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Books in the Studies of World Migrations series

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  • Save 13%
    - Immigrants and Their Homeland Connections
     
    £20.99

    This collection of articles by sociologically minded historians and historically minded sociologists highlights both the long-term persistence and the continuing instability of home country connections. Encompassing societies of origin and destination from around the world, A Century of Transnationalism shows that while population movements across states recurrently produce homeland ties, those connections have varied across contexts and from one historical period to another, changing in unpredictable ways. Any number of factors shape the linkages between home and destination, including conditions in the society of immigration, policies of the state of emigration, and geopolitics worldwide. Contributors: Houda Asal, Marie-Claude Blanc-Chaléard, Caroline Douki, David FitzGerald, Nancy L. Green, Madeline Y. Hsu, Thomas Lacroix, Tony Michels, Victor Pereira, Mônica Raisa Schpun, and Roger Waldinger

  • Save 10%
    - Croations in Australia and America
    by Val Colic-Peisker
    £34.99

    A sophisticated study of transnational migration from the Balkans to Western Australia

  • - Migration Lived and Imagined
    by Mary H. Blewett
    £16.49

    Understanding migration through the lives and fiction of migrant workers in New England

  • Save 14%
    - The Integration of Old and New Migrants in Western Europe since 1850
    by Leo Lucassen
    £78.49

    Focuses on large and problematic groups from Western Europe's past (the Irish in the United Kingdom, the Poles in Germany, and the Italians in France) and demonstrates a number of structural similarities in the way migrants and their descendants integrated into these nation states.

  • Save 13%
    - The Culture of Exile and Emigration from Equatorial Guinea to Spain
    by Michael Ugarte
    £20.99

    Following one African nation's flow of populations and culture in the colonial and postcolonial worlds

  • Save 14%
    - Immigrants and Their Homeland Connections
     
    £78.49

    This collection of articles by sociologically minded historians and historically minded sociologists highlights both the long-term persistence and the continuing instability of home country connections. Encompassing societies of origin and destination from around the world, A Century of Transnationalism shows that while population movements across states recurrently produce homeland ties, those connections have varied across contexts and from one historical period to another, changing in unpredictable ways. Any number of factors shape the linkages between home and destination, including conditions in the society of immigration, policies of the state of emigration, and geopolitics worldwide. Contributors: Houda Asal, Marie-Claude Blanc-Chaléard, Caroline Douki, David FitzGerald, Nancy L. Green, Madeline Y. Hsu, Thomas Lacroix, Tony Michels, Victor Pereira, Mônica Raisa Schpun, and Roger Waldinger

  • Save 13%
    - From the Levant to Brazil
    by Oswaldo Truzzi
    £20.99 - 78.49

  • Save 12%
    - Narratives of Family Migration
    by Siu-lun Wong, Janet W. Salaff & Arent Greve
    £21.99 - 78.49

    Half a million Hong Kong residents fled their homeland during the thirteen years before Hong Kong was returned to China in 1997 - and nearly half of those returned within several years of leaving. This book takes a look at the forces behind Hong Kong families' successful and failed efforts at migration and settlement.

  • Save 12%
    - The Politics of Emigration and Expatriation
     
    £18.49

    Exodus and national identity

  • Save 14%
    - US Society in an Age of Restriction, 1924-1965
     
    £78.49

  • Save 13%
    - US Society in an Age of Restriction, 1924-1965
     
    £22.49

    Maddalena Marinari is assistant professor of history at Gustavus Adolphus College. She is the author of From Unwanted to Restricted: Italian and Jewish Mobilization against Restrictive Immigration Laws, 1882-1965. Madeline Y. Hsu is a professor of history at the University of Texas at Austin. She is the author of the award-winning The Good Immigrants: How the Yellow Peril Became the Model Minority. Maria Cristina Garcia is the Howard A. Newman Professor of American Studies at Cornell University. Her most recent book is The Refugee Challenge in Post-Cold War America.

  • Save 14%
    - Love, Gender, and Migration
    by Marcelo J. Borges
    £78.49

  • Save 14%
    - Economic Migration between Vietnam and Malaysia
    by Angie Ngoc Tran
    £88.99

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