Jean P. Smith
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Introduction
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This introduction establishes the key arguments about the persistence of migration to southern Africa after the Second World War and especially after the 1960s, the distinctive dynamics of minority settler colonialism and how in South Africa, Rhodesia and the United Kingdom migration policy was used to fortify a racially-defined nation. It places British migration to South Africa and Rhodesia in a broader historical context within the wider history of post-war emigration from the United Kingdom, describing the policies of the other main receiving countries: Australia, Canada and New Zealand. The chapter situates Settlers at the End of Empire within the broader literature on British emigration, which has tended to focus either on the nineteenth or early-twentieth centuries or on individual receiving countries. It also addresses the transnational sources on which the book is based, which includes archival sources and oral histories and the methodologies employed in their analysis.

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Settlers at the end of empire

Race and the politics of migration in South Africa, Rhodesia and the United Kingdom

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