In this Issue
- Volume 15, Number 2/3, Fall/Winter 2006
- Issue
- Special Issue: Creating the Ethiopian Diaspora: Perspectives from Across the Disciplines
- Special Issue Editors: Kay Kaufman Shelemay, Harvard University, Steven Kaplan, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Diaspora is dedicated to the multidisciplinary study of the history, culture, social structure, politics and economics of both the traditional diasporas – Armenian, Greek, and Jewish – and those transnational dispersions which in the past three decades have chosen to identify themselves as ‘diasporas.’ These encompass groups ranging from the African-American to the Ukrainian-Canadian, from the Caribbean-British to the new East and South Asian diasporas.
published by
University of Toronto Pressviewing issue
Volume 15, Number 2/3, Fall/Winter 2006Editorial Board
Editor
Khachig Tölölyan, Wesleyan University
Editorial Board
Kim D. Butler, Rutgers University
Rey Chow, Duke University
David Konstan, Brown University
Vassilis Lambropoulos, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Neil Lazarus, University of Warwick, UK
Ellen Rooney, Brown University
Yossi Shain, Tel Aviv University/Georgetown
Advisory Board
Lila Abu-Lughod, Columbia University
Anny Bakalian, City University of New York
Hazel Carby, Yale University
Kwok Bun Chan, Hong Kong Baptist University
Robin Cohen, Oxford University
Terry Cochran, Université de Montréal
Anne Marie Corrigan, University of Toronto Press
Evelyn Hu-DeHart, Brown University
Gregory Jusdanis, Ohio State University
John Lie, University of California-Berkeley
Rosemary Marangoly George, University of California-San Diego
Hamid Naficy, Northwestern University
Susan Pattie, University College, London
David Rapoport, University of California-Los Angeles
William Safran, University of Colorado-Boulder
Dominique Schnapper, Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France
Gabriel Sheffer, Hebrew University
Gayatri Spivak, Columbia University
Leonard Tennenhouse, Duke University
Steven Vertovec, Max Planck Institute