diaspora Youth in Higher Education
Bhutanese diaspora youth have emerged as first-generation college students in growing numbers across the United States and other resettlement countries, navigating the complexities of college admissions, financial aid, and academic life while bridging cultural expectations from their refugee families and the demands of American higher education. Their achievements in fields ranging from public health to engineering represent a generational transformation within a community that arrived with limited access to formal education.
diaspora·8 min readLhotshampa Name Reclamation in the Diaspora
Since the mid-2010s, resettled Lhotshampa families in the United States, Australia, Canada and Norway have begun restoring the standard Nepali spellings of names distorted on Bhutanese official records, through naturalisation, court orders and the naming of children born in exile. The movement is widely practised but unevenly documented.
diaspora·17 min readBhutanese diaspora
The Bhutanese diaspora consists overwhelmingly of Lhotshampa — Nepali-speaking southern Bhutanese — who were expelled or fled in the early 1990s and were later resettled around the world. Of roughly 108,000 refugees in camps in eastern Nepal, about 113,000 were resettled between 2007 and 2018 under a UNHCR-led programme, the great majority to the United States, with smaller communities in Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom and Europe.
diaspora·2 min readBhutanese Diaspora Entrepreneurship: Restaurants
The emergence of Bhutanese and Nepali restaurants in resettlement cities across the United States, Canada, Australia, and beyond represents one of the most visible expressions of Bhutanese diaspora entrepreneurship. From momo shops and dal-bhat restaurants to catering businesses, Lhotshampa entrepreneurs have leveraged culinary traditions rooted in southern Bhutan and the refugee camps to build businesses that serve both their own communities and broader audiences, functioning as cultural ambassadors and economic anchors.
diaspora·8 min readT.P. Mishra
Thakur Prasad Mishra, known as T.P. Mishra, is a Bhutanese refugee journalist, writer, and community advocate. He co-founded The Bhutan Reporter and founded the Bhutan News Service, becoming one of the most prominent voices in exiled Bhutanese media. A Lhotshampa expelled from Bhutan as a child, Mishra spent nearly two decades in refugee camps in Nepal before resettling in the United States, where he has continued his journalism and advocacy work, including contributing to the Smithsonian Institution's Bhutanese Refugee Oral History Project.
diaspora·7 min readTruth and Reconciliation Calls for Bhutan
Diaspora activists, human rights scholars, and international observers have called for the establishment of a truth and reconciliation process to address the ethnic cleansing of the Lhotshampa from Bhutan. Drawing parallels with post-conflict processes in South Africa, Rwanda, and the former Yugoslavia, advocates argue that formal acknowledgment of state violence and a framework for accountability are prerequisites for any meaningful resolution of the Bhutanese refugee crisis.
diaspora·6 min read
Test Your Knowledge
Think you know about this topic? Try a quick quiz!
Help improve this article
Do you have personal knowledge about this topic? Were you there? Your experience matters. BhutanWiki is built by the community, for the community.
Anonymous contributions welcome. No account required.