2014
DOI: 10.1111/glob.12052
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Tamil diaspora and the political spaces of second‐generation activism in Switzerland

Abstract: In this article, we study the emergence of the political spaces of activism of second‐generation Swiss Tamils resulting from a critical event – the suffering of Tamils during and after the final battle in early 2009 of a civil war in northern Sri Lanka that had lasted for decades. We contend that we can explain the geographies of newly emerging second‐generation activism committed to achieving Tamil Eelam through two factors. These are first, this generation's multiple senses of belonging both to Switzerland a… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(42 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
(30 reference statements)
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“…During a cease-fire, diaspora activists gained access to the militant Liberal Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to exert moderate influence, but when war resumed the space for moderation shrank (Orjuela 2008). The 2009 final battle, which crushed the LTTE, also became a critical event for diaspora mobilization (Hess and Kopf 2014, see also Orjuela and Goodwin in this volume). Homeland crises can inspire renewed interest in later diaspora generations, as in the Afghani diaspora (Brinkerhoff 2004, Kerlin 2008), higher remittance rates as among Somalis abroad (Carling et al 2012), and vibrant online activism (Brinkerhoff 2009).…”
Section: This Article Builds On My Earlier Comparative Work On Path-dmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…During a cease-fire, diaspora activists gained access to the militant Liberal Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to exert moderate influence, but when war resumed the space for moderation shrank (Orjuela 2008). The 2009 final battle, which crushed the LTTE, also became a critical event for diaspora mobilization (Hess and Kopf 2014, see also Orjuela and Goodwin in this volume). Homeland crises can inspire renewed interest in later diaspora generations, as in the Afghani diaspora (Brinkerhoff 2004, Kerlin 2008), higher remittance rates as among Somalis abroad (Carling et al 2012), and vibrant online activism (Brinkerhoff 2009).…”
Section: This Article Builds On My Earlier Comparative Work On Path-dmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Once these men get their situation in administrative order, women and children join through family reunification programs. Beyond a more unfavorable political and economic context compared to Vietnamese refugees, Kurdish and Tamil refugees were often affected by an increasingly unfavorable societal context with respect to asylum; suspicion with regards to their reasons for exile, as well as assumptions that their origin was associated with ethnic conflict and alleged terrorist organizations such as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the Partiya Karkerên Kurdistanê (PKK) (Hess & Korf, 2014;Tattolo & Wihtol de Wenden, 2016).…”
Section: Situating Racism and Racialization In The Swiss Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second-generation migrants are a significant presence in many European countries and, in recent years, studies on their integration into these societies often also address the question of transnationalism (Bolognani 2014;Fokkema et al 2012;Hess and Korf 2014). One branch of transnational research considers the phenomenon of 'roots' or 'heritage' migration, namely second-generation migration to the ancestral home (Christou 2006;Fokkema 2011;Grasmuck and Hinze 2016;Potter 2005;Wessendorf 2013).…”
Section: Transnational Migrantsmentioning
confidence: 99%