The interest in our diaspora to assisting with our development drive is mirroring a path that has been well trod for decades by so many other countries. There is much we can learn and by which we can save time and money. The following is excerpted from “Routed” magazine, and is taken from the Greek experience.
“In the current era, the scrutinizing of the interrelationship between homeland and diaspora needs to include three important aspects. The first is that diasporas can only be seen through a transnational prism, affected by a multitude of goals, actors and agendas, with a capacity to affect economic and political developments in the homeland. The second is that the rapidly expanding technological innovations and the wide use of a variety of platforms, especially in the pandemic era, have upended the patterns of human communication and societal synergies. The third is that the networks between diasporas, as well as the networks between homeland and diaspora, follow different interactive patterns in comparison to previous eras, and this can be associated, to a great extent, with the digitization of human interaction.
According to academic literature, diasporas have the capacity to influence the homeland negatively through, for example, conflictual claims and radicalization of certain groups, or positively through partaking in fundraising activities, humanitarian causes, and business investments. Certainly, information technology has reshaped the ways that these interactions take place. The flexible character of the internet contributes to the formation, configuration and dissemination of agendas, goals, ideas, and networks. Through the employment of information technology, diasporas have the capacity to influence policy changes easily and quickly, to show their solidarity through lobbying, and to strengthen social bonds, professional networks and relationships.
These new and altered modes of homeland-diaspora communication set a different framework for scrutiny for migration and diaspora researchers. Using the Greek Diaspora Project at South East European Studies at the University of Oxford (SEESOX) as a case study, there is a firm realization that there is a necessity to develop technological tools responding to the demands of the current era, such as the Greek Diaspora Digital Map. The goal of this tool is to promote the interaction between the country of origin and its diaspora, and also among the diaspora itself. The map constitutes a user-friendly tool, through which people can access the rich information on different diasporic organisations and filter them according to the country they are located in, their activity profile, and also their connection to a specific geographical origin in their origin country. The essential benefit of technology in facilitating and analysing diasporic networks is it can contain not only organisations that traditionally exist physically, but also newly created organisations with only a digital presence – a growing trend. There can be multiple benefits from the usage of the digital map that can be placed in the wider framework of much-needed diasporic engagement with the homeland, particularly due to the economic crisis.
Diasporans of older generations participate in diaspora communities, for example cultural or professional associations, in those connected with church, mandirs and Masjids, or in associations based on regional origins. These have been the traditional ways of staying in touch with their national and cultural identity and traditions. Newer generations also choose to connect through online communities. Technology can be an indispensable medium for interaction between globally scattered communities. It can bring diasporans with a specific cause together (i.e. funding schools abroad) in an online forum, or help them mobilise for economic, philanthropic, or political purposes in the homeland. Especially during the pandemic, there have been numerous examples that demonstrate diasporic engagement facilitated through information technology. Technology has been progressively nurturing diasporic networks. Especially during this unparalleled pandemic crisis, it has assisted recent emigrants and diasporans to remain in touch with their loved ones, to retain social bonds to their homeland and psychological links to their identity. In fact, the impact of technology since the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic has further eradicated boundaries and helped in the creation of new diaspora groups, which offered support, connectivity and valuable information to communities in need.”