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'Colonisation' or 'colonization' occurs whenever any one or more species populates a new area. The term, which is derived from the

World Colonization 1492-2007
Latin ''colere'', "to inhabit, cultivate, frequent, practice, tend, guard, respect,"
[1]originally related to humans. However, 19th century
biogeographers borrowed the term to describe the activities of birds or bacteria, or plant species.
[2]
Human colonisation is a broader category than the related sub-concept of
colonialism, because whereas colonialism refers to the establishment of
settler colonies,
trading posts, and
plantations, colonisation encompasses all large-scale emigrations of an established population to a 'new' location, such as
immigration, the establishment of
expatriate communities, and the use of guest workers.
Historical Colonisations
Classical Period
In ancient times, maritime nations such as the city-states of
Greece and
Phoenicia often established colonies. These appear to have been more benign, emphasising the farming of uninhabited land. In classical times, land suitable for farming was often claimed by migratory "barbarian tribes" who lived by hunting and gathering. To ancient civilised people, the land simply appeared vacant. However this does not mean that conflict did not exist between the colonisers and native peoples.
Another period of colonisation in Ancient times was from the
Romans. The Roman Empire conquered a large part of
Western Europe,
North Africa and
West Asia. In North Africa and west Asia they were often conquering civilised peoples, but as they moved north into Europe they mostly encountered rural tribes with very little in the way of cities. In these areas, waves of Roman colonisation often followed the conquest of the area.
Many of the current cities around Europe began as Roman colonies, such as the German city Köln (better known in its French form
Cologne), which was originally called ''Colonia Claudia'' by the Romans; and the
British capital city of
London which the Romans started as ''Londinium''.
Middle Ages
The decline and collapse of the Roman Empire saw (and was partly caused by) the large scale movement of people in
Eastern Europe and Asia. This is largely seen as beginning with nomadic horsemen from Asia moving into the richer pasture land to the west and so forcing the people there to move further west and so on until eventually the
Franks and their ilk were forced to invade the Roman Empire, beginning the
Dark Ages. It was this period that saw the large scale movement of peoples establishing new colonies all over western Europe, the events of this time saw the development of many of the modern day nations of Europe, the
Franks in
France and
Germany and the
Anglo-Saxons in
England.
The
Vikings of
Scandinavia also carried out a large scale colonisation. The Vikings are best known as raiders, setting out from their original homelands in
Denmark, southern
Norway and southern
Sweden, to pillage the coastlines of northern Europe. In time, the Vikings began trading, rather than raiding, and established colonies. The Vikings discovered
Iceland and establishing colonies before moving onto
Greenland, where they briefly held some colonies. The Vikings also launched an unsuccessful attempt at colonising an area they called
Vinland which probably on the rocky coast of
Newfoundland, on the eastern coastline of
Canada
'Colonial Era', colonialism and imperialism
Main articles: Colonialism
Colonialism in this sense refers to Western European countries' colonisation of land in the Americas, Africa, South-East Asia and the South Pacific.
Modern Colonisation
In some cases,
expatriate communities do set up permanently in target countries, which is a 'truer' colonisation, though in many cases (especially when not gathered into a community) expatriates do not necessarily seek to 'expand their native civilisation', but rather to
integrate into the population of the new civilisation.
Many nations also have large numbers of
guest workers who are brought in to do seasonal work such as harvesting or to do low-paid manual labor. Guest workers or contractors have a lower status than workers with visas, because guest workers can be removed at any time for any reason. Many human colonists came to colonies as slaves, so the legal power to leave or remain may not be the issue so much as the actual presence of the people in the new country.
In the
1980s and
1990s, an elite class of well-educated, highly-paid managers, lawyers, professionals, and business people began a new type of colonising. Since they had highly-sought after skills that were needed in many different countries, they treated the world as their playing field. They moved between countries to seek better jobs and opportunities. In the event of a downturn, they had the resources to pack up and leave to a different country.
However, unlike this elite professional caste, people with lower-paying jobs do not have international mobility. International professional mobility may also be considered a type of
colonialism (rather than colonisation) since these professionals do not move permanently. Instead, they move to a target region temporarily and leave.
Neo-Colonisation
This term, usually pejorative, refers to a sort of "unofficial" colonisation, in which a country's government is overthrown by larger country and replaced by a government that coincides with the larger country's interests. In effect, this makes the country a colony, dealing with the problem of a revolutionary uprising by delivering the impression that the colony is still self-governed.
Other ways of using the term
The theory of 'Science policy colonisation' (Weingart and Mouton (2004)) argues that
science policy is increasingly being dominated by scientific experts from developed, industrialised democracies. Scientists from poorer, emerging or developing democracies may mainly be given the role of collecting raw data. Experts from developed, industrialised democracies may have biases unchallenged that run counter to the best interests of emerging democracies such as South Africa (Weingart and Mouton (2004)). There are also concerns (UNESCO 1999) that the accountability mechanisms imposed on knowledge experts are inadequate.
The term "
cocacolonisation" is used to describe cases where a country's indigenous culture is eroded by a corporate mass-culture, usually from a powerful, industrialised country such as the United States (see
cultural imperialism). This is more metaphorical usage as people need not move, to the colonised country; only cultural signals, symbols, forms of entertainment, and values move need to move to the colonised country.
Hypothetical or fictional types of Colonisation
The hypothetical permanent habitation of locations in Earth's
oceans is called
ocean colonisation. Related ideas such as the
floating city are much less hypothetical - funds are presently being sought to build several large ships that would have permanent populations of up to 50,000 people each.
In
science fiction,
space colonisation is sometimes more benign. Humans find an uninhabited planet, and inhabit it. The
colonisation of Mars is an often-used example of this type of space colonisation. In more recent science fiction, humans may create inhabitable space (by
terraforming or constructing a space habitat) and call that a "colony."
On the other hand, if the planet is already inhabited, much less benign consequences ensue: indeed, some science fiction authors have used the colonisation of alien planets by humans, or the colonisation of
Earth by aliens, to explore the real-world issues surrounding the phenomenon. Such works include those of
Mary Doria Russell, ''The Sparrow'' and ''Children of God''.
The ultimate form of space colonisation is the
Kardashev scale which assumes that a single dominant intelligent species will take over all energy on one planet, then one star, then a whole galaxy full of stars. However, this would not necessarily be so if other species were to be discovered during a galactic expansion. This may require more than one species to share the galactic space with each other as they both develop.
See also
★
Colonialism
References
1. http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?, originally related to humans. However, 19th century biogeographers borrowed the term to describe the activities of birds or bacteria, or plant species.[ The Colonization of Unfamiliar Landscapes, Marcy Rockman, James Steele, , , Routledge, 2003, ISBN 0415256062 ]
2. The Colonization of Unfamiliar Landscapes, Marcy Rockman, James Steele, , , Routledge, 2003, ISBN 0415256062