Studies of World MigrationsSeries Editors: Donna R. Gabaccia and Leslie Page Moch The importance of intercontinental migrations today alerts the scholarly world to the need for studies of human mobility not only over long distances but also over time. Migrations are the most human manifestations of globalization, yet scholars have often focused on immigration to particular nations in specific periods of time instead of global or long-term perspectives. The purpose of this series is to focus scholarly attention on the research on human migrations being written across scholarly disciplines, and to encourage a more global and long-term perspective on human mobility. |
Author: Michael UgartePub Date: Cloth: 2010; Paper: May 2013 Following one African nation's flow of populations and culture in the colonial and postcolonial worlds learn more... |
Author: Edited by John Randolph and Eugene M. AvrutinPub Date: July 2012 Understanding Russia's recent past and present, through the study of how people move learn more... |
Author: Janet W. Salaff, Siu-lun Wong, and Arent GrevePub Date: February 2010 An intimate account of what migration means to Hong Kong families learn more... |
Author: Mary H. BlewettPub Date: April 2009 Understanding migration through the lives and fiction of migrant workers in New England learn more... |
Author: Val Colic-PeiskerPub Date: December 2008 A sophisticated study of transnational migration from the Balkans to Western Australia learn more... |
Author: Edited by Nancy L. Green and François WeilPub Date: April 2007 Exodus and national identity learn more... |
Author: Leo LucassenPub Date: November 2005 Common threads in the long-term integration experience of migrants, past and present learn more... |







