@ARTICLE{Khani, author = {Khani, Hossein and }, title = {Syrian Crisis and Increasing Muslims’ Diaspora in Europe}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, abstract ={The internal crisis in Syria, which began in 2011, continues to have devastating consequences for its people. In addition, Syrian conflict and violence have led to the displacement of people, the expansion of terrorism, and the escalation of political and sectarian differences, and thus creating increasing instability throughout the region. It is worth noting that almost half of the Syrian population has left home because of the war. With the onset of the refugee crisis, Europe considered the crisis as a strictly confined issue to the Middle East, but after a wave of refugees, European governments inevitably admitted that this issue could not be left exclusively to the Middle East or the border states, so they attempt to share the burden of this responsibility to find common solutions to the crisis. The current question is: “How has such a situation been created for Syrian refugees and asylum seekers in the Middle East and Europe?” In response, the hypothesis of the paper, utilizing Diaspora theory, sees this incident as the result of territorial displacement between governments and large-scale transnational migration, which has been carried out by ISIL in accordance with "political requirements" and "structural violence", and the consequence of its transnational environment would result in the disperse from the main core and going forcibly to several places. Hence, using qualitative method and library technique in dealing with the Syria crisis, the present study found the components of genocide, women's bondage, slavery and bondwoman as the main reasons for this dispersal. }, URL = {http://priw.ir/article-1-483-en.html}, eprint = {http://priw.ir/article-1-483-en.pdf}, journal = {Political Research In Islamic World}, doi = {}, year = {2017} }