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E-grāmata: London the Promised Land Revisited: The Changing Face of the London Migrant Landscape in the Early 21st Century

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Some two decades since the publication of London the Promised Land , which charted and investigated the successes and failures of the migrant experience in London over a period of three hundred years, this book re-examines the migrant landscape in London. While remaining a beacon for immigrants, the migrant face of the city has changed rapidly and dramatically from one which was heavily populated by semi-skilled and unskilled post-colonial incomers, to one which now embraces the EU Accession Countries, refugees from the Middle East and Africa, oligarchs from Russia, the new wealthy from China, economic migrants from Latin America and Ireland, and still, post-colonial immigrants - at the same time witnessing the exodus ’home’ of incomers, or their descendants, who now see opportunities where there were none before. The contributors, all leading academics and practitioners in their diverse fields, examine changes to the migrant landscape of contemporary London at the micro, meso and macro levels. London the Promised Land Revisited thus explores a range of experiences in the capital, including the presence and treatment of illness amongst migrants, the phenomenon of migrant ’invisibility’ and asylum, the migrant marketplace and ethnic ’clustering’, and interaction with local and national government - across a variety of migrant groups, both ’new’ and ’old’. As such, this book will appeal to scholars across the social sciences with interest in migration, migrant experiences and the contemporary ’global’ city.
List of Figures
vii
Notes on Contributors ix
Acknowledgements xv
Foreword xvii
Philip E. Ogden
1 Introduction: London the Promised Land Revisited: The Migrant Landscape in the 21st Century
1(10)
Anne J. Kershen
2 London's Migrant Landscape in the 21st Century
11(24)
Anne J. Kershen
3 The Ethnic Marketplace as Point of Transition
35(20)
Laura Vaughan
4 Knowing our Communities: It Doesn't Have to be that Difficult
55(22)
Michael Keating
5 London's `Ghosts': The Capital and the UK Policy of Destitution of Refused Asylum-Seekers
77(20)
Tendayi Bloom
6 Undocumented and Unseen: The Making of the Everyday in the Global Metropolis of London 2015
97(16)
Parvati Nair
7 Who Speaks for the Subaltern in a Postcolonial Metropolis? Representing the Lives of Migrants in London through Novels, Films and Oral History
113(14)
John Eade
8 Migrants and Descendants: Multi-Generations of the Irish in London in the 21st Century
127(20)
Bronwen Walter
9 London as an Informal and Individualistic Paradise? Transnationalism as a Form of Anti-State Resistance by Polish Migrants in London
147(20)
Michal P. Garapich
10 Latin London: Negotiating Invisibility among Latin Americans in London
167(20)
Cathy McIlwaine
11 Ethnicity and Culture in 21st Century Medicine
187(22)
Veronica L.C. White
12 The Presence and Treatment of Infection in the Migrant Population of London
209(18)
Jane Anderson
13 Afterword
227(4)
Anne J. Kershen
Index 231
Anne J. Kershen is Honorary Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Migration at Queen Mary University of London, Honorary Senior Research Associate at the Bartlett School of Graduate Studies, University College London, UK, and founder of the Centre for the Study of Migration. She is the author of Strangers, Aliens and Asians: Huguenots, Jews and Bangladeshis in Spitalfields 1666-2000 and Uniting the Tailors, co-author of Tradition and Change and editor of London the Promised Land? The Migrant Experience in a Capital City, A Question of Identity; Language Labour and Migration and Food in the Migrant Experience, and author of Strangers, Aliens and Asians: Huguenots, Jews and Bangladeshis in Spitalfields.