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Australia, Britain and Migration, 19151940: A Study of Desperate Hopes (Studies in Australian History)

Australia, Britain and Migration, 19151940: A Study of Desperate Hopes (Studies in Australian History)

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Michael Roe
Cambridge University Press, 9/14/1995
EAN 9780521465076, ISBN10: 0521465079

Hardcover, 322 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English

The story of Australia's post-war immigration program is well known, but little has been written about migration to Australia between the wars. This 1995 book is a systematic study of assisted emigration from Britain to Australia during the inter-war years. It looks at the British and Australian politicians and bureaucrats involved in the program and the half-million migrants who uprooted themselves. While their imperial ties were significant, the book shows that British and Australian governments acted in their own interests, using migration to meet their different needs, with little regard for the migrants themselves. Michael Roe shows that the Anglo-Australian relationship was rife with contradictions and these often came to a head in the debates over migration. Not only is the book an important study of imperial relations in the 1920s and 1930s, it describes an important and overlooked aspect of Australian political and social history.

Introduction
Background
1. The Great War's impact
2. The whirl of Hughes
1920–3
3. S. M. Bruce and Empire
1923–5
4. The modest zenith of hope
1925–6
5. Ambiguities
1926–7
6. Through confusion to doom
1928–9
7. Nadir
1929–35
8. Toward the wheel's return
1932–40
9. Emigration
10. Immigration
Afterword.

"Well documented and well written..." Choice

"...a prodigious work of scholarship and one which all historians of Australia will find of immense and lasting value." Times Literary Supplement

"This book is another in the excellent series Studies in Australian History produced under the aegis of Cambridge University Press, and with it MIchael Roe makes a major contribution to the history of Australia in the early decades of the twentieth century....it is a tour de force of scholarship and the metjodical application of the historian's craft....admirable piece of work....Roe commands such respectful attention amongst Australian Historians." F.G. Clarke, American Historical Review

"Michael Roe is an eminent Australian historian who has chosen to study the neglected subject of immigration to Australia between the wars. ...this a very detailed analysis of British-Australian diplomacy on the issue of migration which also illuminates wider social attitudes among the policy-making elites. ...[Roe's] book will remain definitive for a long time." Erik Olssen, Labor History