Migration and disruptions : toward a unifying theory of ancient and contemporary migrations /
Migration and disruptions : toward a unifying theory of ancient and contemporary migrations /
edited by Brenda J. Baker and Takeyuki Tsuda.
- Gainesville : University Press of Florida, (c)2015.
- 1 online resource
Includes bibliographies and index.
Part I: A conceptual framework. -- Introduction: bridging the past and present in assessing migration / Unifying themes in studies of ancient and contemporary migrations / Part II: Past perspectives -- The Anglo-Saxon migration: an archaeological case study of disruption / Religious disruption and the Islamic conquest of Andalucía / Causes and consequences of migration in epiclassic Northern Mesoamerica / The debated role of migration in the fall of ancient Teotihuacan in central Mexico / Migration as a response to environmental and political disruption: the middle horizon and late intermediate periods in the south-central Andes / Part III: Modern perspectives -- "Disruption," use wear, and migrant habitus in the Sonoran Desert / Environmental disruption as a consequence of human migration: the case of the U.S.-Mexico border / Rethinking "causation" and "disruption": the environment-migration nexus in northern Ethiopia / Migration and disruption on Palawan Island, the Philippines: a comparison of two cases / Unequal in the court of public opinion: Mexican and Asian immigrant disruptions in the United States / Perceptions of disruption: media representations and medical staffs' perceptions of undocumented immigrants? Impact on healthcare services in post-SB 1070 Arizona / Conclusion: migration and disruptions from prehistory to the present / Brenda J. Baker and Takeyuki Tsuda -- Takeyuki Tsuda, Brenda J. Baker, James F. Eder, Kelly J. Knudson, Jonathan Maupin, Lisa Meierotto, and Rachel E. Scott -- Catherine Hills -- Sonia Zakrzewski -- Christopher S. Beekman -- George L. Cowgill -- Kelly J. Knudson and Christina Torres-Rouff -- Jason De León, Cameron Gokee, and Anna Forringer-Beal -- Lisa Meierotto -- James Morrissey -- James F. Eder -- Takeyuki Tsuda -- Jonathan Maupin -- Takeyuki Tsuda and Brenda J. Baker.
In this groundbreaking unifying theory of migration, a group of researchers from various anthropological disciplines attempt to identify the social and environmental disruptions that led to migration, regardless of its temporal space. Never before has such a diverse group of scholars met to identify and codify across time the reasons humans migrate.
9780813055404 9780813050874
Human beings--Migrations.
Social sciences--Emigration and immigration.
Emigration and immigration.
Electronic Books.
GN370 / .M547 2015
Includes bibliographies and index.
Part I: A conceptual framework. -- Introduction: bridging the past and present in assessing migration / Unifying themes in studies of ancient and contemporary migrations / Part II: Past perspectives -- The Anglo-Saxon migration: an archaeological case study of disruption / Religious disruption and the Islamic conquest of Andalucía / Causes and consequences of migration in epiclassic Northern Mesoamerica / The debated role of migration in the fall of ancient Teotihuacan in central Mexico / Migration as a response to environmental and political disruption: the middle horizon and late intermediate periods in the south-central Andes / Part III: Modern perspectives -- "Disruption," use wear, and migrant habitus in the Sonoran Desert / Environmental disruption as a consequence of human migration: the case of the U.S.-Mexico border / Rethinking "causation" and "disruption": the environment-migration nexus in northern Ethiopia / Migration and disruption on Palawan Island, the Philippines: a comparison of two cases / Unequal in the court of public opinion: Mexican and Asian immigrant disruptions in the United States / Perceptions of disruption: media representations and medical staffs' perceptions of undocumented immigrants? Impact on healthcare services in post-SB 1070 Arizona / Conclusion: migration and disruptions from prehistory to the present / Brenda J. Baker and Takeyuki Tsuda -- Takeyuki Tsuda, Brenda J. Baker, James F. Eder, Kelly J. Knudson, Jonathan Maupin, Lisa Meierotto, and Rachel E. Scott -- Catherine Hills -- Sonia Zakrzewski -- Christopher S. Beekman -- George L. Cowgill -- Kelly J. Knudson and Christina Torres-Rouff -- Jason De León, Cameron Gokee, and Anna Forringer-Beal -- Lisa Meierotto -- James Morrissey -- James F. Eder -- Takeyuki Tsuda -- Jonathan Maupin -- Takeyuki Tsuda and Brenda J. Baker.
In this groundbreaking unifying theory of migration, a group of researchers from various anthropological disciplines attempt to identify the social and environmental disruptions that led to migration, regardless of its temporal space. Never before has such a diverse group of scholars met to identify and codify across time the reasons humans migrate.
9780813055404 9780813050874
Human beings--Migrations.
Social sciences--Emigration and immigration.
Emigration and immigration.
Electronic Books.
GN370 / .M547 2015