Table of Content
General Editor’s introduction
Introduction: Mapping the contours of the British World: Empire, identity and migration – Kent Fedorowich and Andrew S Thompson
1. Malthus and the Uses of British Emigration – Eric Richards
2. ‘Sprung from ourselves’: British interpretations of mid-nineteenth-century racial demographics – Kathrin Levitan
3. Religious nationalism and clerical emigrants to Australia, 1828–1900 – Hilary M Carey
4. Resistance and accommodation in Christian mission: Welsh Presbyterianism in Sylhet, Eastern Bengal, 1860–1940 – Aled Jones
5. Asian migration and the British World, c.1850–c.1914 – Rachel Bright
6. Righting the record? British child migration: the case of the Middlemore Homes, 1872–1972 – Michele Langfield
7. Travelling colonist: British emigration and the construction of Anglo-Canadian privilege – Lisa Chilton
8. ‘Dear Grace…love Maidie’: Interpreting a migrant’s letters from Australia, 1926–67 – Stephen Constantine
9. Staying on or going ‘home’? Settlers’ decisions upon Zambian Independence – Jo Duffy
11. ‘I’m a Citizen of the World’: Late-twentieth-century British emigration and global identities – the end of the ‘British World’? – A. James Hammerton
12. Multiculturalism, decolonisation and immigration: Integration policy in Britain and France after the Second World War – Eleanor Passmore and Andrew S Thompson
Index