Pluto Press, 2011 Cloth: 978-0-7453-2906-2 | Paper: 978-0-7453-2905-5 Library of Congress Classification JV6225.A76 2012 Dewey Decimal Classification 304.8
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Constant migration is a worldwide phenomenon that creates sharp divisions between those who accept the need for migrants and welcome the contributions they make and those who oppose them on xenophobic grounds. Guy Arnold provides a comprehensive survey of the consequences of migration.
Arnold studies both the massive internal migrations in China and India that drive economic development and the influx of cheap labour into the advanced economies of the USA and EU. He shows that migrants are essential to advanced countries, filling skills gaps and bolstering ageing and static populations. He argues that the constant flow of people in all directions should be welcomed as a positive assault upon outdated, narrow nationalism.
Packed with statistics that support the argument that migration is a force for positive change, Arnold's analysis will be an excellent resource for journalists, policy makers and students of sociology, human geography and anthropology.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Guy Arnold is a freelance writer and the author of fifty books, mainly concerned with relations between global North and South, with special emphasis upon Africa. These include Wars in the Third World since 1945 (1995), The New South Africa (2000), Africa: A Modern History (2005) and The New Scramble for Africa (2009).
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Part I THE AMERICAS
1 The United States of America
2 Mexico
3 Canada and the Caribbean
4 South America
Part II EUROPE
5 The European Union
6 Britain
7 France and Germany
8 Spain, Italy, Malta, Greece
9 Europe's Small Developed States
10 East Europe, Turkey
11 Russia
Part III AFRICA
12 Africa and Europe
13 Sudan and the Horn
14 The Congo, Rwanda, Burundi
15 West Africa
16 Southern Africa
Part IV ASIA
17 China
18 India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka
19 Southeast Asia
20 Southwest Asia, The Gulf
21 The Asian Periphery
22 Tentative Conclusions
References
Bibliography
index
Nearby on shelf for Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration / Emigration and immigration. International migration / Immigration:
Constant migration is a worldwide phenomenon that creates sharp divisions between those who accept the need for migrants and welcome the contributions they make and those who oppose them on xenophobic grounds. Guy Arnold provides a comprehensive survey of the consequences of migration.
Arnold studies both the massive internal migrations in China and India that drive economic development and the influx of cheap labour into the advanced economies of the USA and EU. He shows that migrants are essential to advanced countries, filling skills gaps and bolstering ageing and static populations. He argues that the constant flow of people in all directions should be welcomed as a positive assault upon outdated, narrow nationalism.
Packed with statistics that support the argument that migration is a force for positive change, Arnold's analysis will be an excellent resource for journalists, policy makers and students of sociology, human geography and anthropology.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Guy Arnold is a freelance writer and the author of fifty books, mainly concerned with relations between global North and South, with special emphasis upon Africa. These include Wars in the Third World since 1945 (1995), The New South Africa (2000), Africa: A Modern History (2005) and The New Scramble for Africa (2009).
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Part I THE AMERICAS
1 The United States of America
2 Mexico
3 Canada and the Caribbean
4 South America
Part II EUROPE
5 The European Union
6 Britain
7 France and Germany
8 Spain, Italy, Malta, Greece
9 Europe's Small Developed States
10 East Europe, Turkey
11 Russia
Part III AFRICA
12 Africa and Europe
13 Sudan and the Horn
14 The Congo, Rwanda, Burundi
15 West Africa
16 Southern Africa
Part IV ASIA
17 China
18 India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka
19 Southeast Asia
20 Southwest Asia, The Gulf
21 The Asian Periphery
22 Tentative Conclusions
References
Bibliography
index