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Tunisian diaspora

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The Tunisian diaspora refers to people of Tunisian origin living outside that country. It is the direct result of the strong rate of emigration which Tunisia has experienced since its independence in 1956.[1] In the 1960s and 70s, the favourable economic situation in France increased the phenomenon. The beginning of the 1980s saw the clear development of a Tunisian community in that country as a result of the large number of people (more than 22,000).[2]

Population

In 2012 the number of Tunisians residing abroad was numbered at 1,223,213 individuals,[3] of which 84.4% were living in Europe. However, this official figure appears to be lower than reality because of the inadequate recording of migration statistics.[4] Thus it is not rare to discover a single data point represents all the members of a family or to discover duplicates. Among the citizens which are underrepresented in the statistics are the third generation in France (according to one estimate, only one in ten of these have been recorded) and the children of mixed-race parents. The illegal immigrants (very numerous in Italy for example) are by definition not included in the official statistics.

625,864 have settled in France[3] - one of the most important foreign communities in the country - and two thirds of them hold double citizenship. They are concentrated mostly in the large cities (40% in Paris, 12% in Lyons and 8% in Marseilles, with smaller communities in Nice, Bordeaux, Toulouse, Strasbourg, and Lille). Sonia Mabrouk connects this clumping phenomenon with the urban origin of the Tunisian migrants (Tunis and the littoral), but also with the nature of the different waves of migration. Thus the 1970s mainly saw the arrival of migrants from the south of Tunisia. These settled in the Rhône Valley and at Paris which offered the greatest number of opportunities for employment and created connections with their places of origin, which subsequently encouraged other migrants to settle in the same places. According to INSEE, 1.4% of children born in 2011 in Metropolitan France (i.e. 11,466 of 792,996) had a father born in Tunisia, with the greatest proportion in the departments of Alpes-Maritimes (8.6%), Var (4.5%), Seine-Saint-Denis (3.9%), Rhône (3.7%), Val-de-Marne (3.4%), and Bouches-du-Rhône (2.4%).[5]

There are 91,584 Tunisians in the other Maghreb countries, 59,616 in other Arab countries, 36,075 in North America, 2143 in Subsaharan Africa and 1383 in Asia (excepting the Arab countries); 348 Tunisians are accounted for in Australia.[3]

Country Total
Europe
1,032,412
 France 668,668
 Italy 189,092
 Germany 30,696
 Belgium and  Luxembourg 24,810
  Switzerland 16,667
 Netherlands 8,776
 Sweden 8,704
 United Kingdom 7,797
 Austria 7,083
 Spain 3,271
 Denmark 2,189
 Russia and  Ukraine 1,614
 Norway 1,606
 Romania 1,352
 Finland 1,079
 Turkey 431
North-Africa and Middle-east
271,900
 Israel[6] 120,700
 Libya 68,952
 Saudi Arabia 20,017
 United Arab Emirates 19,361
 Algeria 16,774
 Qatar 7,827
 Yemen 5,215
 Iraq 4,185
 Oman 3,964
 Morocco 3,445
 Kuwait 3,164
 Syria 1,800
 Bahrain 1,480
 Lebanon 1,228
 Jordan 851
Americas
36,075
 Canada 25,645
 United States 15,308
Subsaharan Africa
2,143
 South Africa 317
Asia
1,383
 Japan 624
 Indonesia 342
 China 306
Total 1,223,213
Source : Communauté tunisienne à l'étranger en 2012 (Office of Tunisians Abroad)[3]

Demographics

Statistics of the Office of Tunisians Abroad show more than 128,000 Tunisian families in Europe with a concentration in France and Germany. Young Tunisians (less than 16 years of age) represent 25% of the Tunisian community abroad.[7] Thus there is currently a rejuvenation of the Tunisian diaspora which is now in its third generation. Women represent nearly 26% of the total community.[7] In France, their percentage is estimated at 38.2%. The portion of the diaspora who are over 60 years old is around 7%.

Originally, the largest part of the Tunisians in Europe worked in sectors requiring minimal qualifications. In effect the migrants of the 1960s and 70s were less educated (mostly farmers or manual labourers).[2]

Subsequently, the majority of Tunisians settled in France have worked in the service sector (hotels, restaurants or retail) or have headed small businesses. In 2008, Tunisia became the first of the Maghreb countries to sign a management agreement concerning the flow of migrants, at the impetus of President Nicolas Sarkozy: it provides easy access for almost 9,000 Tunisian students enrolled in French institutions,[2] but also almost 500 titres de séjour (residency permits) for highly qualified individuals so that they can acquire experience in France, valid for a maximum of six years.[2] In the Arab World the Tunisian population is mostly made up of very highly qualified individuals while labourers and other unskilled individuals form the majority in Asian countries like India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.

Employment of Tunisans Abroad in hundreds (2011)
Area Total
Education and research 2,083
Architecture 1,938
Medicine and pharmacology 893
IT 380
Legal 89
Business 1,105
Other 1,860
Total 8,348
Region Number Employed
Europe 4,193
Americas 1,609
Arab World 1,226
Africa 136
Asia 68
Australia 11
Total 7,243
Sources : Office of Tunisians Abroad[8]

Economic impact

The contribution of Tunisians abroad encapsulates the projects which they support directly or indirectly in Tunisia. According to the Office of Tunisians Abroad, there were more than 8,845 such projects between 1987 and 2004, for a total investment of around 321 million dinar, generating 39,381 jobs, principally in services (64%) and industry (26%):[9]

  • 5,649 projects related to services mobilised 140.1 million dinars and generated 17,397 jobs;
  • 2,423 projects in the industrial sector with 133.7 million in investment and 20,513 employed;
  • 773 projects in the agricultural sector for 47.2 million dinars of investment and 1,471 employed.

According to the Office of Tunisians Abroad, the Tunisians abroad make average of 1.1 billion dinars worth of transfers every year, 76% in the form of money transfers, which constitutes the fourth largest source of currency for the country, representing 5% of the GDP and 23% of national savings.[9] But, although these transfers increase by 8.9% per year, the importance of this source of income has been decreasing continuously since 1996 and the number of projects created by Tunisians abroad has seemed to stagnate.[9]

Notable persons of Tunisian descent

Salah Mejri (United States), Max Azria (United States), M. Salah Baouendi (United States), Poorna Jagannathan (United States), Mustapha Tlili (United States), Ferrid Kheder (United States), Oussama Mellouli (United States), Leila Ben Youssef (United States), K2rhym (United States), Bushido (rapper) (Germany), Loco Dice (Germany), Sami Allagui (Germany), Änis Ben-Hatira (Germany), Mounir Chaftar (Germany), Sofian Chahed (Germany), Nejmeddin Daghfous (Germany), Rani Khedira (Germany), Sami Khedira (Germany), Ayman (Germany), Elyas M'Barek (Germany), Adel Tawil (Germany), Amel Karboul (Germany), Michel Boujenah (France), Azzedine Alaïa (France), Tarak Ben Ammar (France), Lââm (France), Nolwenn Leroy (France), Nidhal Saadi (France), Samia Orosemane (France), Yoann Touzghar (France), Aïda Touihri (France), Isleym (France), Hatem Ben Arfa (France), Sadek (France), Tunisiano (France), Afef Jnifen (Italy), Sana Hassainia (Canada), Nabila Ben Youssef (Canada), Hinda Hicks (England), Yusra Ghannouchi (England), Mohamed Hechmi Hamdi (England), Hend Sabry (Egypt), Ghassan bin Jiddo (Lebanon),

In Tunisia, free courses of instruction in Tunisian Arabic are organised during the summer holidays for the children of Tunisian residents abroad, who are heavily influenced by the culture of the countries in which they live. Trips are also organised for them to experience Tunisian culture, history and civilisation.

See also

References

  1. ^ A., Brand, Laurie (2006-01-01). Citizens abroad : emigration and the state in the Middle East and North Africa. Cambridge University Press. OCLC 62132937.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b c d Sonia Mabrouk, « Un diplôme pour visa », Jeune Afrique, 27 avril 2008, pp. 71-72
  3. ^ a b c d Template:Fr Communauté tunisienne à l'étranger (Office of Tunisians Abroad)
  4. ^ Template:Fr « Combien sommes-nous ? », 216 le mag, n°9, October 2009, p. 10 Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Template:Fr Template:Xls Live births and the father's country of origin, by department and place of domicile of the mother (Insee)
  6. ^ "Statistical Abstract of Israel 2009 - No. 60 Subject 2 - Table NO.24". Israeli government. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
  7. ^ a b Template:Fr Sonia Mabrouk, « Les Tunisiens dans le monde », Jeune Afrique, 27 avril 2008, p. 71
  8. ^ Template:Fr Compétences tunisiennes à l'étranger (Office of Tunisians Abroad)
  9. ^ a b c Template:Fr Abou Sarra, « Les transferts des Tunisiens à l’étranger : Une manne pas assez exploitée », Webmanagercenter, 3 septembre 2008

Bibliography

  • Janice Alberti Russell, The Italian community in Tunisia. 1861-1961. A viable minority, éd. Université Columbia, Columbia, 1977
  • Salah Rimani, Les Tunisiens de France : une forte concentration parisienne, éd. L'Harmattan, Paris, 1988
  • Bruce Allen Watson, Exit Rommel. The Tunisian Campaign. 1942-43, coll. Stackpole Military History Series, éd. Stackpole Books, Mechanicsburg (Pennsylvanie), 1999, (ISBN 9780811733816)
  • Maastricht university, An analysis of the Engagement of the Tunisian Diaspora in Germany and the Potentials for Cooperation, 2013