nations, including England, America, Canada, Australia, the Republic of Ireland and New Zealand. Immigration Immigration is the introduction of new people into a habitat or population. It is a biological concept and is important in population ecology, differentiated from emigration and migration.
During the 13 years of the prohibition of thesaleofliquorin theUnited States(1920–33),fleetsof ships carried liquor fromEuropeand theWest Indiesto the Atlantic coast, while truckloads were run all along the Canadian frontier. In the second half of the 20th century, such drugs as heroin,coc...
Migration from former colonies to former colonial powers represents a large portion of 20th-century migration. This migration has been facilitated by generous laws regarding immigration and citizenship. For example, after World War II Britain granted citizenship to hundreds of millions of colonial ...
migrate,transmigrate- move from one country or region to another and settle there; "Many Germans migrated to South America in the mid-19th century"; "This tribe transmigrated many times over the centuries" 2.immigrate- introduce or send as immigrants; "Britain immigrated many colonists to Americ...
They were in the form of a single-sheet paper document. The Aliens Act 1905 marked the beginnings of immigration control in Britain. It was aimed at preventing paupers and criminals from entering the country, and it introduced immigration controls and registration. Following the British Nationality...
At the turn of the 20th century, the majority of immigrants to the United States were coming from Europe, especially Southern Europe and Eastern Europe, including Russia. This itself was a major shift, as immigrants had come mainly from Britain, Ireland, Germany, and Scandinavia during the 17th...
This chapter focuses on three aspects of 20th-century Empire: the link between social, political, and cultural change in Britain and developments in colonial societies; the gendering of colonial policy and its impact on colonial gender o... B Bush - 《Slavery & Abolition》 被引量: 3发表: ...
Consequently, immigration policy strongly favoured white people from Great Britain. Britain's entry into the European Economic Community in 1973, however, forced New Zealanders to reevaluate the idea that New Zealand identity was part of a broader British identity category and this had implications ...
After the British conquest of New France, the name Quebec was sometimes used instead of Canada. The name Canada was fully restored after 1791, when Britain divided old Quebec into the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada (renamed in 1841 Canada West and Canada East, respectively, and ...
Each time it was treated jovially and amicably but why was this reminder of the Tebbit Test even relevant in what Southgate himself described as a diverse ‘modern England’ represented by his team? Stuart Hall wrote of a‘multicultural drift’ in Britain. Rather than a deliberate policy of ...