The Yearbook of Transnational History is dedicated to disseminating pioneering research in the field of transnational history. This seventh volume brings together examples of four different world migration systems, that of the Black Atlantic, of early modern religious migrations, exile in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and twenty-first century refugee systems, thus encompassing more than six centuries from local, regional, transregional, comparative, and macro historical perspectives.
Between Macro and Micro History – Scales in Migration Studies Susanne Lachenicht
Early Modern Atlantic Slavery and Labor Systems Trevor Burnard
The Ties that Bind: Itineraries of Freedom in the Dutch Caribbean Jessica Vance Roitman
European Port Cities and the Black Atlantic: On the Potential of Transnational Meso-Histories Annika Bärwald
The Moravian Mission in Saron/Suriname (1757-1779) as a Meso-History of the Relationship Between Supra-Territorial Religion and Imperial State-Building Jessica Cronshagen
Complexity, Contingency, and Agency: The Heuristic Potential of the Microhistory of Migration Fabrice Langrognet
Medicalizing the Refugee Experience: Fractured Continuities and Claims of Novelty in the Psychiatric Study of Forced Migration Baher Ibrahim
Fleeing Boko Haram: Historicizing the Refugee Experience in the Lake Chad Basin Region, 2010-2020 Edidiong Emem Ekefre
World Refugee Systems and Hospitable Form in Twenty-First-Century Life-Writing: Stories of Precarious Life Jan Rupp