Academic literature on the topic 'Diaspora'

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Journal articles on the topic "Diaspora"

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Aitken, Miriam. "“We are the Revolution, Abroad”: Diaspora Protests, Identity Construction, and the Remaking of Citizenship in the 2019 Lebanese Thawra." Middle East Law and Governance 16, no. 2 (July 24, 2024): 279–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18763375-16020007.

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Abstract Diasporas are often viewed as mirrors for their homeland’s politics. The Lebanese diaspora’s involvement in the 2019 Thawra, however, established the diaspora as a locus for autonomous and disruptive political action. Through an analysis of the spatialities of protest, this paper analyses the diaspora’s involvement in the Thawra, its implications for the protest movement, and for the diaspora itself. It argues that diaspora protests gave rise to new tactics and protest repertoires. These mirrored protest activity on the ground, supported protestors in Lebanon, and constituted the diaspora as a locus for contestation and claims-making. Moreover, the diaspora’s mobilization in the Thawra contributed to the consolidation of diasporic identity and the construction of alternative societal imaginaries and conceptions of citizenship that challenge Lebanon’s state-centric and sectarian citizenship regime. This paper thus makes the case for reassessing the autonomous political role of diasporas to gain a fuller understanding of transnational protest dynamics, solidarities, and citizenship beyond the boundaries of the nation-state.
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Szmyt, Zbigniew. "Granica jako zasób, granica jako wehikuł czasu. Społeczne reprezentacje diaspor na pograniczu rosyjsko-chińskim." Studia Migracyjne – Przegląd Polonijny 49, no. 2 (188) (October 2023): 139–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/25444972smpp.23.020.18634.

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Jednym z efektów rosyjskiej wojny domowej (1917–1922) była emigracja na niespotykaną wcześniej skalę. Z azjatyckiej części Rosji masowo emigrowali też przedstawiciele rodzimych mniejszości narodowych i etnicznych. Emigranci ci stworzyli szereg diaspor zamieszkujących strefy pograniczne z ZSRR. Władza radziecka traktowała te społeczności jako wrogie, a hermetyczny charakter sowieckiej granicy sprawiał, że kontakt pomiędzy diasporami a krajem pochodzenia był znikomy. Wraz z rozpadem ZSRR i otwarciem granic diaspory zaczęły odgrywać ważną rolę w tzw. odrodzeniu etnicznym mniejszości w Rosji. Inkorporacja dotychczas demonizowanych, nielojalnych i wrogich pogranicznych społeczności wymagała wprowadzenia nowych dyskursów i reprezentacji w lokalnych historiach publicznych. Na przykładzie buriackiej diaspory w Chinach artykuł pokazuje proces włączania diaspor w pole polityki etnicznej na Syberii i negocjowania ich statusu społecznego we współczesnej Rosji. The Border as a Resource, the Border as a Time Machine. Social Representations of Diasporas on the Sino-Russian Frontier These emigrants created a number of diasporas inhabiting the border zones with the USSR. The Soviet authorities treated these communities as hostile, and the hermetic nature of the Soviet border meant that contact between the diasporas and the country of origin was negligible. With thecollapse of the USSR and the opening of the borders of the diaspora, they began to play an essential role in the so-called ethnic revival of minorities in Russia. The incorporation of previously demonized, disloyal, and hostile frontier communities required the introduction of new discourses and representations in local public histories. On the example of the Buryat diaspora in China, the article shows the process of including diasporas in the field of ethnic politics in Siberia and negotiating their social status in contemporary Russia.
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Domachowska, Agata. "Kształtowanie relacji państwo–diaspora: przykład czarnogórski." Środkowoeuropejskie Studia Polityczne, no. 1 (March 18, 2019): 41–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/ssp.2019.1.3.

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Celem artykułu jest dokonanie analizy relacji państwo-diaspora na przykładzie Czarnogóry. W literaturze przedmiotu zauważalny jest brak dogłębnych badań tego zjawiska. Czarnogóra stanowi interesujący przypadek ze względu fakt, że liczba osób żyjących w diasporach jest porównywalna do liczby mieszkańców tego państwa. Artykuł składa się z czterech części. Pierwsza z nich stanowi przedstawienie rozważań teoretycznych na temat diaspor, ale także relacji państwo-diaspora. W ko­lejnej została pokrótce scharakteryzowana czarnogórska diaspora - jej historia, li­czebność oraz kierunki emigracji. Trzecia część stanowi analizę kształtowanych przez Czarnogórę relacji z diasporą. Szczególną uwagę zwrócono na proces instytucjonali­zacji owych stosunków. Artykuł kończy podsumowanie.
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Kirk, Niamh. "Diaspora journalism’s coverage of migration: How the Irish diaspora press reported the refugee crisis." Journal of Global Diaspora & Media 2, no. 1 (June 1, 2021): 99–116. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/gdm_00017_1.

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Irish diasporas have a long history of multidirectional and multigenerational migration with large communities sustaining successful commercial diaspora news media organizations. Such complex migration patterns often result in the hybridization of identities whereby the migrant group develops cultural identities that are different from the ‘homeland’ and each other. Diaspora media operate as important cultural landmarks that mediate the representation of home and hostland identity, providing a rich set of cultural building blocks with which diaspora communities can identify. Indeed, comparative studies have shown diverse representations of Irish diasporic identities and history in Irish diaspora news media located in different parts of the world. However, to date much of the focus has been on the representations of historical events such as the Famine the 1916 Rising. What is not yet clear is how identity is represented in relation to contemporary news events. Using framing analysis this article compares how Irish diaspora news media located in different regions draw on Irish diasporic identity to represent the appropriate responses of Irish diasporans and Irish people to the Refugee crisis in 2016 finding that while there are some variances, a unifying message dominates.
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Brinkerhoff, Jennifer M. "Diasporas and Public Diplomacy: Distinctions and Future Prospects." Hague Journal of Diplomacy 14, no. 1-2 (April 22, 2019): 51–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1871191x-14101015.

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Summary Diaspora diplomacy encompasses diasporas as: agents in their own right; instruments of other’s diplomatic agendas; and/or intentional or accidental partners with other actors pursuing shared interests. Diaspora diplomacy is not territorially bound, and agendas are fluid. Three important features of diaspora diplomacy distinguish it from public diplomacy more generally. First, the diaspora identity results in specific applications of diplomacy for which diasporans may play a unique role. Second, diasporans’ responses to global crises of identity and inequity yield particular motivations and targets of engagement. Third, diasporans may have an in-between advantage for public diplomacy. The complexity of diaspora diplomacy is likely to increase because of circular migration, layered identities, and continued improvements and access to telecommunications. Researchers and policy-makers should focus attention on how to integrate diasporas into existing efforts to account for the complexity of transnational relations.
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Stratton, Jon. "(Dis)placing the Jews: Historicizing the Idea of Diaspora." Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies 6, no. 3 (December 1997): 301–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/diaspora.6.3.301.

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This article explores the idea of diaspora from the point of view of the Jewish experience. This is not because I want to take the Jewish diaspora as in some way typical; indeed, quite the reverse is the case. I want to argue for a historical understanding of diaspora, one which recognizes that the changes in the historical context of what we generally call diasporas affect the meaning and experience of being in diaspora. Distinguishing the variety of western Jewish diasporic experience from that of other groups of people who experience themselves as diasporic will help us to theorize the meaning of “diaspora” as it is more generally applied.
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Vuković-Ćalasan, Danijela, and Siniša Tatalović. "Defining Diaspora in post-Yugoslav States." Politička misao 57, no. 4 (February 25, 2021): 100–122. http://dx.doi.org/10.20901/pm.57.4.05.

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Contemporary societies exist in the conditions of globalization, which profoundly‎ transforms them in different dimensions. Technological progress enabled‎ the significant changes in the identity dimension. This has, inter alia,‎ resulted in new opportunities for preserving identification with the country of‎ origin, increased interest in the diaspora concept in the politological and sociological‎ thought and caused new approaches and activities by the states in‎ improving relations with their diasporic communities. The former republics‎ of the SFRY, which have been making progress in building legal and institutional‎ capacities for cooperation with diasporas, are no exception. Generally,‎ all of these countries have very numerous and diverse diasporas, which have‎ usually been emerging in a long period of time. This paper analyzes the policies‎ of the states, created by the break-up of the SFRY, towards their diasporas.‎ The policies of these states are specific and they differ from one another,‎ both in defining diaspora and in legal and institutional solutions that should‎ improve diaspora’s link with the country of origin. However, the Republic of‎ Slovenia, the Republic of Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Republic of‎ Serbia, Montenegro and the Republic of North Macedonia, have some common‎ elements as well.‎
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Adamson, Fiona B. "Sending States and the Making of Intra-Diasporic Politics: Turkey and Its Diaspora(s)." International Migration Review 53, no. 1 (October 8, 2018): 210–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0197918318767665.

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The multiple politics and identities of many contemporary diasporic configurations raise a number of important conceptual issues for the study of diaspora politics, including what counts as a “diaspora,” how do particular “diasporas” emerge, and what shapes their politics? This article discusses conceptual and substantive splits in the burgeoning social science literature on diasporas and suggests the value of analyzing the politics and policies of sending states as crucial factors in both “diaspora-shaping” and “diaspora-generating” processes. It presents an extended case study of the emergence of diaspora groups connected with contemporary Turkey, situating Turkey’s “New Diaspora Policy” in its historical context. The article concludes by suggesting that the proposed framework allows for a deeper theorization of the relationship between identity categories and political action, thus shedding light on the conceptual puzzle of what constitutes a diaspora.
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Sahoo, Ajaya K., and Anindita Shome. "Diaspora and Transnationalism: the Changing Contours of Ethnonational Identity of Indian Diaspora." Perspectives on Global Development and Technology 19, no. 3 (September 8, 2020): 383–402. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15691497-12341561.

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Abstract Diasporic communities have historically maintained—either actively or passively—their ethnonational identities, be it in the case of classical diasporas such as the Jews or Armenians or the case of more modern diasporas such as the Indians or other South Asians. However, the ethnonational identities of diasporic communities have strengthened significantly in recent times as a result of the global forces such as the Internet that created and recreated the existing and newer ways of transnationalism and ethnonationalism. The study of the Indian diaspora is inherent because of the fact that these global forces have drastically changed the ethnonational identity of Indians in the diaspora. There are a plethora of factors that played an important role in this process of transformation. This article tries to examine two of the most significant factors that strengthened the ethnonational identity, such as the dynamic changes in the Indian government policy towards diaspora and the role of the Internet that facilitates the youth to play a prominent role in this neo-diaspora.
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Timalsina, Ramji. "Diasporic Characters in Rajab’s Short Stories." Dristikon: A Multidisciplinary Journal 10, no. 1 (December 31, 2020): 214–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/dristikon.v10i1.34599.

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This article has attempted to find how the short stories in Rajab‘s collection entitled Paai [Pie] have depicted the realities in the Diaspora through the presentation of characters. Three stories have been selected from the collection. These short fictions are studied in the light of the theory of characterization in short stories. The analysis concentrates on the diasporic identity related cultural, emotional and existential conditions of the characters. The study has found that all the diasporic characters have undergone different types of problems as per their diverse life situations. Generally, all diasporans have identity crisis related to culture. This crisis is connected with their emotion and existence, too. I have also found that there are three types of main characters: general diasporas, senior citizens and young couples. The general diasporans have been used to show the existential conditions of any diasporan in the host land. The depiction of the senior citizens shows how a new land cannot be a good place for them: Most of them are emotionally shocked and unsettled. Even the young couples who reach the USA using all possible means finally feel frustrated and disoriented. Almost all the characters in these stories are unhappy diasporans. It is hoped that this article will encourage researchers to study other diasporic fictions from the point of view of characterization.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Diaspora"

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Abobeker, Shoker. "Diaspora, identity and return : the Kurdish diaspora in Devon." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/27934.

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This research argues for a more nuanced understanding of the diverse motivations for diaspora movement and return. The study develops contemporary diaspora literature by critiquing the way that concepts of home and homeland are used, underscoring the overlooked importance of community engagement, and emphasising the role of racism and gender in return migration. Empirically, the argument draws on semi-structured interviews with 84 male and female participants from the county of Devon, located within the southwest of England, in the United Kingdom, and 32 male and female participants who have returned to south Kurdistan. Alongside contributions to extant literature about migration and diaspora, the thesis also contributes to the fields of diaspora and migration studies by shedding light on the current state of the Kurdish diaspora in particular. Since Kurds have experienced increased autonomy in recent years, the thesis takes the opportunity to reflect on the familiar themes of home, community, identity and belonging in research on diaspora when long-held dreams of autonomy are finally realised. The thesis also makes suggestions for working alongside marginalized and disadvantaged people and supporting their struggle for equal citizenship.
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Kaushik, Ratika. "Homing diaspora/diasporizing home : locating South Asian diasporic literature and film." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2018. http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/73136/.

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This thesis contains a detailed study of contemporary South Asian diasporic literary and cinematic works in English. The majority of the works analyzed and discussed are those produced from the 1980s onwards. My research investigates how selected diasporic texts and films from South Asia problematize representations of homeland and host spaces. I reveal in the course of this study, how these works, actively negotiate alternative modalities of belonging that celebrate the plurality of cultural identities within and outside the homeland. This exploration of diasporic narratives of homeland and host land is explored by examining these narratives across two mediums: the cinematic and the literary. In so doing, the thesis initiates a dialogue between the two mediums and locates these selected diasporic works within a larger tapestry of contemporary cultural, literary and global contexts. The thesis shows that these literary and filmic representations celebrate as well as present an incisive critique of the different cultural spaces they inhabit. The thesis also reveals how, in representing the experiences of multiple-linguistic, geographical, historical dislocations, these texts invite readers to see the changing faces of diasporic cultures and identities. My thesis complements this analysis of representation with a broader analysis of the reception of these diasporic works. My analysis sets out to move away from the critical tendency to scrutinize texts in relation to a politicized rhetoric of reception which privileges a reading of texts through insider/outsider binarism, by drawing together and contrasting academic and popular responses in the reception of diasporic texts. In so doing, my thesis reads these texts as agents of cultural production, focusing on interpretative possibilities of the literary critical mode of reading and enabling nuanced modes of analysis attentive to issues of diasporic identity, the identity of nation-states and the emergent global dynamics of migrant narratives. The texts I analyze are Salman Rushdie‘s Midnight's Children (1981) and The Satanic Verses (1988), Micheal Ondaatje‘s Running in the Family (1982) and Anil's Ghost (2000), Rohinton Mistry‘s A Fine Balance (1995), Mohsin Hamid‘s The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007), and Hanif Kureishi‘s The Buddha of Suburbia (1990) and as well as two filmic texts, Mira Nair‘s The Namesake (2007) and Gurinder Chadha‘s Bend It Like Beckham (2001).
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Cohen, Michelle E. "Deconstructing diaspora dreams." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp01/MQ29152.pdf.

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Delisle, Jennifer. "The Newfoundland Diaspora." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/859.

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For over a century there has been a large ongoing migration from Newfoundland to other parts of Canada and the US. Between 1971 and 1998 alone, net out-migration amounted to 20% of the province’s population. This exodus has become a significant part of Newfoundland culture. While many literary critics, writers, and sociologists have referred to Newfoundland out-migration as a “diaspora,” few have examined the theoretical implications of applying this emotionally charged term to a predominantly white, economically motivated, inter-provincial movement. My dissertation addresses these issues, ultimately arguing that “diaspora” is an appropriate and helpful term to describe Newfoundland out-migration and its literature, because it connotes the painful displacement of a group that continues to identify with each other and with the homeland. I argue that considering Newfoundland a “diaspora” also provides a useful contribution to theoretical work on diaspora, because it reveals the ways in which labour movements and intra-national migrations can be meaningfully considered diasporic. It also rejects the Canadian tendency to conflate diaspora with racialized subjectivities, a tendency that problematically posits racialized Others as always from elsewhere, and that threatens to refigure experiences of racism as a problem of integration rather than of systemic, institutionalized racism. I examine several important literary works of the Newfoundland diaspora, including the poetry of E.J. Pratt and Carl Leggo, the drama of David French, the fiction of Donna Morrissey and Wayne Johnston, and the memoirs of Helen M. Buss/ Margaret Clarke and David Macfarlane. These works also become the sites of a broader inquiry into several theoretical flashpoints, including diasporic authenticity, nostalgia, nationalism, race and whiteness, and ethnicity. I show that diasporic Newfoundlanders’ identifications involve a complex, self-reflexive, postmodern negotiation between the sometimes contradictory conditions of white privilege, cultural marginalization, and national and regional appropriations. Through these negotiations they both construct imagined literary communities, and problematize Newfoundland’s place within Canadian culture and a globalized world.
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Aydin, Paulina. "Home In Diaspora." Thesis, KTH, Arkitektur, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-276794.

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What happens when home moves and has to resettle somewhere else because of contemporary invocations of diaspora? In a series of meaningful displacements one might have multiple homes with different reasons for maintaining some form of attachment to each. Through a semi-structured approach, letting narratives unfold as they come up, I ask: What did you leave? What did you meet? What did you get and give? What could that be? An architectural alphabet evolves that tells stories, comes with things and moments but perhaps most important questions the habitual and the culturally specific. How can we understand what a home is if I do not ask what a home was, is for someone else or could be? And not only through the homes we idealize but through the displaced homes that actually have to meet ours. Could this alphabet be used to provoke the limited one we have today and help us towards the prospect of choice by imagining a future whereupon there could, or maybe simply should, be so many more? More to be used to rethink and deviate from a standard mark that negates a past for some and make the transition more than a continuum for others.
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Campbell, Kyle. "Sister Cities and Diaspora: From Diaspora to Potential Sister City Partnership." Thesis, Malmö högskola, Fakulteten för kultur och samhälle (KS), 2015. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-21219.

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The sister city concept has now been around for several decades and yet there remains to be a paucity of literature dealing with the subject. Despite this unfortunate fact, there has been some literature written trying to deal with the progression of what sparked cities to try to establish sister city relationships with one another. However, this is still not enough. Diasporas have been neglected as a potential cause, which I try to remedy by employing the method of explaining outcome process tracing in a case study of the sister city relationship that began to be explored between the cities of Governador Valadares, Brazil and Framingham, United States.Information was collected using materials such as news articles from such sources as the Metrowest Daily News and official websites such as Governador Valadares’ official city webpage, and various histories, ethnographies, and other sources were also considered especially focusing on Framingham and the Greater Boston Area, allowing for the collection of materials of both primary and secondary nature and thus an in-depth analysis.What was found was that indeed, it is true that diaspora had a hand in influencing the negotiation of a sister city relationship between the two cities; First, the context of the Brazilian Diaspora in the United States was explained and analysed and it was found that it could be termed a termed a proletarian labour diaspora.Explaining outcome process tracing was then employed to inductively explain how the spark can be created, which suggested that the causal mechanism between the diaspora and the negotiations for the SCR to begin were that of an enclave forming due to the diaspora which then allowed social capital to be accumulated, allowing for Governador Valadares to grow despite Brazil’s bad economic conditions due to remittances, leading to the mayor of Governador Valadares initiating the talks.
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Marchi, Lisa. "Creolizing Diaspora: Home and Identity, Language and Hospitality in Arab Diasporic Literature." Doctoral thesis, University of Trento, 2011. http://eprints-phd.biblio.unitn.it/567/1/tesi_di_dottorato_corretta_Marchi.pdf.

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This research investigates the extent to which diaspora can be considered a useful term of reference for the exploration and critical interrogation of the literary works written by authors of Arab origin in Europe, Canada and the United States. The aim of this study is to develop an alternative theoretical model to analyze and critically interrogate works that have been written beyond the boundaries of a national literature and that blur the opposition "migrant" vs. "national" or "ethnic" vs. "mainstream." This study makes use of an integrated methodology and draws its theoretical tools from deconstruction, post-colonial studies, feminist theory, and Edouard Glissant's poetics of creolization. It is an interdisciplinary and multilingual work that puts in dialogue literature with philosophy and sociology and explores texts written in English, French, German, and Italian.
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Keinan, Shay Baruch. "Diasporas and Deliberative Democracy: A case study of Jewish diaspora involvement in constitutional deliberations in Israel." Phd thesis, Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/141459.

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The boundaries of citizenship are increasingly contested. The trend among scholars is to try to expand the state’s responsibilities and duties to include non-citizens in the relevant polity. Legal, social and political theorists ask whether citizenship can or should exist beyond the nation state and a defined territory. This debate closely relates to the burgeoning research regarding diaspora communities and their connections with their countries of origin or homelands (‘kin-states’). Diaspora communities have always maintained some level of interest in the affairs of their kin-states, but globalisation and advanced communication technologies have made it easier for people in the diaspora to engage in activities that are directed at the political and social life of their kin-states. Kin-state governments also increasingly extend their actions beyond their state borders and reach out to their diaspora communities in order to promote a specific definition of the national community and to reap political and economic gains. This trend of diaspora communities influencing political decisions in a country in which they do not reside raises a question of legitimacy in traditional liberal-democratic models of governance: why should diaspora people be allowed to affect political decisions in their kin-state when they may not have to bear the consequences of such decisions? As diaspora populations become more and more involved in political processes in their kin-states, modern democratic theories need to adapt in order to accommodate such encroachments on traditional democratic principles. In this thesis I analyse the challenges and legal implications created by the existence of large and influential diaspora communities in today’s globalised world. I connect diaspora theory with deliberative democratic theory, filling a gap in deliberative democratic literature. I contend that elite models of deliberative democracy can be useful in overcoming the challenges mentioned above. I examine the role of constitutional courts in a deliberative democracy and argue that they may be better situated to conduct deliberations in divided societies where ethnic and religious tensions prevent other democratic bodies from deliberating effectively. This is especially relevant when dealing with divided societies with large diasporic populations. To support these claims, I examine the Israeli Supreme Court. I analyse the Israeli Supreme Court’s unique deliberative features and explain how these features have enabled diaspora Jews (and other groups of non-citizens) to participate in the Israeli democratic process. I examine illustrative cases in which Jewish diaspora activists were involved in proceedings and deliberations at the Israeli Supreme Court. The case studies demonstrate that, under certain circumstances, diaspora communities can legitimately and effectively participate in political processes in their kin-states, challenge constitutional norms and influence government policies and laws.
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Humboldt, Carmen. "Afrikanische Diaspora in Deutschland." Berlin Logos, 2006. http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?id=2786089&prov=M&dokv̲ar=1&doke̲xt=htm.

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Cronemo, Ira. "Chilean Diaspora in Sweden." Thesis, Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för spanska, portugisiska och latinamerikastudier, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-88411.

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This paper presents investigations on integration of Chilean Diaspora in Sweden. Largegroups of Chilean refugees arriving in the 1970s and 1980s in multiple waves. Sweden wasknown as a country with a very generous refugee policy allowing numerous entries to stay.Reflections are made on the refugees in the different waves, the legal view on refugee statusand the division into political and economical refugees. Interviews with Chileans how theyintegrated are included. The questions analysed are if there is any differences in integrationprocess between first and second wave and what the impact was of the first wave beingpolitical and second wave economical refugees. The paper includes a short summary of thehistorical events leading to the flow of refugees, theories behind integration and why languageand identity is important factors in the integration process. The political refugees in the firstwave had a significant influence on the awareness among the Swedish population on thesituation for Chileans after the military coup.
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Books on the topic "Diaspora"

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Gouws, Tom. Diaspora. Pretoria: HAUM-Literêr, 1990.

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Karageōrgiou, Tasoula. Diaspora. Athēna: Plethron, 1994.

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Jacek, Leoński, and Wątróbski Leszek, eds. Diaspora. Szczecin: Uniwersytet Szczeciński, 2006.

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Singh, Amarjit, ed. Indian Diaspora. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6209-467-3.

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Jones, Demelza. Superdiverse Diaspora. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28388-9.

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Strohmaier, Alena. Medienraum Diaspora. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-24606-8.

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Somalingam, Thusinta. Doing Diaspora. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-12619-3.

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Media, Karmen. Domovina, diaspora. Frankfurt: Verlag für Bucher auf Bosnischen Sprachen, 2007.

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Adam, Walaszek, and Bartkowiak Danuta, eds. Polska diaspora. Kraków: Wydawn. Literackie, 2001.

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Ahmed, Ali Jimale. Diaspora blues. Lawrenceville, NJ: Red Sea Press, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Diaspora"

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Chatterjee, Sandra. "Diaspora/Diasporic." In The Routledge Handbook of Music and Migration, 50–52. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003309437-13.

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Vivekananthan, Jeevika, and Phil Connors. "Pacific Diaspora Humanitarianism: Diasporic Perspectives." In Understanding Diaspora Development, 111–36. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-97866-2_6.

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Patrut, Iulia-Karin. "Diaspora." In Handbuch Postkolonialismus und Literatur, 134–38. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05386-2_21.

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Kamali, Leila. "Diaspora." In The Routledge Companion to Twenty-First Century Literary Fiction, 169–79. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019. | Series: Routledge companions to literature series: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315880235-16.

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Hughes, Aaron W., and Russell T. McCutcheon. "Diaspora." In Religion in 50 Words, 76–78. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003140184-14.

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Feierstein, Liliana Ruth. "Diaspora." In Handbuch Jüdische Studien, 101–12. 2nd ed. Köln: Böhlau Verlag, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7788/9783412521400.101.

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Altman, Michael J. "Diaspora." In Hinduism in America, 141–66. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003283874-7.

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Baumann, Martin. "Diaspora." In Metzler Lexikon Religion, 251–54. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-00091-0_91.

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Huang, Wei-Jue. "Diaspora." In Encyclopedia of Tourism, 259. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01384-8_58.

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Fagan, Brian M., and Nadia Durrani. "Diaspora." In World Prehistory, 131–61. 11th ed. New York: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003332831-7.

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Conference papers on the topic "Diaspora"

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Tukhashvili, Mirian, and Mzia Shelia. "Diasporas In Georgia: Number and Structure." In V National Scientific Conference. Grigol Robakidze University, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.55896/978-9941-8-5764-5/2023-163-171.

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After the annexation of Georgia by Russia in early XIX century, the number and relative share of diaspora in the territory of Georgia grew steadily. It was one of the directions of the implementation of Russian policy in the Caucasus region that continued until the Second World War and was then followed by the process of slow reduction of the share of diasporas in the entire population, which accelerated exponentiallyin the post-Soviet period after the restoration of the independence of Georgia. The reason for this is that due to the disastrous deterioration of the living conditions, diasporas tend to go abroad at a higher pace than the representatives of the autochthonous Georgian and Abkhazian ethnicities do. The reduction of the number of diasporas was influenced by the process of integration of diasporas into the Georgian ethnos. In the post-Soviet period, the number of population of the main autochthonous Georgian ethnicity decreased by 512 thousand people, i.e. 13.5%, while the number of Abkhazians increased by 30%, and the total number of diasporas decreasedby 2.5 times. Great changes have taken place in the demographic structure of diasporas that was manifested in the aging of all diasporas. In the period of 1989-2014, the median age in the Russian diaspora increased from 36.7 years to 48.8 years, among Armenians - from 30.5 to 38.4 years, among Azerbaijanis - from 23.5 to 32.2 years, and in the total population of Georgia- from 30.7 to 37.7 years. In the post-Soviet period, Turkish, Arab, Iranian, Indian and Chinese diasporas were formed and tend to increase. The economic and cultural advancement of Georgia that occurred in the recent period provides a fertile ground for attracting the population of Asian countries for migration purposes. It becomes necessary to regulate immigration flows with a carefully thought - out policy. Keywords: Georgia, Diaspora, Ethnos, Population.
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Korolczuk, Danuta, and Jaroslaw Szewczyk. "Urban Diaspora." In Urban Heritage: Research, Interpretation, Education. Vilnius, Lithuania: Vilnius Gediminas Technical University Publishing House Technika, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.3846/uh20070925.25-31.

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"Kurdish Diaspora Issues." In rd Joint International Conference on Accounting, Business, Economics and Politics. Tishk International University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.23918/icabep2021p15.

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Bela, Baiba. "Cooperation with diaspora professionals working in international organisations as a resource for development." In 24th International Scientific Conference. “Economic Science for Rural Development 2023”. Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies. Faculty of Economics and Social Development, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.22616/esrd.2023.57.034.

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The diaspora is increasingly seen as a potential resource for development and the ways in which the diaspora is involved in the development of the country of origin are becoming more diverse. Review of scientific literature shows that there has been little research on the perspective of highly skilled diaspora professionals on cooperation benefits for their homelands, as well as diaspora engagement for home country development and for diaspora diplomacy are rarely linked. The article draws attention to the perspective of highly qualified Latvian diaspora professionals on cooperation with Latvia and the benefits to the country from such cooperation, linking cooperation for diaspora diplomacy and for development. The article will also examine whether the benefits of cooperation identified in other studies (mainly from the state viewpoint) coincide with the vision of diaspora professionals on such benefits. The data used in the analysis is derived from the study “The involvement of Latvian professionals in diaspora diplomacy and the potential of network diplomacy” and further analysis is possible thanks to the State research programme “New solutions to study demographic and migration processes for the development of Latvian society”. The main results illustrate the framework for cooperation between diaspora professionals and the public administration in Latvia, the most significant benefits of diaspora diplomacy and the benefits from diaspora engagement for development (the transfer of social capital, as well as the transfer of experience, knowledge, ideas and practices to the public administration and other sectors). The data reveals high readiness of highly skilled Latvian diaspora professionals to cooperate, and diverse benefits of cooperation for national development and international visibility of Latvia.
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Mortensen Steagall, Marcos, and Robert Pouwhare. "Introduction to LINK 2023." In LINK 2023. Tuwhera Open Access, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/link2023.v4i1.207.

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The 5th Edition of LINK 2023 International Conference of Practice-led Research and Global South, focusing on the Latin American Diaspora in Aotearoa New Zealand, aimed to advance the experiences of this community and their contributions to culture and knowledge. It examined their impact and influence on design, creativity, language, and diasporic knowledge, emphasising a Global South perspective and valuing decolonial epistemologies.
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Hill, Rodrigo. "Memories and Reveries: photography, memory and diaspora." In LINK 2023. Tuwhera Open Access, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/link2022.v4i1.200.

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This presentation aims to explore the intersection of photography with notions of memory and diaspora as catalysers for the development of a lens-based model of representation connected to affect, cultural perception and nostalgia. I will discuss and present my recent creative practice research project titled Desacoplado: Memórias e Devaneios (Displacement: Memories and Reveries) exhibited at the Auckland Museum as part of Toró: é tudo tanto group exhibition from March to October 2023. The project compiles personal archival imagery produced throughout the last twenty years, marking temporal points that preceded or at times ran in parallel with migration experiences to and in Aotearoa. Drawing on Stuart Hall’s notions on diaspora and Svetlana Boym’s take on nostalgia I constructed a theoretical model to support and inform my creative practice developments. Hall asserted that diaspora is surrounded by a sense of loss and connection while Boym discusses nostalgia as a feeling of loss and displacement. These distinctive concepts and views were useful to understand my own condition as an immigrant in Aotearoa, displaced from my home environment and yet part of an ongoing process of becoming. To address these concepts I started a process of reviewing my photographic archive, looking for imagery that could fit a family album of some kind, ranging from snap-shots, family photographs and archival imagery re-worked through montage, cropping, printing and picture framing strategies. This process covered multiple iterative stages and ways of selecting, compiling, curating and presenting the photographs. These methodological stages were useful to shape a model to address the ways notions of nostalgia and diaspora can be discussed and represented through lens-based and curatorial approaches, positioning photography at core as both practice and research methodology. This led to the compilation of 18 photographs, covering various personal moments and responses to diasporic experiences both in Aotearoa and my home country Brasil. My presentation at the 2023 LINK conference will aim to unpack some of the creative decisions, ideas and processes connected to Desacoplado: Memórias e Devaneios, highlighting the value of photography and creative practice as means to address complex research concepts.
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Filip, Nelli, and Natalia Branaşco. "Diaspora in the context of the economic development of the countries of origin." In International Scientific Conference “30 Years of Economic Reforms in the Republic of Moldova: Economic Progress via Innovation and Competitiveness”. Academy of Economic Studies of Moldova, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.53486/9789975155649.02.

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In the context of globalization, migration processes have a significant impact on the formation of the modern international system. In bilateral interstate relations, the diaspora acts as a connecting link. The policy of the state of residence in relation to the diaspora can influence foreign policy decisions, and is also an indicator of the attitude towards the homeland of the diaspora. States can use the resource of the diaspora for the realization of national interests, for example, in establishing relations with foreign partners. In this case, the diaspora provides an economic, cultural and linguistic presence. The diaspora is directly involved in the life of the host society and has the opportunity to create a positive image of their homeland, the level of participation in this is not only state, but can also be of a private nature.
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Best, Michael L., Thomas N. Smyth, Daniel Serrano-Baquero, and John Etherton. "Designing for and with diaspora." In the 27th international conference extended abstracts. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1520340.1520418.

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"The Kurdish Diaspora in Poland." In International Conference on Accounting, Business, Economics and Politics. Tishk International University, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.23918/icabep2022p56.

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Reynolds, Neal A., R. Mark Allen, Peter Muhling, and Charlie Gianfriddo. "Global Irish – Diversity of the diaspora." In Irish-type Zn-Pb deposits around the world. Irish Association for Economic Geology, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.61153/taym1799.

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The spectrum of zinc-lead deposits formed in basinal mineral systems encompasses VMS (volcanogenic massive sulphide), SHMS (shale-hosted massive sulphide), Irish-type and MVT (Mississippi valley Type) deposits. The platform carbonate-hosted part of that spectrum, the Irish-type and MVT deposits, has created the greatest challenges to pigeonholing approaches and the Irish Midland deposits have been variably considered as unique, “SedEx” variants, or MVT variants. In fact, the Irish-type spectrum of deposits can be considered as a global diaspora of diverse deposits that, nonetheless, show a number of distinct and economically significant characteristics in style and setting. For this reason, they warrant consideration as a discrete deposit type, though not in a neat pigeonhole, that is best considered in a mineralizing system context. The distinguishing features of Irish-type mineral systems can be considered in terms of source, trigger, pathway, trap, and preservation. The key features that distinguish Irish-type from ‘typical’ MVT and SHMS deposits are related to basin type and setting, timing of the mineralization event, mineralization style and chemistry, and deposit geometry. Empirically, these characteristic basin to deposit scale features overlap both MVT and SHMS but, together, are unique to Irish-type systems. This gives rise to criteria that can be applied to determine prospectivity of basins for Irish-type deposits and to target deposits within these basins. It is important to distinguish Irish-type from MVT systems because their economic characteristics are different. However, it is also important to recognise that there is great variability within the broad basinal carbonate-hosted zinc-lead deposit family and that each basin, and indeed each trend and deposit, are to some extent unique. It is therefore extremely important to avoid model-driven exploration and to develop a targeting understanding that acknowledges the model framework but is based on actual observations and data. To understand this diversity and targeting context, it is pertinent to consider the wide range of carbonate-hosted deposits that do not fit into the published MVT pigeonhole, including the Irish Midlands deposits; the Alpine deposits; deposits in the Basque-Cantabria Basin; deposits on the Gondwana margin including a number of deposits in North African,, southeast Turkey, Iran, and Duddar in Pakistan; the Early Cretaceous deposits on the Atlantic margin in Gabon; the Ordovician of the Sibumasu terrane (Tibet to Southeast Asia); Polaris in the Franklinian Basin; Nanisivik in the Borden Basin; and the Devonian Lennard Shelf deposits of Western Australia. All of these deposits occur in rift-sag basins with carbonate platforms, in some cases with multiple rift-sag cycles or with successor basins and, where constrained, the mineralization event is syn-basinal and typically related to early extension or inversion events. The deposits are stratabound and mostly tabular and continuous, often show strong direct control by extensional structures, are typically dominated by replacement, and commonly have significantly higher grades than ‘typical’ MVT deposits such as those in the mid-continent US, Silesia (Poland) and Pine Point (Canada).
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Reports on the topic "Diaspora"

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Bela, Baiba, and Inta Mieriņa. Diasporas organizāciju kapacitātes un vajadzību pētījums: pētījuma rezultāti. LU Akadēmiskais apgāds, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.22364/dop.23.

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Šobrīd diaspora ir tik daudzveidīga kā nekad agrāk – dažādas paaudzes, atšķirīgi izceļošanas iemesli, atšķirīga latviešu valodas prasme, daudzās mītnes zemēs latviešu dzīvesvietas un pulcēšanās vietas šķir lieli attālumi, pieaugošā dzīves dārdzība pasaulē ierobežo līdzekļus, ko var veltīt “latviešu lietām”. Kā diasporas organizācijas darbojas šajos apstākļos? Ar kādiem izaicinājumiem katrā pasaules reģionā un savās mītnes zemēs tās saskaras? Detalizēta un aktuāla informācija par diasporas organizācijām būtu lietderīga, izstrādājot datos balstītu plānu darbam ar diasporu, pamatojot nepieciešamo līdzekļu apmēru, plānojot vizītes pie diasporas, pasākumus ar vēstniecību, Latvijas Investīciju un attīstības aģentūras, citu Latvijas valsts iestāžu vai pašvaldības pārstāvju līdzdalību, kā arī plānojot atbalsta pasākumus un grantu konkursus diasporai. Lai apzinātu diasporas organizācijas un neformālās domubiedru grupas, gūtu dziļāku ieskatu to ikdienas darbībā un noskaidrotu, kādi ir to resursi un vajadzības, ar kādām grūtībām tās saskaras, un izprastu, kādas ir to nākotnes iespējas, LU Diasporas un migrācijas pētījumu centrs veica apjomīgu pētījumu. Pētījuma mērķis ir izpētīt diasporas organizāciju daudzveidību, tām pieejamos resursus, organizāciju kapacitāti un aktuālās vajadzības.
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Bazzi, Samuel, Andreas Ferrara, Martin Fiszbein, Thomas Pearson, and Patrick Testa. The Confederate Diaspora. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, June 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w31331.

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Rodríguez-Montemayor, Eduardo. Diaspora Direct Investment Policy: Options for Development. Inter-American Development Bank, September 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0008424.

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In today's globalized world, goods and capital are flowing as never before. The movement of people across borders has also enlarged significantly. About 215 million people live away from their home country and many members of such Diasporas are prospering abroad and are eager to extend such success by investing in their homeland. In this paper we explore the impacts of Diaspora Direct Investment (DDI) on international development, i.e. we look at how direct investments from foreign companies connected to Diaspora members (i.e. diaspora-owned firms or firms with diaspora members in the top management) boost productive activities in the home country of such people. One of the main advantages of DDI is that it is more stable than other types of FDI, particularly during unfavorable economic conditions, because of the emotional connections of diaspora members to their country of origin. Moreover, such companies engaging in DDI are often seen as the ¿first movers¿ into a country due to potential advantages they have in terms of knowing the culture and having social networks in the home country. This may act as a catalyst for further investment from other companies by providing market and operational information about the homeland to potential investors. We focus particularly on the experience of Latin America and analyze policy options to design comprehensive diaspora strategies that maximize investments, institutional development and the flow of talent and ideas. Such strategies, which would ideally involve Diaspora members in their formulation, can give Diaspora entrepreneurs support in terms of networking, mentoring and training (e.g. business incubators). Nonetheless, a more mature stage of diaspora engagement would be achieved with the development of venture capital funds as well as other sources of financing (e.g. matching funds). The smart utilization of digital technologies for connecting Diasporas empowers all such policy options.
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Wenner, Mark D. Can Diaspora Bonds be Used in the Caribbean? Inter-American Development Bank, October 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0000181.

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Filanowski, Michael E. Hezbollah's Passport: Religion, Culture, and the Lebanese Diaspora. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, April 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ad1002558.

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Balda, Taras, and Halyna Kondryn. Дисидентський рух в Україні крізь призму діаспорної публіцистики. Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, March 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2023.52-53.11718.

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The article’s subject – journalism of Ukrainian authors in diaspora publications on the topic of the dissident movement in soviet Ukraine. Trends of diaspora environment’s perception of variations and forms of Ukrainian intelligentsia and public figures’ resistance to totalitarian system in 1960-1980 are emphasized in the article. The diaspora journalists’ attitude to dissident movement’s tasks and perspectives in Ukraine are considered in the article, as well as disagreements in evaluation of perspectives of Ukrainian statehood’s restoration are stated. Two diaspora views’ polemics are emphasized: one of them strongly did not perceive peaceful methods of resistance to soviet system, the other – claimed that Ukrainians in Ukraine have a right to choose the methods and ways of fight for restoration of independency themselves. The practical achievements of such polemics are emphasized in the summary. Key words: diaspora; diaspora publications; journalism; dissident movement; liberation struggle.
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Anyanwu, Lawrence A. Supplanting Chinese Influence in Africa: The U.S. African Diaspora. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, March 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada560060.

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Bela, Baiba, Kaspars Bērziņš, Valdis Krebs, Inta Mieriņa, and Anete Vingre. Latvijas zinātnieku diaspora: sadarbības tīkli un iespējas : pētījuma rezultāti. Latvijas Universitātes Sociālo zinātņu fakultātes Sociālo un politisko pētījumu institūta Diasporas un migrācijas pētījumu centrs, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22364/lzdsti.

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Simpson Reeves, Laura. Cultural understandings of responsibility amongst Samoan diaspora in Greater Brisbane. The University of Queensland, May 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.14264/1222d23.

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Lacarte, Valerie, Jordi Amaral, Diego Chaves-González, Ana María Sáiz, and Jeremy Harris. Migration, Integration, and Diaspora Engagement in the Caribbean: A Policy Review. Inter-American Development Bank, March 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0004769.

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Migration has long been part of Caribbean nations reality. Often discussed in the context of emigration to North America and Europe, movements to and within the Caribbean are an equally important part of its history. In recent decades, climate change, natural disasters, and shifts in global mobility patterns have reshaped the migration landscape in the Caribbean. This document, produced by the Inter-American Bank (IDB) and the Migration Policy Institute (MPI), presents a policy review on migration in nine Caribbean countries, outlining challenges and opportunities for the integration of the migrant population and a successful engagement with diasporas to advance the development of the region.
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