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5 - Ethiopian Diasporans in South Africa: Dynamics of Migration, Opportunities, and Challenges

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 May 2024

Shimelis Bonsa Gulema
Affiliation:
Stony Brook University, State University of New York
Hewan Girma
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Mulugeta F. Dinbabo
Affiliation:
University of the Western Cape, South Africa
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Summary

Background/Contextualization

Given the huge movement of people and growing interconnectedness in a globalized world, discourses around migration increasingly turn to the study of diasporas (e.g., Dinbabo 2022; Dinbabo and Badewa 2020; Dinbabo and Nyasulu 2015). The past few decades have witnessed growth in the quantities, variety, and activity of diasporas, as well as in diasporans’ investment in both their countries of origin and their host countries (IOM 2013). According to the IOM (2020, 2), as of 2020 the number of global migrants had reached an estimated figure of 272 million, representing about 3.5% of the global population. In addition, the global number of refugees and asylum seekers rose by about 13 million between 2010 and 2017, accounting for nearly a quarter of the growth in the number of all foreign migrants (IOM 2020, 2).

A number of scholars argue that diasporans are significant actors not only in national, bilateral, and global matters but also in questions of migration and development relating to their countries of origin (Brubaker 2005; Demir 2015; Harald 2008; Peck 2006; Safran 1991). Indeed, a not inconsiderable amount of attention has been given to the roles that diasporas play in connecting community members and contributing to civil society organizations, self-help groups, development associations, government agencies, and the private sector (Belebema and Mensah 2017; Dinbabo and Carciotto 2015; Harald 2008; IOM 2013; Sithole, Tevera, and Dinbabo 2022). Diasporas play an essential part in social and economic development in both countries of origin and host countries (Peck 2006). Diasporas enable societies that are vibrant, ground-breaking, and open to international trade, investment, talent, and knowledge to develop these traits further (Harald 2008). Some diasporic communities participate in political activities that fuel animosities between communities and ethnic groups, in some cases funding insurgencies that cause havoc and destruction. Moreover, a number of diasporas have made it possible for nationalism, hostilities, and polarization to extend across nations and regions (Adamson 2005; Lyons 2007). Ethiopian diaspora groups in USA, Europe, Australia, and Canada, for example, have recently become engaged in nationalist movements within Ethiopia itself, spreading propaganda and fundraising on behalf of the Ethiopian political parties.

This chapter studies Ethiopian diasporans in South Africa, asking how they have developed and what roles—if any—they play in matters in Ethiopia.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Global Ethiopian Diaspora
Migrations, Connections, and Belongings
, pp. 126 - 149
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2024

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