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*Released early for the UK election.* From our earliest wanderings to the rise of the digital nomad, here is the story of human migration. For hundreds of thousands of years, the ability of Homo sapiens to travel across vast distances and adapt to new environments has been key to our survival as a species. Yet this deep migratory impulse is being tested as never before. By building ever stronger walls and raising barriers to progress, governments are harming the lives of migrants and threatening the future well-being of our societies. In The Shortest History of Migration, a visionary thinker tells a story of the movement of peoples that spans every age and continent and goes to the heart of what makes us human. Drawn from ancient records and the latest genetic research, it recounts strange, terrible and uplifting tales of migrants past and present, examining the legacies of empire, slavery and war. Finally, Goldin turns his attention to today's world, bringing together the evidence of history with the most recent data to suggest how we might create a more humane future -- one that allows us to reap the tremendous benefits that migration can offer.
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‘Goldin is one of the great authorities on globalisation’
Gordon Brown
‘Impressively succinct yet wide-ranging… convincingly shows that migration has always been an integral part of humanity’
Hein de Haas, author of How Migration Really Works
‘To move is human. Migration, therefore, is the story of humanity – as intimate to our history as evolution itself… An indispensable guide to our common origins – and our shared destiny.’
Parag Khanna, author of Connectography
‘A bold and compelling account of the story of migration… generally shifts the global picture away from the usual suspects – the USA and Western Europe.’
Robin Cohen, author of Migration: the Movement of Humankind from Prehistory to the Present
‘A fresh, clear-eyed and timely analysis of the challenges and opportunities that comes from one of the most important themes of the 21st century’
Peter Frankopan on The Age of the City
‘Fascinating… outstanding insights for all those interested in the stresses of the modern world and how other ages have confronted them in their own time’
Niall Fergusson on Age of Discovery
iii
v
To my grandparents, who gave up everything to flee
vi
My family, Vienna, 1936. My grandmother is on the left in a traditional Austrian dirndldress; on the far right is my grandfather, also in national dress. My mother is in the front with plaits, next to her sister. My grandparents escaped with their children in 1938 but all my relatives who stayed in Austria were killed in concentration camps, despite their strong allegiance to the country.
This is a deeply personal book. Both my mother’s and father’s parents fled almost certain death. Had they not done so, I would not be alive today. My paternal grandfather’s siblings and other family members who were unable to leave Lithuania perished in the pogroms. All the relatives of my mother’s parents who remained in Austria and Czechoslovakia were killed in the Holocaust. My father’s fleeing family were not welcome anywhere in Europe, with those who escaped finding refuge in the United States, Canada, Argentina and South Africa, where I was born.
xYears later, I too felt compelled to leave my homeland. My opposition to the brutally racist apartheid regime in South Africa led me into exile, to establish a new life first in England, then in France and later in the US. Then the seemingly impossible occurred, and I was able to return to the country of my birth to support President Mandela in establishing a democratic country. When he retired, and my job as chief executive of the Development Bank of Southern Africa was done, my family and I moved back to the US and then to England, where I had first gone into exile and where we have lived since 2006.
My experience is one example of the myriad ways in which refugees have been saved by migration. But historically we all have. Migration prevented humanity going extinct when faced by famines and droughts in the distant past. Migration enabled Homosapiensto populate the world. Without migration, humanity as we know it would not exist. We owe our progress as a species to our migratory nature. We have learned new ways of doing things and been able to pollinate ideas through migrant encounters. It is this pollination that is essential to all historical leaps in progress and which we require more than ever to meet current global challenges such as climate change.
Migration lies at the heart of human development. My primary interest as an economist is in how this development occurs. Why do some countries become rich and others remain poor? Why are some people wealthy while others live in desperate poverty? Above all, what can be done about it? Understanding why inequality persists and how it can be addressed requires that we understand migration.
In writing this short history I have necessarily selected only a small sample from the treasure trove of accounts of past migration that are available. Choosing what to include is a highly subjective process. There are inevitably huge gaps, not least due xito the dearth of information regarding migration in the continent of my birth, Africa, and to accounts written in languages I cannot read. The endnotes and suggested further reading at the end of the book will hopefully provide stepping stones for readers to pursue their interests.
This book is divided into two main sections. After an introduction in which I discuss the complicated question of what we mean by migration, the first ten chapters provide a broadly chronological history from the first humans to migrants in the modern era. Part two then explores contemporary issues of migration with a thematic focus. In particular, it considers the impact of migration both on sending and receiving countries and on the migrants themselves. Finally, I offer my perspective on the future of migration and the lessons that can be drawn from our past.
The history of migration is the story of humanity and its progress. The building of increasingly impervious borders threatens this. Across the world, the focus over the past century has been on keeping migrants out. This book shows that it is not only migrants whose lives are poorer as a result. By excluding this source of vitality and new ideas we are impoverishing all our societies. My hope is that The Shortest History of Migration will provide fresh insights into our common history and that it will encourage readers to see migration and migrants in new and more helpful ways.
c. 315–200 kya Long-range migrations within Africa
c. 130–95 kya Early migrations out of Africa
c. 80–35 kya Humans reach Europe, Asia and Australasia
c. 27,000–13,000 ya Early migrations into the Americas
c. 13,000–9,000 ya Agriculture develops in Fertile Crescent
c. 6,000–4,000 ya Early wheel technologies emerge
c. 5,000 ya Writing systems spread by migrants
9–12 CE The short-lived Xin Dynasty of China briefly abolishes slavery
117 CE Roman Empire reaches its greatest extent under Trajan
c. 500 Silk Roads link Mediterranean and China
700s–1000s Viking longships cross Atlantic
1206–1368 Mongols form largest contiguous empire in history
1400s First sugarcane plantations in the eastern Atlantic
1405–1431 Zheng He leads 62-ship fleet across Indian Ocean
late 1400s Bartolomeu Dias, Vasco da Gama sail around Africa
1492 Columbus lands in the Bahamas, thinking it’s India
early 1500s First African slaves depart Europe for the Americas
1519 Hernan Cortes conquers Aztec capital, present-day Mexico City
1662 Settlement Act hinders movement of England’s poor
1718 Britain’s Transportation Act formalises forced migration as punishment
1780s Transatlantic slave trade peaks with more than 78,000 slaves a year arriving in the Americas
1833/4 Slavery Abolition Act bans slavery in the British Empire
1850s End of Japan’s two-century sakoku period of isolation
1850s–early 1900s Annual European migration to North America doubles to 1 million
1880s Chinese railroad workers make up 10% of California’s population
1886 Statue of Liberty erected
late 1800s–early 1900s Jewish refugees flee persecution in Russia and Eastern Europe
1900–1930 Millions of Japanese move to Taiwan and Korea as Japan extends imperial reachxiii
1914–1918 First World War. Britain enlists 3 million people from its dominions.
1917 US introduces literary test for migrants
1917 Bolshevik Revolution leads to over 1 million refugees fleeing to Europe alone
1923 Population exchanges between newly independent Greece and Turkey
1924 US Border Patrol created
1938–1939 Kindertransport brings 10,000 children to Britain
1945 Second World War ends, leaving 11 million outside their country of origin and 30 million displaced
1947 Partition divides Indian subcontinent
1947–8 Establishment of Israel creates 726,000 Palestinian refugees
1945–1973 8.5 million colonials return to Europe
1950s Chinese flee to Hong Kong and Taiwan after Civil War
1961 Berlin Wall goes up
1971 10 million Bengalis and Hindus move to India after creation of Bangladesh
1972 Idi Amin expels 800,000 Asians from Uganda
1975 Vietnam victory over US causes 2 million Vietnamese to flee, more than 800,000 by boat
1980s Soviet invasion of Afghanistan displaces 2 million Afghans and creates 5 million refugees
1989 Berlin Wall comes down
1991 Collapse of Soviet Union
1995 The Schengen Agreement takes effect. The border-free Schengen area will eventually guarantee free movement to more than 400 million Europeans
2001 US invasion of Afghanistan in response to 9/11 terrorist attacks begins 20-year war
2011+ Syrian civil war leads to over 14 million fleeing their homes over next 13 years
2020 COVID-19 pandemic restricts movement around the planet
2022 Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forces 7.8 million abroad, pushing global numbers of displaced above 100 million for first time
2023 Sudan civil war drives 1.4 million into neighbouring countries and displaces 6 million internally by end of year
2024 In Gaza, by the end of April up to 1.7 million people (over 75 per cent of the population) have been displaced, the majority several timesxiv
Migration is not the problem; it is the solution. Migration will save us, because it is migration that made us who we are.
Gaia Vince, Nomad Century
Even if you are not a migrant, your ancestors were. If they had not migrated you would not be alive. It is through migration in the distant past that humans evolved into who we are and what we are capable of today. Yet migration has become a source of growing anxiety and polarisation. While some see migrants as a solution to our problems, others consider them a threat that will overwhelm society.
This book is about something both commonplace and extraordinary. Most people tend to spend their lives close to home. At any point in the modern era, however, about 3 per cent of our species has been on the move. As you read this, more than 280 million migrants are living and working in countries other than where they were born.
The brief history that follows asks why. It traces the story of migration from the earliest wanderings of Homo sapiens to the rise of the digital nomad. It explores how migration has become tangled up over the centuries with ideas about identity, belonging, ambition and prosperity. And it shows how migrants have become associated with disruption and division, but also creativity and new connections.2
Simply put, a migrant is someone who travels beyond their home range or territory to settle in another. Their journey may be temporary or it may be permanent. People migrate for many reasons: some to survive or escape persecution, others to earn income to support themselves and their dependants. Wanderlust or a sudden urge to travel and see new places can make migrants of us. So too can the desire to study or be reunited with family.
1.a. The movement of a person or people from one country, locality, place of residence, etc., to settle in another; an instance of this.
1.b. The seasonal movement or temporary removal of a person, people, social group, etc., from one place to another; an instance of this. Also (occasionally): a journey.
Oxford English Dictionary
Historically, humans have migrated as nomads and explorers, settlers and conquerors, merchants and students. They have travelled alone and with their relatives. They have arrived in foreign places as refugees or as voluntary workers. Not all migrants travel freely, however. Slavery, coerced labour and human trafficking have been called different things at different times but they persist in familiar forms, through the exploitation and forced movement of people.
While migration occurs within countries, this book focuses on movements of people between them. As modern nation states and borders did not exist for much of history, we must begin by considering our earliest long-distance journeys across large territorial expanses.3
Migration links all of us through a common lineage to our origins as Homosapiens. Driven by curiosity and by need, the restless movement of the first humans from place to place remains a defining feature of progress in our modern, globalised world.
As people migrated further from their homes, they encountered other wanderers and settlers with different habits, technologies and economic activities. They all carried with them relics of their past: of the lands they inhabited, the plants they cultivated, animals they reared and people with whom they shared their lives. They traded words and stories. Over time these brief exchanges led to a wider pollination of knowledge, culture, ideas and practices.
The story of human mobility is one of cooperation and peaceful exchange, but it is also one of violence. Terrible things have been done to compel people to migrate against their will. Rulers have expanded their frontiers into new territories, uprooting people in the process. Colonial settlers have destroyed whole communities and cultures, subjugating indigenous peoples in the name of civilisation.
Despite the unfathomable suffering, migration is what makes us uniquely human and remains the key to the success of our species. Migrants have always brought enormous benefits to societies despite the disruption they represent, and often because of it. Well managed, migration can be a force for good. Too often, however, it is seen as a problem to be prevented and can take a terrible toll on migrants themselves.
The story of human movement is also a story about immobility.1 For much of our past, national borders as we know them 4did not exist. Passports and travel documents only became commonplace after World War I, since when more than a hundred new countries have been created. The rise of national identity and a proliferation of hard borders have led to a growing sense of belonging – of insiders and outsiders – and a desire to control the movement of people considered foreign. Ironically, many people classed as migrants would like to move but cannot.
Stricter controls make the lives of migrants more difficult but tend not to reduce their numbers. On the contrary, the construction of walls and impermeable borders can leave societies with more migrants and make the management of migration harder. Workers may find it difficult to return home after seasonal contracts or when they retire, for example. By diverting migrants to more dangerous crossings, harsher laws also lead to an increase in undocumented and unregulated migration and expose people to hardship and grave dangers.
2.4 million
Refugees in need of resettlement
130 million
Forcibly displaced or stateless people worldwide
(UN Refugee Agency estimates for 2024)
Movements within countries are largely beyond the scope of this book. But the evidence suggests internal migration often precedes international migration, since it draws people into cities where they pick up the know-how and resources needed for a move abroad. As we shall see, however, fears of a ‘brain drain’ are often exaggerated, as are worries about immigrants placing a burden on taxpayers. Incoming migrants tend to have a net positive impact on government revenues.5
There is a widening disconnect between our growing recognition of the benefits of migration and ever-stricter controls on free movement. Everyone has an interest in migration, including governments that seek to control it and businesses that try, legally or otherwise, to employ migrants. But migration is too important to be left to politicians and bosses alone.
This book draws on the lessons of history to suggest a more humane and effective set of policies and practices to ensure that countries, communities and migrants themselves can reap the extraordinary benefits of migration. Migrants have been at the heart of all major advances in civilisation. Putting a stop to human movement harms our capacity to grapple with the global challenges we face now, from hunger and disease to the existential threat of climate change.
I hope this shortest history of migration will help readers understand our common bonds and provide clues as to how we might navigate our increasingly entangled future. By identifying what made people move in the past, and how that is changing, my aim is to provide a fresh perspective on current debates about migration. These generate a great deal of heat but very little light. By understanding migration better we can help to shape its – and our – future.6
PART ONE
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