Page 177 - Berkshire Encyclopedia Of World History Vol Two
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            cultural distance from host societies and are viewed as  the twentieth century. As many as 65 million Europeans
            unwelcome expressions of U.S. imperial power by local  migrated to the Americas, and as many as 40 million Chi-
            populations.                                        nese and Indians left their home countries between 1815
                                                                and 1930. Most of the Indian migrants and a substantial
            Imperial Diasporas                                  minority of the European and Chinese migrants traveled
            As in the case of the Greek Mediterranean two millennia  under some form of indenture, labor contract, or debt
            earlier, mobile merchants often functioned as the van-  peonage. The so-called proletarian mass migrations are
            guard of empire building in the European empires    nevertheless considered voluntary.Workers followed the
            formed after 1500. Dutch, Spanish, Portugese, German,  money in a global labor market that as often offered tem-
            French, and British colonists created settlements around  porary and seasonal employment as opportunities for
            the world that reproduced their own cultures rather than  permanent settlement, especially by the latter years of the
            adapting the customs and languages of the natives   twentieth century.
            among whom they lived.                                Chinese, Indian, and southern and eastern European
              Diasporas formed through empire building often had  migrants were especially likely to consider themselves
            significant state support, with the government organizing,  sojourners who intended to return home again. Perhaps
            directing, and financing migrations of their citizens to  as many as 90 percent of Chinese and Indian laborers
            strengthen some of their colonies demographically. From  returned from New World,Asian, or Africa plantations or
            the seventeenth century onward, actions taken by the  mines. Among Italian laborers in agriculture and indus-
            British state—land policies that forced poor Scots or Irish  try, rates of return were typically over 50 percent. Male
            from their fields and crofts, export of prisoners, spon-  laborers in all these groups left home, returned, and then
            sored migration of female spinsters—encouraged migra-  departed again, often several times over the course of
            tion to its colonies, especially in Canada and Australia.  their lives. Recent research suggests that the constant cir-
            Its military and government bureaucracies also organized  culation of mobile men, along with the often violently
            the migration of soldiers, civil servants, and teachers to  hostile reactions of native workers and host societies, rein-
            work in Africa, India, and other parts of Asia.While many  forced sojourners’ attachment to their homelands.
            so employed expected to return home again, and culti-  Between 1880 and 1930, laws passed in Canada, the
            vated a pride in their Britishness that held them aloof  United States, and Australia to exclude or limit the migra-
            from colonized populations, imperial migrants did some-  tion of all contract laborers, to prevent the settlement of
            times also acquire an attachment to their new homelands  Chinese and Indians, and to limit the number of workers
            and settle more permanently.This was true for colonial-  entering from Italy, Greece, and the Balkans had the same
            ists from other European countries as well. In both  effect. The result was heightened ethnic and racial con-
            French Algeria and British Rhodesia, settlers who had  sciousness among even the descendants of workers who
            come as empire builders stayed on and violently opposed  settled permanently abroad. Many have maintained dis-
            independence under native African rule after World War  tinctive ethnic identities and a continued awareness of
            II, a fact that suggests the complex relationship between  their foreign origins over several generations. Some schol-
            imperial culture, home, and host societies in imperial  ars now refer to these groups, too, as diasporas, although
            diasporas.                                          that labeling is controversial.


            Proletarian or Labor Diasporas                      Debates about Migration,
            The emancipation of slaves and the industrialization of  Ethnicity, and Diaspora
            cities in Europe and the Americas in the nineteenth cen-  Few scholars would argue that every migration generates
            tury provoked vast new migrations that continued into  a diaspora. Many, however, accept a wider and more gen-
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