03772nam 22005653 450 99664783480331620250905162201.01-5292-3449-210.56687/9781529234497(MiAaPQ)EBC31653228(Au-PeEL)EBL31653228(CKB)37401415600041(OCoLC)1492929018(DE-B1597)704730(DE-B1597)9781529234497(EXLCZ)993740141560004120250201d2025 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierRethinking Migration Challenging Borders, Citizenship and Race /edited by Bridget Anderson1st ed.Bristol :Bristol University Press,2025.©2025.1 online resource (271 pages)1-5292-3446-8 Front Matter --Contents --List of Figures and Tables --Notes on Authors --Acknowledgements --Introduction: Rethinking Migration – Challenging Borders, Citizenship and Race --Multiple Mobilities --Introduction --Mobile People and Places in Premodern Europe --The Early Voyages of the East India Company, 1601–17: A Non-Human and Unheroic History --Cows on the Move: The Im(Material) Politics of Animal Passports and the Risk of Antimicrobial Resistance --Productive Borders --Introduction --Migrants and Borders in the Medieval English World --The Aliens Order 1920, the ‘Work Permit’ and the Making of the National Labour Market --The Production and Negotiation of the ‘Good’ and the ‘Bad’ Migrant --Transformative Representations --Introduction --Why Can’t Chinese Citizens Go Home? Spoiled Citizenship and Stigmatized Returns in Pandemic Times --The Family Idyll, Exclusion and Ideology in Persepolis --Sounds across Borders and the Ukraine War --Beyond Migrants and Migration --Introduction --Constructing Illegality: Epistemic Borderwork in the Speeches of UK Political Elites --Communities of Resistance: Migrant Organizing and Transnational Campaigning Past and Future --IndexAvailable open access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. Humans have always moved, but across the world ‘migration’ has become a major policy, political and media concern. How can we understand human movement without positioning ‘the migrant’ as a problem? This interdisciplinary collection rethinks migration and movement. It explores mobility beyond the human and across time, from the movement of soil in the Middle Ages to contemporary cow passports. It also examines the histories of international borders and how they are intertwined with the politics of race and nation. The book illustrates that conceptually based, critical and creative thinking is as important for practice as it is for theory and can help us understand and respond to migration as a force that connects rather than divides.SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & ImmigrationbisacshSOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration.304.8Anderson Bridget1961-1793659Smith Brendan1787232Scheding Florian1976-1793658Rooke Holly1787234Zhang Juan1354825Publicover Laurence1787235Donkin Lucy1787236Dias-Abey Manoj1787237Tello Maria Paula Escobar1793660Massoumi Nariman1787239MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996647834803316Rethinking Migration4333599UNISA