This paper investigates the communication practices of Nigerian Diaspora members in Britain. It examines how they mitigate longing, and negotiate belonging in the distance. It studies their choices of media in communicating, and examines the factors that shape those choices over space and time. The paper notes that the decision on the media to use is shifty, as it is largely dependent on personal need, ever changing technologies of communication and the disparity in development between homeland and hostland, amongst other factors. Emerging in the circumstance is the fact of mitigation of distance through the use of the different media, both old and new, either in their individual variations, or from their point of convergence
The increasing transnational migration of people and availability of homeland newspapers on the web ...
Purpose: This paper aims to explore the connectivity between social media use, access to migrant net...
Postings generated during 'natural' online interactions among geographically dispersed/ diasporic Ni...
Diasporic discourses reflect the sense of being part of an ongoing transnational network that includ...
This research investigates Internet uses and the potentials for transnational connections, for the d...
This research investigates Internet uses and the potentials for transnational connections, for the d...
This thesis originally sets out to interrogate Brah’s conception of diaspora as the site of everyday...
This paper examines the Nigerian Diaspora members’ engagement with Nigeria, as a nation-state. The p...
This study primarily examines the dynamics of the long-term relationship between the BBC World Servi...
This article explores the patterns of transnational audiences’ engagement with global media in a dig...
The increasing migration, powered by advanced transportation, information and communication technolo...
“The movement of large masses of people across national boundaries, technologies that deliver modern...
The diversification of African broadcast media into online services provides a vehicle for African ...
Purpose: This paper aims to explore the connectivity between social media use, access to migrant net...
This study deals with the issue of migrants and their use of media to facilitate integration and neg...
The increasing transnational migration of people and availability of homeland newspapers on the web ...
Purpose: This paper aims to explore the connectivity between social media use, access to migrant net...
Postings generated during 'natural' online interactions among geographically dispersed/ diasporic Ni...
Diasporic discourses reflect the sense of being part of an ongoing transnational network that includ...
This research investigates Internet uses and the potentials for transnational connections, for the d...
This research investigates Internet uses and the potentials for transnational connections, for the d...
This thesis originally sets out to interrogate Brah’s conception of diaspora as the site of everyday...
This paper examines the Nigerian Diaspora members’ engagement with Nigeria, as a nation-state. The p...
This study primarily examines the dynamics of the long-term relationship between the BBC World Servi...
This article explores the patterns of transnational audiences’ engagement with global media in a dig...
The increasing migration, powered by advanced transportation, information and communication technolo...
“The movement of large masses of people across national boundaries, technologies that deliver modern...
The diversification of African broadcast media into online services provides a vehicle for African ...
Purpose: This paper aims to explore the connectivity between social media use, access to migrant net...
This study deals with the issue of migrants and their use of media to facilitate integration and neg...
The increasing transnational migration of people and availability of homeland newspapers on the web ...
Purpose: This paper aims to explore the connectivity between social media use, access to migrant net...
Postings generated during 'natural' online interactions among geographically dispersed/ diasporic Ni...