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The Business of Transatlantic Migration between Europe and the United States, 19001914
Details
This is the first systematic examination of the business of mass migration travel across the North Atlantic during the period of unprecedented globalization prior to World War I. It explicates the reinforcing interests and actions of the oceanic shipping lines, their migrant customers, and contemporary government authorities, in coping with the substantial risks of mass physical relocation, particularly those due to cyclical economic recessions, and in keeping migration safe, smooth and largely self-regulated. In a comprehensive analysis backed up by extensive and consistent statistics, it details the motives and mechanisms by which these eleven million Europe-born migrants made nineteen million ocean crossings on eighteen thousand voyages of several hundred large steamships, generating hundreds of millions of dollars in revenues for these steamship lines during the pivotal peak years of early twentieth century migration between Europe and America, and it describes how this long-lived long-distance travel business operated as the crucial common denominator of the greatest and most ethnically diverse mass transoceanic relocation ever.
Here we find an old and much-traversed topic of economic history, but examined with a totally new approachthe literal process of migration, and the business that made it possible. This broad definitionallows Keeling to set straight the record on all sorts of things that historians of migration as conventionally understood have asserted without proof thus far.Ann McCants (MIT)Keeling's impressive study on how and why millions of Europeans crossed to the United States between 1900 and 1914 works because he writes about migrants and transport in equal doses.Michael Miller, University of MiamiThe research here is broad-based, multinational and extremely impressive. The level of the analysis and the insights provided throughout suggest strongly that it will have an important impact among a wide variety of scholars. The book takes a mass of evidence and makes it comprehensible. This is no small achievement.Lewis R. Fischer, Memorial University, Newfoundland
Inhalt
Introduction 1. Transportation Revolution and European Exodus 2. The Economics of Migrant Travel 3. Competition, Conferences and Combinations, 1900-03 4. The North Atlantic Fare War of 1904 5. More Control at the Gates, 1902-07 6. Coping with the Cyclical Slump of 1907-08 7. Comfort and Safety at Sea: Repeat migration, closed berths, and boats for all, 1909-14 8. Conclusions Epilogue Appendix Suggestions for Further Reading Bibliography
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783034011525
- Sprache Englisch
- Auflage 22.11.2012
- Größe H240mm x B160mm x T32mm
- Jahr 2012
- EAN 9783034011525
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 978-3-0340-1152-5
- Veröffentlichung 22.11.2012
- Titel The Business of Transatlantic Migration between Europe and the United States, 19001914
- Autor Drew Keeling
- Untertitel Mass migration as a transnational business in long distance travel
- Gewicht 770g
- Herausgeber Chronos Verlag
- Anzahl Seiten 352
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Genre History