Synopses & Reviews
Review
"In this expanded second edition, Castles and Miller succeed in presenting both a panoramic view of the complexity and variety of international migration during the 20th century and a detailed discussion of the processes leading to minority formation ." --Hania Zlotnik, Chief, Mortality and Migration Section, Population Division, United Nations
"The Age of Migration, Second Edition is the best introduction to the movement of people across national borders. It covers the major theories of migration, the most significant movements in each region of the world, and the linkages between immigration and integration." --Philip Martin, Dept. of Ag and Resource Economics, University of California, Davis
Synopsis
At the turn of the twenty-first century, international migration has become a central issue in international relations and one of the most important questions of domestic politics in many countries. THE AGE OF MIGRATION provides a global perspective on the nature of migration movements, why they take place, and their effects on countries as different as Britain and the USA, Australia and Germany, and Canada and France. Showing how migration almost always leads to formation of ethnic minorities, the book examines how growing ethnic diversity affects economies, cultures, and political institutions and challenges existing forms of citizenship and national identity. This second edition has been
completely revised and updated, including increased coverage of new migrations in Africa and Latin America and a new chapter on the Asia-Pacific region.
About the Author
Stephen Castles is Research Professor of Sociology at the Institute of Social Change and Critical Inquiry, University of Wollongong, Australia. He has been responsible for a wide range of studies on immigration and multiculturalism in Australia and Europe, and is Director of the Secretariat of the Asia-Pacific Migration Research Network program.
Mark J. Miller is Professor of Political Science and International Relations at the University of Delaware. He has long been associated with the Center for Migration Studies in New York, and serves on the editorial board of the influential International Migration Review.
Table of Contents
Preface to the Second Edition
1. Introduction
2. The Migratory Process and the Formation of Ethnic
Minorities
3. International Migration before 1945
4. Migration to Highly Developed Countries Since 1945
5. The Next Waves: The Globalization of International
Migration
6. New Migrations in the Asia-Pacific Region
7. Migrants and Minorities in the Labour Force
8. The Migratory Process: A Comparison of Australia
and Germany
9. New Ethnic Minorities and Society
10. Immigrant Politics
11. Conclusion: Migration in the New World Disorder