Migrants and Migration in Modern North America – Cross–Border Lives, Labor Markets, and Politics
Autor Dirk Hoerder, Nora Fairesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 25 sep 2011
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822350514
ISBN-10: 0822350513
Pagini: 456
Ilustrații: 1 photograph 6 tables, 20 maps, 8 figures
Dimensiuni: 156 x 233 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
ISBN-10: 0822350513
Pagini: 456
Ilustrații: 1 photograph 6 tables, 20 maps, 8 figures
Dimensiuni: 156 x 233 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Cuprins
List of Maps; Preface / Dirk Hoerder and Nora FairesIntroduction: Migration, Peoples Lives, Shifting and Permeable Borders: The North American and Caribbean Societies in the Atlantic World / Dirk HoerderPart I. Intersocietal Migrations1. Mirando atrás: Mexican Immigration from 1876 to 2000 / Jaime R. Aguila and Brian Gratton; 2. Through the Northern Borderlands: Canada-U.S. Migrations in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries / Bruno Ramirez; 3. The Making and Unmaking of the Circum-Caribbean Migratory Sphere: Mobility, Sex across Boundaries, and Collective Destinies, 18401940 / Lara PutnamPart II. Connecting Borderlands, Littorals, and Regions4. Population Movements and the Making of Canada-U.S. Not-So-Foreign Relations / Nora Faires; 5. Greater Southwest North America: A Region of Historical Integration, Disjunction, and Imposition / Carlos G. Vélez-Ibáñez with Dirk Hoerder; 6. Independence and Interdependence: CaribbeanNorth American Migration in the Modern Era / Melanie Shell-Weiss; 7. Migration to Mexico, Migration in Mexico: A Special Case on the North American Continent / Delia González de Reufels and Dirk Hoerder; 8. The Construction of Borders: Building North American Nations, Building a Continental Perimeter, 1890s1920s / Angelika E. Sauer; 9. The United StatesMexican Border as Material and Cultural Barrier / Omar S. Valerio-JiménezPart III. Complicating Narratives10. Migration and the Seasonal Round: An Odawa Familys Story / Susan E. Gray; 11. Market Interactions in a Borderland Setting: A Case Study of the Gila River Pima of Arizona, 18461862 / Dan Killoren; 12. Paying Attention to Moving Americans: Migration Knowledge in the Age of Internal Migration, 1930s1970s / James N. Gregory; 13. The Black Experience in Canada Revisited / Sarah-Jane (Saje) Mathieu; 14. Circumnavigating Controls: Transborder Migration of Asian-Origin Migrants during the Period of Exclusion / Yukari Takai; 15. Migration and Capitalism: The Rise of the U.S.-Mexican Border / John Mason HartPart IV. Contemporary and Applied Perspectives16. Central American Migration and the Shaping of Refugee Policy / María Cristina Garcia; 17. Central American Transmigrants: Migratory Movement of Special Interest to Different Sectors within and outside Mexico / Rodolfo Casillas-R.; 18. Interrogating Managed Migrations Model: A Counternarrative of Canadas Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program / Kerry Preibisch; 19. 1867 and All That. . . : Teaching the American Survey as Continental North American History / Angelika Sauer and Catherine ODonnellAbout the Contributors; Index
Recenzii
"This excellent collection is easily the best effort to date to interpret North American migrations. It takes seriously the inclusion of the Caribbean and Central America in its purview, successfully integrates analyses that range from the micro- to the macro-levels, and incorporates a long-term perspective that connects studies of pre-historic Native America and the early modern slave trade to modern studies of immigration and refugees. Best of all, it provides readers with a marvelous introduction to the ways that a North American perspective on human movement differs, often remarkably so, from the national perspectives developed within the historiographies of the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Donna Gabaccia, author of Immigration and American Diversity: A Social and Cultural History
"This volume achieves a feat of thematic and conceptual integration. It explores the demographic, socioeconomic, political, and symbolic role of migration in the formation of North American nations. Yet it transcends national borders and categories with examinations of the local, regional, borderlands, and hemispheric mobility of indigenous peoples, Asians, Europeans, Afro-descendants, Latinos, Anglo- and French-Canadians, among other sub- and supra-national groups. The result is a combination of macro and micro perspectives that illuminates both the forest and the trees. Jose C. Moya, author of Cousins and Strangers: Spanish Immigrants in Buenos Aires, 1850-1930
"The editors aim to develop what they call "transcultural social studies in this integrated view of migration in North America via an interdisciplinary collection of essays illuminating the movements of people within and between Canada, the Caribbean, Mexico and the US over the past two centuries. Contributors examine the movements of diverse populations across the continent in relation to changing cultural, political and economic patterns.- Times Higher Education, May 24th 2012
Recent scholarship on borderlands has illuminated the ways in which the migration of diverse groups of peoples have both been influenced by and shaped economic, political, societal, and cultural patterns across Canada, the United States, and Mexico. In Migrants and Migration in Modern North America, coeditors Dirk Hoerder and the late Nora Faires have compiled a collection of essays that move beyond the boundaries of nation-states, offering a broader framework within which to understand translocal and transregional population movements Certainly, most of the chapters apply this broadened perspective to examine elements of continuity/change and cross-currents of convergence/divergence in North American history while remaining complex and rich in detail. This integrationist approach serves as an exemplar for teaching and research in both migration and borderlands studies. Migrants and Migration in Modern North America presents a kaleidoscopic picture of human mobility by analyzing migration patterns from precontact to the present, from the "top down" and from the "bottom-up," and by considering a range of movement among local borderlands communities to sweeping diasporic experiences of First Peoples, Mexicans, Canadians, Americans, Asians, and Caribbean migrants. - Dominique Brégent-Heald, H-Borderlands
"This volume achieves a feat of thematic and conceptual integration. It explores the demographic, socioeconomic, political, and symbolic role of migration in the formation of North American nations. Yet it transcends national borders and categories with examinations of the local, regional, borderlands, and hemispheric mobility of indigenous peoples, Asians, Europeans, Afro-descendants, Latinos, Anglo- and French-Canadians, among other sub- and supra-national groups. The result is a combination of macro and micro perspectives that illuminates both the forest and the trees. Jose C. Moya, author of Cousins and Strangers: Spanish Immigrants in Buenos Aires, 1850-1930
"The editors aim to develop what they call "transcultural social studies in this integrated view of migration in North America via an interdisciplinary collection of essays illuminating the movements of people within and between Canada, the Caribbean, Mexico and the US over the past two centuries. Contributors examine the movements of diverse populations across the continent in relation to changing cultural, political and economic patterns.- Times Higher Education, May 24th 2012
Recent scholarship on borderlands has illuminated the ways in which the migration of diverse groups of peoples have both been influenced by and shaped economic, political, societal, and cultural patterns across Canada, the United States, and Mexico. In Migrants and Migration in Modern North America, coeditors Dirk Hoerder and the late Nora Faires have compiled a collection of essays that move beyond the boundaries of nation-states, offering a broader framework within which to understand translocal and transregional population movements Certainly, most of the chapters apply this broadened perspective to examine elements of continuity/change and cross-currents of convergence/divergence in North American history while remaining complex and rich in detail. This integrationist approach serves as an exemplar for teaching and research in both migration and borderlands studies. Migrants and Migration in Modern North America presents a kaleidoscopic picture of human mobility by analyzing migration patterns from precontact to the present, from the "top down" and from the "bottom-up," and by considering a range of movement among local borderlands communities to sweeping diasporic experiences of First Peoples, Mexicans, Canadians, Americans, Asians, and Caribbean migrants. - Dominique Brégent-Heald, H-Borderlands
Notă biografică
Descriere
Illuminates the movements of people within and between Canada, the Caribbean, Mexico, and the United States over the past two centuries