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E-grāmata: New Scots: Scotland's Immigrant Communities since 1945

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This is the first wide-ranging, cross-disciplinary overview of immigration to Scotland in recent history and its impact on both the newcomers and the host society. It examines key themes relating to postwar migration by showcasing the experiences of many of Scotland's most striking immigrant communities of people arriving from England, Poland, India, Pakistan, China, the Caribbean and the African continent. New Scots also features analysis of asylum seekers and refugees, along with Jewish and Roma migrants, and includes a chapter on migrant voting patterns during the Independence Referendum of 2014.

Framed in chronological, thematic and international contexts, New Scots offers its readers a penetrating understanding of immigration, one of the most crucial issues confronting the United Kingdom today.
List of Figures
vii
List of Tables
viii
The Contributors ix
Acknowledgements xi
Series Editors' Introduction xii
1 Introduction: The Historical and Contemporary Context of Immigration to Scotland since 1945
1(20)
T. M. Devine
Angela McCarthy
2 Invisible Migrants? English People in Modem Scotland
21(29)
T. M. Devine
3 `New' Jews in Scotland since
50(25)
Nicholas J. Evans
Angela McCarthy
4 The Migration and Settlement of Pakistanis and Indians
75(29)
Stefano Bonino
5 Immigration to Scotland from Overseas: The Experience of Nurses
104(22)
Ima Jackson
6 Polish Diaspora or Polish Migrant Communities? Polish Migrants in Scotland, 1945--2015
126(24)
Emilia Pietka-Nykaza
7 Education and the Social Mobility of Chinese Families in Scotland
150(26)
Eona Bell
8 African Migrants, Asylum Seekers and Refugees: Tales of Settling in Scotland, 2000--15
176(29)
Teresa Piacentini
9 `Race', Place and Territorial Stigmatisation: The Construction of Roma Migrants in and through Govanhill, Scotland
205(27)
Ashli Mullen
10 Migration, Engagement and Constitutional Preferences: Evidence from the 2014 Scottish Independence Referendum
232(20)
Ailsa Henderson
Chris Carman
Rob Johns
James Mitchell
11 Immigration to Scotland since 1945: The Global Context
252(11)
Enda Delaney
Index 263