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3rd Edition

Global Diasporas
An Introduction




ISBN 9781032188454
Published July 8, 2022 by Routledge
234 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations

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Book Description

Following its initial publication in 1997, Global Diasporas: An Introduction was central to the emergence of diaspora studies and quickly established itself as the leading textbook in the field. This expanded and fully-revised 25th anniversary edition adds two new chapters on incipient diasporas and diaspora engagement while carefully clarifying the changing meanings of the concept of diaspora and incorporating updated statistics and new interpretations seamlessly into the original text. The book has also been made more student-friendly with illustrations, thought-provoking questions, and guides to further reading.

The book features insightful case studies and compares a wide range of diasporas, including Jewish, Armenian, African, Sikh, Chinese, British, Indian, Lebanese, Afghan and Caribbean peoples. This edition also retains Cohen’s rich historical and sociological descriptions and clear yet elegant writing, as well as his modified concept of ‘diasporic rope’ linking different features of diasporas.

This updated edition of the definitive textbook in the field will be an indispensable guide for students and instructors seeking to explore the complex issues of diaspora, migration and identity.

Table of Contents

1. The study of diasporas: a guide

Simple definitions of diaspora

A complex idea of diaspora: nine strands of a diasporic rope

A typology of diasporas

Diasporic actors and activism

Conclusion

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

2. Transcending the prototype: rethinking the Jewish diaspora

The Jewish diaspora as prototype

‘Babylon’ as a site of oppression

‘Babylon’ as a site of creativity

The Jewish diaspora and Christianity

The Jewish diaspora and Islam

Ashkenazi fates

Conclusion

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

3. Victim diasporas: Africans and Armenians

Origins of the African diaspora

The social construction of African homelands

Return and other aspects of the African diaspora

The creation of the Armenian diaspora

After the massacres: Armenians at home and abroad

Soviet Armenia and after

Conclusion

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

4. Labour and imperial diasporas: indentured Indians and the British

Indentured Indians: a new system of slavery?

Indentured women

The songs of Ramayana and political outcomes

Imperial diasporas

The settlement of the British Empire

British emigration from below: the role of ‘gentlewomen’

The end of the dominion diaspora

Effects on British identity

Conclusion

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

5. Trade diasporas: Chinese and Lebanese

The making of the Chinese trade diaspora

The Chinese as minorities

The great Lebanese emigration

The Lebanese diaspora: butterflies and caterpillars

Conclusion

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

6. Deterritorialized diasporas: the black Atlantic and other cases

The Caribbean: migration and diaspora

African-Caribbeans in the USA

African-Caribbeans in the UK

Caribbean peoples in the Netherlands and France

The black Atlantic thesis

Other deterritorialized diasporas

Conclusion

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

7. Incipient diasporas: Afghans and other refugees and displaced people

Workers in the Gulf states

Turkish guestworkers in Germany

Incipient diasporas and ‘new diasporas’

The making of an incipient diaspora: Afghans

Refugees and displaced people as reservoirs for incipient diasporas

Incipiency and contiguity: the dimensions of diaspora formation

Conclusion

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

8. Dreams and realities of a homeland: Zionists and Sikhs

Birth traumas: can Israel be a ‘normal’ state?

Israel and the diaspora: a tangled relationship

Yordim, sabras and transnationals

Israel and the US Jewish diaspora: attitudinal shifts

A Sikh identity

Sikh origins

Amritsar, the Golden Temple and the lure of homeland

Post-Khalistani visions: the politics of recognition and a global qaum

Conclusion

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

9. Diasporic engagement: state and non-state actors

Home governments and diasporas: from rejection to adoption

Host governments and diasporas: from fear to accommodation

International agencies/INGOs and diasporas as agents of development

Diasporas and homeland community engagement

Diasporas in conflict and post-conflict situations

Conclusion

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

10. Conclusion: mutating meanings of diaspora

Jews and Greeks in classical times

Diaspora in early Christianity

The expanded concept

The emergent field of diaspora studies

Decoupling diaspora from homeland

Applied diaspora studies

Diasporas and complexity

Conclusion: between self-declaration and a Procrustean bed

Further reading

Questions to think about

Notes

References

 

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Author(s)

Biography

Robin Cohen is Emeritus Professor of Development Studies at the University of Oxford, UK. He has published widely on migration, globalization, social identity and diasporas. He is the author of numerous books, most recently Refugia: Radical Solutions to Mass Displacement (with Nicholas Van Hear, Routledge, 2019), Migration: The Movement of Humankind from Prehistory to the Present (Andre Deutsch, 2019), and Encountering Difference: Diasporic Traces, Creolizing Spaces (with Olivia Sheringham, Polity Press, 2016). He is also editor of several volumes, including the Routledge Handbook of Diaspora Studies (with Carolin Fischer, Routledge, 2018) and The Cambridge Survey of World Migration (Cambridge University Press, 2010).

Reviews

Praise for Previous Editions

Cohen’s erudition is vast … his interpretations are solid and well informed. By and large one can only marvel at the scope of Cohen’s learning and the richness of his vocabulary.

Mark J. Miller, University of Delaware, USA, Journal of World History

Cohen’s book offers a timely overview of diasporas. The book is also engagingly written, with Cohen’s personal anecdotes adding zing rather than self-indulgence to the analysis.

Robert C. Smith, Columbia University, USA, Political Studies Quarterly

A succinct but satisfying book … as Cohen convincingly demonstrates here, the diaspora wave is well and truly upon us.

Sarah Ansari, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK, Times Higher Educational Supplement

Robin Cohen’s delineation of common features associated with diaspora, and his proposition of ‘ideal types’, are important conceptual tools for use in systematic theorizing and research about diaspora, no matter the geographic location.

Jualynne E. Dodson, Michigan State University, USA, Athens Journal of Social Sciences