Eurocentrism, forced labour, and global migration: A critical assessment

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Abstract

Recent historiography attempts increasingly to move beyond Eurocentrism. In the field of migration, Adam McKeown's article is a fine example of an attempt to put global migration in a non-Eurocentric perspective. Perhaps its most acute insight is in putting the paradigmatic European migration flows to the Americas in the nineteenth century at par with the mainly intra Asian (south/south-east Asian and north-east Asian) migration flows. McKeown's main target of attack is the unabashed "Euro-centrism" (or rather the "North Atlantic centrism") of much of the migration literature on the so called age of mass migration. Eurocentrism appears, at least in the way that McKeown presents it, as a set of three interrelated propositions. © 2007 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis.

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APA

Mohapatra, P. P. (2007, April). Eurocentrism, forced labour, and global migration: A critical assessment. International Review of Social History. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020859006002823

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