skip to content
Coerced and free migration : global perspectives Preview this item
ClosePreview this item
  • Preview this Item (Questia)

Coerced and free migration : global perspectives

Author: David Eltis
Publisher: Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, 2002.
Series: Making of modern freedom.
Edition/Format:   Book : EnglishView all editions and formats
Rating:

(not yet rated) 0 with reviews - Be the first.

 

Find a copy in the library

Retrieving... Finding libraries that hold this item...

Details

Document Type: Book
All Authors / Contributors: David Eltis
ISBN: 0804744548 9780804744546
OCLC Number: 48958138
Description: xii, 447 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm.
Contents: Introduction: migration and agency in global history / David Eltis --
Free and coerced migrations from the old world to the new / David Eltis --
Changing laws and regulations and their impact on migration / Stanley L. Engerman --
The epidemiology of migration / Philip D. Curtin --
The differential cultural impact of free and coerced migration to colonial America / Lorena S. Walsh --
Irish and German migration to eighteenth-century North America / Marianne S. Wokeck --
Migration and collective identities among the enslaved and free populations of North America / Mechal Sobel --
Freedom and indentured labor in the French Caribbean, 1848-1900 / David Northrup --
Asian contract and free migrations to the Americas / Walton Look Lai --
Convicts : unwilling migrants from Britain and France / Colin Forster --
Migration in early modern Russia, 1480s-1780s / Richard Hellie --
Peasant migration, the abolition of serfdom, and the internal passport system in the Russian Empire, c. 1800-1914 / David Moon.
Series Title: Making of modern freedom.
Responsibility: edited by David Eltis.

Reviews

User-contributed reviews
Retrieving weRead reviews...
Retrieving GoodReads reviews...
Retrieving Amazon reviews...

Tags

Be the first.
Confirm this request

You may have already requested this item. Please select Ok if you would like to proceed with this request anyway.

Close Window

Please sign in to WorldCat 

Don't have an account? You can easily create a free account.