0 a group of people who spread from one original country to other countries, or the act of spreading in this way: --
France's population of Arabic origin is the continent's largest, drawing on Francophone diasporas from North Africa and Lebanon.
The Hmong diaspora evolved against the backdrop of terror that unfolded in their homeland.
Nearly two-fifths of Spain's foreign residents come from the Latin diaspora - mostly from Ecuador and Colombia.
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 --
Thus, we need to explore if diaspora embodies the potential to dislodge the politics of return.
Is diaspora the most appropriate term to describe the situation of internationally recognized refugees with a right of return?
As for identity, one could of course speak of 'social identity', as has been done by various historians working on multiple identities or diasporas.
Such studies can be located within the burgeoning diaspora literatures.
The indigenous voice in the black diaspora appears much later.
This transnational part of his outlook was easy to accept for those with a diaspora-wide perspective.
The diaspora label usually assumes cultural and linguistic difference between places that give form to a diasporic consciousness and identity and places of origin.
In it he at once claims the maximal terrain for diaspora studies and restricts the scope of the volume sharply.