History, Historians and the Immigration Debate

History, Historians and the Immigration Debate

Going Back to Where We Came From

Simpson, Julian M.; Henrich, Eureka

Springer International Publishing AG

10/2018

242

Dura

Inglês

9783319971223

15 a 20 dias

574

Descrição não disponível.
Chapter 1: Introduction: History as a 'Martial Art'; Eureka Henrich and Julian M. Simpson.- SECTION 1: MOVING MIGRATION HISTORY FORWARD.- Chapter 2: From the Margins of History to the Political Mainstream: Putting Migration History Centre Stage; Eureka Henrich and Julian M. Simpson.- Chapter 3: Beyond the Apocalypse: Reframing Migration History; Leo Lucassen.- SECTION 2: AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND.- Chapter 4: Taking a Longer View: History, Politics and Trans-Tasman Migration; Lyndon Fraser.- Chapter 5: The Campaign to Address the Issue of Filipina Victims of Domestic Violence in Australia, 1980s-1990s; Mina Roces.- SECTION 3: ASIA.- Chapter 6: Not Singaporean Enough? Migration, History and National Identity in Singapore; John Solomon.- Chapter 7: 'They Never Call Us Indian': Indian Muslim Voices and the 1947 India/Pakistan Partition; Anindya Raychaudhuri.- SECTION 4: EUROPE.- Chapter 8: The Role of Immigration in the Making/Unmaking of the French Working Class (Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries); Gerard Noiriel, (translated from the original French by Julian M. Simpson).- Chapter 9: Was the Multiculturalism Backlash Good for Women? Perspectives from Five Minority Women's Organisations in the Netherlands.- Margaretha A. van Es.- SECTION 5: GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES.- Chapter 10: Migrant Doctors and the 'Frontiers of Medicine' in Westernised Healthcare Systems; Julian M. Simpson.- Chapter 11: The Right to Asylum: A Hidden History; Klaus Neumann.- Chapter 12: Will the Twenty-First Century World Embrace Immigration History?; Donna Gabaccia.
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Immigrants;Migration;Emigration;Social History;Public History;nation-building;human mobility;India/Pakistan partition;ethnic pluralism;multiculturalism