Australia, Migration and Empire

Australia, Migration and Empire
Title Australia, Migration and Empire PDF eBook
Author Philip Payton
Publisher Springer
Pages 330
Release 2019-08-12
Genre History
ISBN 3030223892

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This edited collection explores how migrants played a major role in the creation and settlement of the British Empire, by focusing on a series of Australian case studies. Despite their shared experiences of migration and settlement, migrants nonetheless often exhibited distinctive cultural identities, which could be deployed for advantage. Migration established global mobility as a defining feature of the Empire. Ethnicity, class and gender were often powerful determinants of migrant attitudes and behaviour. This volume addresses these considerations, illuminating the complexity and diversity of the British Empire’s global immigration story. Since 1788, the propensity of the populations of Britain and Ireland to immigrate to Australia varied widely, but what this volume highlights is their remarkable diversity in character and impact. The book also presents the opportunities that existed for other immigrant groups to demonstrate their loyalty as members of the (white) Australian community, along with notable exceptions which demonstrated the limits of this inclusivity.

Settlers at the end of empire

Settlers at the end of empire
Title Settlers at the end of empire PDF eBook
Author Jean P. Smith
Publisher Manchester University Press
Pages 234
Release 2022-07-12
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1526145472

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Settlers at the end of empire traces the development of racialised migration regimes in South Africa, Rhodesia (present-day Zimbabwe) and the United Kingdom from the Second World War to the end of apartheid in 1994. While South Africa and Rhodesia, like other settler colonies, had a long history of restricting the entry of migrants of colour, in the 1960s under existential threat and after abandoning formal ties with the Commonwealth they began to actively recruit white migrants, the majority of whom were British. At the same time, with the 1962 Commonwealth Immigrants Act, the British government began to implement restrictions aimed at slowing the migration of British subjects of colour. In all three nations, these policies were aimed at the preservation of nations imagined as white, revealing the persistence of the racial ideologies of empire across the era of decolonisation.

A Concise History of Australia

A Concise History of Australia
Title A Concise History of Australia PDF eBook
Author Stuart Macintyre
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 368
Release 2004-08-24
Genre History
ISBN 9780521601016

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Australia is the last continent to be settled by Europeans, but it also sustains a people and a culture tens of thousands of years old. For much of the past 200 years the newcomers have sought to replace the old with the new. This book tells how they imposed themselves on the land, and brought technology, institutions and ideas to make it their own. It relates the advance from penal colony to a prosperous free nation and illustrates how, in a nation created by waves of newcomers, the search for binding traditions has long been frustrated by the feeling of rootlessness. This revised edition incorporates the most recent historical research and contemporary historical debates on frontier violence between European settlers and Aborigines and the Stolen Generations. It covers the Sydney Olympics, the refugee crisis and the 'Pacific solution'. More than ever before, Australians draw on the past to understand their future.

Britain and the Sea

Britain and the Sea
Title Britain and the Sea PDF eBook
Author Glen O'Hara
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 335
Release 2010-06-30
Genre History
ISBN 1137073128

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O'Hara presents the first general history of Britons' relationship with the surrounding oceans from 1600 to the present day. This all-encompassing account covers individual seafarers, ship-borne migration, warfare and the maritime economy, as well as the British people's maritime ideas and self perception throughout the centuries.

Empire's Children

Empire's Children
Title Empire's Children PDF eBook
Author Ellen Boucher
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 305
Release 2014-03-13
Genre History
ISBN 1107041384

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A definitive history of child emigration across the British Empire from the 1860s to its decline in the 1960s.

Refugees in Europe, 1919-1959

Refugees in Europe, 1919-1959
Title Refugees in Europe, 1919-1959 PDF eBook
Author Matthew Frank
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 269
Release 2017-09-21
Genre History
ISBN 1472585631

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This book is open access and available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by Knowledge Unlatched. Refugees in Europe, 1919-1959 offers a new history of Europe's mid-20th century as seen through its recurrent refugee crises. By bringing together in one volume recent research on a range of different contexts of groups of refugees and refugee policy, it sheds light on the common assumptions that underpinned the history of refugees throughout the period under review. The essays foreground the period between the end of the First World War, which inaugurated a series of new international structures to deal with displaced populations, and the late 1950s, when Europe's home-grown refugee problems had supposedly been 'solved' and attention shifted from the identification of an exclusively European refugee problem to a global one. Borrowing from E. H. Carr's The Twenty Years' Crisis, first published in 1939, the editors of this volume test the idea that the two post-war eras could be represented as a single crisis of a European-dominated international order of nation states in the face of successive refugee crises which were both the direct consequence of that system and a challenge to it. Each of the chapters reflects on the utility and limitations of this notion of a 'forty years' crisis' for understanding the development of specific national and international responses to refugees in the mid-20th century. Contributors to the volume also provide alternative readings of the history of an international refugee regime, in which the non-European and colonial world are assigned a central role in the narrative.

Welcome to Little Europe

Welcome to Little Europe
Title Welcome to Little Europe PDF eBook
Author Josef Sestokas
Publisher Palmer Higgs Pty Ltd
Pages 230
Release 2011-01-05
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0987140701

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