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Migration: A World History
Migration: A World History
¥6,314
(incl.tax)
  • Major topic in world history curriculum
  • Explores migration in a variety of periods and geographic locations
  • Geared towards helping AP students prepare for exams and work with primary sources
  • Contains examples, maps, illustrations, and quotations from diverse types of primary analyzed engagingly.

   
Migration began with our origin as the human species and continues today. Each chapter of world history features distinct types of migration. The earliest migrations spread humans across the globe. Over the centuries, as our cultures, societies, and technologies evolved in different material environments, migrants conflicted, merged, and cohabited with each other, creating, entering, and leaving various city-states, kingdoms, empires, and nations. During the early modern period, migrations reconnected the continents, including through colonization and forced migrations of subject peoples, while political concepts like "citizen" and "alien" developed. In recent history, migrations changed their character as nation-states and transnational unions sought in new ways to control the peoples who migrated across their borders.
   
This volume will explore the process of migration chronologically and also at several levels, from the illuminating example of the migration of a individual community, to larger patterns of the collective movements of major ethnic groups, to the more abstract study of the processes of emigration, migration, and immigration. This book will concentrate on substantial migrations covering long distances and involving large numbers of people. It will intentionally balance evidence from the now diverse people's of the world, for example, by highlighting an exemplary migration for each of the six chapters that highlights different trajectories and by keeping issues of gender and socio-economic class salient wherever appropriate. Further, as a major theme, the volume will consider how technology, the environment, and various polities have historically shaped human migration. Exciting new scholarship in the several fields inherent in this topic make it a particularly valuable and timely project.

Index: 

Series Editors' Preface
Preface: Migration in World History and as World History
1. Earliest Human Migrations: ca. 200,000 BCE to ca. 600 CE
2. Mixing and Clashing Migrations, 600 CE to 1450
3. Migrations Start to Reconnect the World, 1450 to 1750
4. National and International Migrations, 1750 to 1914 
5. Migrations in an Age of Globalization, 1914 to the Present
Chronology 
Notes
Further Reading
Websites
Index

About the author: 

Michael H. Fisher is Robert S. Danforth Professor of History at Oberlin College

Product details

ISBN : 9780199764334

Author: 
Michael H. Fisher
Pages
176 Pages
Format
Paperback
Size
158 x 236 mm
Pub date
Jan 2014
Series
New Oxford World History
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Migration: A World History

Migration: A World History

Migration: A World History