0 a group of people who spread from one original country to other countries, or the act of spreading in this way:
Nearly two-fifths of Spain's foreign residents come from the Latin diaspora - mostly from Ecuador and Colombia.
The Hmong diaspora evolved against the backdrop of terror that unfolded in their homeland.
France's population of Arabic origin is the continent's largest, drawing on Francophone diasporas from North Africa and Lebanon.
1 the Jews living in different parts of the world outside Israel, or the various places outside Israel in which they live
2 the scattering of people from their original country to other places
He is part of an Indian diaspora that is rising to lead banks in Europe and the U. S.
People in a diaspora are often more religious than in their homeland.
We now have a Western diaspora and that diaspora is bringing Iranians and Indians together.
They regulated the social and religious affairs of all the Jews in the diaspora.
These interests include diaspora groups that claim the refugee for themselves, and international relief organisations and charitable agencies that speak on behalf of the refugee.
This poem suggests an ' ' inner folding' ' of border effects between ' ' this place' ' and that ' ' hometown,' ' which accompanies the experience of identity disorientation in diaspora.
The complexities and ambivalence of the two ' ' hemispheres' ' are associated with defining diaspora identities among different cultural passages.
Moreover, with the issue of international violence becoming increasingly alarming, academic attention (not just political) should be given to the phenomenon of the military diaspora.