Tony Kushner, 'Colin Holmes: An Introduction' SECTION 1: HISTORIOGRAPHY Jennifer Craig-Norton, 'Introduction' Chapter 1: Ken Lunn, ‘Uncovering traditions of intolerance: the earlier years of Immigrants and Minorities and the "Sheffield School"’ Chapter 2: Tony Kushner, ‘Colin Holmes and the Development of Migrant and Anti-Migrant Historiography’ Chapter 3: Tobias Brinkmann, ‘Looking Beyond the Nation State: the history of global migrations after 1800’ Chapter 4: Christhard Hoffmann, ‘Class vs. Ethnicity: concepts of migrant historiographies in Britain and (West) Germany, 1970s-1990s’ SECTION 2: PLACES AND SPACES Tony Kushner, 'Introduction' Chapter 5: Anne Kershen, 'From the Profitable Strangers to the residents of Banglatown: an exploration of the historiography of immigrants in London's East End' Chapter 6: Anne Witchard, 'The Chinese Connection: an historiography' Chapter 7: Panikos Panayi, 'The Uniqueness of London' Chapter 8: Caroline Bressey, 'Spaces of Black History' SECTION 3: COMMUNITY HISTORY Christhard Hoffmann, 'Introduction' Chapter 9: Geoffrey Alderman, ‘Academic Duty and Communal Obligation Revisited’ Chapter 10: Wendy Ugolini, ‘Weaving Italian Experience into the British Immigration Narrative’ Chapter 11: Jennifer Craig-Norton, ‘Jewish Refugee Historiography: moving beyond the celebratory?’ Chapter 12: Saima Nasar, ‘We Refugees? Re-defining Britain’s East African Asians’ SECTION 4: RACISMS AND ANTI-MIGRANT POLITICS Christhard Hoffmann, 'Introduction' Chapter 13: Gavin Schaffer, ‘Race and Colour Revisited: white immigrants in post-war Britain’ Chapter 14: Barbara Bush, ‘Family Misfortunes? Gendered perspectives on West Indian migration, welfare policies and cultural racism in post-Second World War Britain’ Chapter 15: Krista Maglen, ?Inside, Outside, and In-Between: shifting borders in British immigration and disease control’ Chapter 16: Graham Macklin, ‘The Evolving Historiography of the Extreme Right in Britain’ SECTION 5: MARGINAL, NEGLECTED AND REIMAGINED HISTORIES Jennifer Craig-Norton, 'Introduction' Chapter 17: David Mayall, ‘Gypsy/Romani Studies: a few reflections’ Chapter 18: Milosz Cybowski, ‘"The poorest, the most intractable, and the most permanent" – the invisible nineteenth-century Pole in Britain’ Chapter 19: Rozina Visram, ‘History of Asians in Britain 1600-1950’ Chapter 20: Nick Evans, ‘The development of transmigrant historiography in Britain’ SECTION 6: IDENTITIES Tony Kushner, 'Introduction' Chapter 21: Donald MacRaild and Kyle Hughes, 'Underground Catholic networks in Ireland and Britain: the case of Ribbonism before the famine and after' Chapter 22: James Jordan, ‘"The most varied, colourful, confusing hubub in the world": the East End, television and the documentary imagination, July 1939' Chapter 23: Ryan Hanley, 'The Equiano Effect: representativeness and early black British migrant testimony' Chapter 24: Kathy Burrell, 'Framing Polish Migration to the UK, from the Second World War to EU Expansion' Tony Kushner, 'Afterword' APPENDICES: COLIN HOLMES - A LIFE AND CAREER 1. Colin Holmes: publications 2. The Sheffield School - Colin Holmes Postgraduate Supervision 3. Colin Holmes interview with Alan Dein INDEX