Articles
Migration: crossing borders
History in Focus invited thirteen academics to write short pieces on the idea of crossing borders from their own research perspectives. The resulting articles, listed below, illustrate the breadth and depth of historical research relating to migration. The papers consider various types of borders or boundaries: physical borders, social and cultural borders, linguistic borders, economic borders, religious borders. Different perspectives, different foci and different methodologies have guided the authors of these articles, and we hope they will be of interest to historians and students of migration and of the ways in which borders affect people's lives.
Articles index
Defending socialism? Benito Corghi and the inter-German border
by Pertti Ahonen
Chinabound: Crossing borders in treaty port China
by Robert Bickers
From green borders to paper walls: Jewish migrants from Eastern Europe in Germany before and after the Great War
by Tobias Brinkmann
War, Cold War, and New World Order: political boundaries and Polish migration to Britain
by Kathy Burrell
Beyond the pale? Mary Carpenter and the Irish poor in mid-Victorian Bristol
by Madge Dresser
The boundaries of welfare
by David Feldman
Pizza, pasta and red sauce: Italian or American?
by Donna R. Gabaccia
Crossing borders: migration in Russia and Eastern Europe during the twentieth century
by Peter Gatrell
Crossing borders: Scottish emigration to Canada
by Marjory Harper
Immigration: saying the unsayable
by Eric Homberger
The colonial and post-colonial dimensions of Algerian migration to France
by Jim House
Within and beyond the Empire: Irish settlement in Argentina (1830–1930)
by Edmundo Murray
Crossing occupation borders: migration to the north-east of England
by David Renton