Abstract
The study of diasporic politics compels us not only to deessentialize and reconceptualize the concept of the nation because of the mobility that diasporic politics adds to the seemingly circumscribed character of the politics of the nation-state, but also to do away with any monolithic notion of diaspora. A diasporic protopolitical system may take various forms pertaining to time and space: periods of internal crisis, political turmoil, electoral campaigns, invasion or wars, and the national context of such a system’s incorporation.
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