A colonial diaspora is a group of people that live outside of their ancestral homeland because their ancestors migrated as part of a
colonial-era practice. Depending on the source, the term refers to either people originating from the colonizing group or those whose ancestors were shifted under colonial pressure.[2][3][4][5]
During the
colonial era that ended after
World War 2, Europeans migrated around their global empires, with significant groups settling in the Western Hemisphere and
Australasia.[8][9]
Over 1 million Indian people were
taken as indentured servants to other parts of the world during the British Empire, primarily to the Caribbean and
Southeast Africa.[10][11] Because they had left South Asia before the establishment of the current independent nations of that region, they were often denied citizenship in South Asia,[12] and because they were also sometimes expelled or otherwise treated like non-citizens in their host countries, some of them or their families were forced to migrate twice.[13]
Postcolonial diasporas
Postcolonial diasporas are similar to colonial diasporas in that both groups often migrated in a way that addressed the global demand for labor.[14][15] Postcolonial diasporas tend to split into those who have migrated as part of a "
post-national" clique that has economic dealings with multiple countries, and those who have migrated out of a sense of exile.[16]
This article needs additional or more specific
categories. Please
help out by
adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles.(November 2023)