Dane szczegółowe książki
What is migration history? / Harzig, Christiane; Hoerder, Dirk (1943-); Gabaccia, Donna R. (1949-)
Tytuł
What is migration history?
Serie wydawnicze
Wydawnictwo
Cambridge: Polity Press, 2009
ISBN
9780745643359; 9780745643366
Hasła przedmiotowe
Spis treści
pokaż spis treści
Contents 8
Detailed Contents 9
Maps 27
Preface 29
Chapter 1. Introduction: Popular Views - Scholarly Reconceptualizations 31
Chapter 2. Migration in Human History - the Long View **1 38
2.1 Deep Time: Homo sapiens Migrates from East Africa across the World **2 39
2.2 Population Change and Mobility during the "Agricultural Revolution," 15,000-5000 BP 43
2.3 Cities, Civilizations, and Seaborne Migrations, c. 5000 BCE to 500 CE 44
2.4 Migrations and Societies, 500 BCE to 1500 CE 50
2.5 Two Worlds into One: Migrations, Trading Circuits, and Cultures in Contact, 1400 to 1600 55
2.6 People on the Move in Self-Ruled, Colonized, and Colonizer Societies, 1600 to 1800 60
2.7 Global Migration Systems in the Nineteenth Century 65
2.8 Refugee-Generation, Unmixing of Peoples, and Forced Labour Migrations in the First Half of the Twentieth Century 72
2.9 Decolonization and New Global Patterns of Migration since the 1950s 75
Bibliography 81
Chapter 3. Theories of Migration and Cultural Interaction 83
3.1 Theory and Practice from the 1880s to the 1950s 84
3.2 Neo-Classical Economics and the Push-Pull Model 92
3.3 Innovative Concepts of Transculturation, 1930s - 1950s 94
3.4 Towards a Typology of Migrations in Modern Times **27 96
3.5 Compartmentalization of Research by Type of Migration 99
3.6 New Approaches since the 1970s: World Systems, Family Economics, and Labour Markets 102
The macro-level: world systems theory 103
The micro-level: family economies 105
The meso-level: labour market theory 106
3.7 Recent Approaches: Agency, Networks, and Human and Social Capital **56 108
3.8 Transnational Approaches and Transcultural Societal Studies 113
Bibliography 115
Chapter 4. A Systems Approach to Migrant Trajectories 118
4.1 Structures and Agency: Contextualizing Migration Decisions 120
4.2 The Society of Departure 123
4.3 Voyages: Extended, Compressed, Delayed 129
4.4 The Receiving Society: Economic Insertion, Acculturation, Politics, and New Belongings 133
4.5 Global Interdependence and Transcultural Lives 141
Bibliography 144
Chapter 5. Migrant Practices as a Challenge to Scholarship 147
5.1 Race and Mobility 148
5.2 Gender and Mobility 151
5.3 Transnational and Translocal Families 155
5.4 Bringing the State Back In 158
Bibliography 163
Chapter 6. Perspectives in the Early Twenty-First Century 165
6.1 Gendered and Racialized Labour and Refugee Migrations in the Present 166
6.2 Inclusion Strategies: Citizenship and Belonging 170
6.3 Migrants' Identifications at the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century 174
Bibliography 178
Notes 180
Chapter 2 Migration in Human History 180
Chapter 3 Theories of Migration and Cultural Interaction 183
Chapter 4 A Systems Approach to Migrant Trajectories 196
Chapter 5 Migrant Practices as a Challenge to Scholarship 198
Chapter 6 Perspectives in the Early Twenty-First Century 201
Index 206
Detailed Contents 9
Maps 27
Preface 29
Chapter 1. Introduction: Popular Views - Scholarly Reconceptualizations 31
Chapter 2. Migration in Human History - the Long View **1 38
2.1 Deep Time: Homo sapiens Migrates from East Africa across the World **2 39
2.2 Population Change and Mobility during the "Agricultural Revolution," 15,000-5000 BP 43
2.3 Cities, Civilizations, and Seaborne Migrations, c. 5000 BCE to 500 CE 44
2.4 Migrations and Societies, 500 BCE to 1500 CE 50
2.5 Two Worlds into One: Migrations, Trading Circuits, and Cultures in Contact, 1400 to 1600 55
2.6 People on the Move in Self-Ruled, Colonized, and Colonizer Societies, 1600 to 1800 60
2.7 Global Migration Systems in the Nineteenth Century 65
2.8 Refugee-Generation, Unmixing of Peoples, and Forced Labour Migrations in the First Half of the Twentieth Century 72
2.9 Decolonization and New Global Patterns of Migration since the 1950s 75
Bibliography 81
Chapter 3. Theories of Migration and Cultural Interaction 83
3.1 Theory and Practice from the 1880s to the 1950s 84
3.2 Neo-Classical Economics and the Push-Pull Model 92
3.3 Innovative Concepts of Transculturation, 1930s - 1950s 94
3.4 Towards a Typology of Migrations in Modern Times **27 96
3.5 Compartmentalization of Research by Type of Migration 99
3.6 New Approaches since the 1970s: World Systems, Family Economics, and Labour Markets 102
The macro-level: world systems theory 103
The micro-level: family economies 105
The meso-level: labour market theory 106
3.7 Recent Approaches: Agency, Networks, and Human and Social Capital **56 108
3.8 Transnational Approaches and Transcultural Societal Studies 113
Bibliography 115
Chapter 4. A Systems Approach to Migrant Trajectories 118
4.1 Structures and Agency: Contextualizing Migration Decisions 120
4.2 The Society of Departure 123
4.3 Voyages: Extended, Compressed, Delayed 129
4.4 The Receiving Society: Economic Insertion, Acculturation, Politics, and New Belongings 133
4.5 Global Interdependence and Transcultural Lives 141
Bibliography 144
Chapter 5. Migrant Practices as a Challenge to Scholarship 147
5.1 Race and Mobility 148
5.2 Gender and Mobility 151
5.3 Transnational and Translocal Families 155
5.4 Bringing the State Back In 158
Bibliography 163
Chapter 6. Perspectives in the Early Twenty-First Century 165
6.1 Gendered and Racialized Labour and Refugee Migrations in the Present 166
6.2 Inclusion Strategies: Citizenship and Belonging 170
6.3 Migrants' Identifications at the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century 174
Bibliography 178
Notes 180
Chapter 2 Migration in Human History 180
Chapter 3 Theories of Migration and Cultural Interaction 183
Chapter 4 A Systems Approach to Migrant Trajectories 196
Chapter 5 Migrant Practices as a Challenge to Scholarship 198
Chapter 6 Perspectives in the Early Twenty-First Century 201
Index 206