“This wide-ranging volume shows how vital it is to contextualise contemporary debates about migration through an historical lens. The research shared within these diverse chapters informs our work presenting migration heritage to the public.” (Sophie Henderson, Director of the Migration Museum Project, UK)<p>“This important collection asks academics to urgently address the major questions of our time, using history as a “martial art” in which to fight the social and political battles inherent in immigration debates.” (Jayne Persian, Lecturer in History, University of Southern Queensland, Australia, and Author of Beautiful Balts: From displaced persons to new Australians (2017))</p>
<p>“This timely and provocative collection of essays illustrates how historians are uniquely placed to contribute in a meaningful and informed way to the polarizing debate over immigration and migration. Migrant peoples, as this book demonstrates, are far from anomalous or marginal; rather, they have long enriched and formed an essential part of the creative dynamic in their adopted communities.” (David Wright, Professor of History, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, and co-editor of Doctors Beyond Borders: The Transnational Migration of Physicians in the Twentieth Century (2016))</p>
<p>“This is an impressive contribution to global history. Eureka Henrich and Julian M. Simpson have brought together a strong cast of established scholars and new researchers who make a well-argued case that historians have much to offer current debates on migration. The book has been carefully crafted to enhance its accessibility to the non-specialist who has so much to learn from its findings.” (John Tosh, Professor of History, Roehampton University, UK, and Author of Why History Matters (2008))</p>