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Entangling migration history : borderlands and transnationalism in the United States and Canada /

This collection uses current cross-boundary theories in applied case studies to better understand how people, institutions, and ideas permeate geopolitical lines in North America.

Bibliographic Details
Call Number:Libro Electrónico
Other Authors: Bryce, Benjamin (Editor), Freund, Alexander, 1969- (Editor)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:Inglés
Published: Gainesville : University Press of Florida, [2015]
Series:Contested boundaries.
Subjects:
Online Access:Texto completo
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction / Benjamin Bryce and Alexander Freund
  • Canada and the Atlantic world: migration from a hemispheric perspective, 1500-1800 / José C. Moya
  • A spatial grammar of migration in the Canadian-American borderlands at the turn of the Twentieth-century / Randy William Widdis
  • Mexicans, Canadians, and the reconfiguration of continental migrations, 1915-1965 / Bruno Ramirez
  • Sexual self: morals policing and the expansion of the U.S. Immigration Bureau at America's early Twentieth-century borders / Grace Peña Delgado
  • Out of one borderland, many: the 1907 anti-Asian riots and the spatial dimensions of race and migration in the Canadian-U.S. Pacific borderlands / David C. Atkinson
  • Bridging the Pacific: diplomacy and the control of Japanese transmigration via Hawaii, 1890-1910 / Yukari Takai
  • Entangled communities: German Lutherans in Ontario and North America, 1880-1930 / Benjamin Bryce
  • Religious borderlands and transnational networks: the North American Mennonite underground press in the 1960s / Janis Thiessen
  • Epilogue: entanglements and the practice of migration history / Erika Lee.