This article explores the distinctly legal vagueness that underpinned citizenship and subjecthood in the British empire in the early twentieth century, drawing specifically on examples from South Africa and Australia. Situating the administration of laws about citizenship within a global context, this offers a revision of the current scholarship on the global ‘color line’. The white ‘color line’ which developed within the British empire was less a shared legal system and more of a constant negotiation between different actors. Unlike other recent studies of citizenship and subjecthood, this is not an intellectual history. This, instead, is a close scrutiny of bureaucratic decision-making precisely because the system which flourished under B...
The relationship between nationally unified calls for immigration restriction in the White Australia...
Recent scholarship on transnational immigration restriction have tended to frame British policies in...
Subjects and Aliens confronts the problematic history of belonging in Australia and New Zealand. In ...
This article explores the distinctly legal vagueness that underpinned citizenship and subjecthood in...
C1 - Refereed Journal ArticleFrom the time of European settlement in Australia until 1948, British s...
This article provides a corrective to recent scholarship surrounding modern migration control, which...
Enemy aliens were undesirable migrants in Australia during World War I, right? Yet enemy alien women...
Between the 1910s and 1930s, male migrants from colonial Nyasaland (present-day Malawi) contested So...
At the turn of the twentieth century, Indian immigrants throughout the British empire faced a rise i...
This thesis explores how an idea of Britain’s Empire as a global white republic grew up amongst many...
However it may have originated, during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, modern citizenship be...
This article examines the process by which British-born migrants to Australia and South Africa were ...
This thesis examines the history of immigration policy in South Africa and provides valuable insight...
Empire Unbound is an exploration of the history and politics of empire and imperial citizenship tha...
his article recovers the essential imperial and international context of the Immigration Restriction...
The relationship between nationally unified calls for immigration restriction in the White Australia...
Recent scholarship on transnational immigration restriction have tended to frame British policies in...
Subjects and Aliens confronts the problematic history of belonging in Australia and New Zealand. In ...
This article explores the distinctly legal vagueness that underpinned citizenship and subjecthood in...
C1 - Refereed Journal ArticleFrom the time of European settlement in Australia until 1948, British s...
This article provides a corrective to recent scholarship surrounding modern migration control, which...
Enemy aliens were undesirable migrants in Australia during World War I, right? Yet enemy alien women...
Between the 1910s and 1930s, male migrants from colonial Nyasaland (present-day Malawi) contested So...
At the turn of the twentieth century, Indian immigrants throughout the British empire faced a rise i...
This thesis explores how an idea of Britain’s Empire as a global white republic grew up amongst many...
However it may have originated, during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, modern citizenship be...
This article examines the process by which British-born migrants to Australia and South Africa were ...
This thesis examines the history of immigration policy in South Africa and provides valuable insight...
Empire Unbound is an exploration of the history and politics of empire and imperial citizenship tha...
his article recovers the essential imperial and international context of the Immigration Restriction...
The relationship between nationally unified calls for immigration restriction in the White Australia...
Recent scholarship on transnational immigration restriction have tended to frame British policies in...
Subjects and Aliens confronts the problematic history of belonging in Australia and New Zealand. In ...