Studies in Pacific history : economics, politics and migration

Bibliographic Information

Studies in Pacific history : economics, politics and migration

edited by Dennis O. Flynn, Arturo Giráldez and James Sobredo

Ashgate, c2002

Available at  / 13 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In recent years scholars have begun to conceptualize the history of the Pacific Ocean as a subset of world history. This question is taken up in the introductory chapter of this volume, which sets out four periods of modern Pacific history: a silver period, 1570s-1750; a period of early integration, 1750-1850; a gold period, 1850-c.1900; and a period of imperial strategies after the gold rushes. The next chapter looks at the fur trade of the Pacific coast of America, and its dependence on markets in China and Russia, followed by a set which focus on the era of the gold rushes, in California, Australia and New Zealand, when the pace of Pacific integration grew rapidly and new markets opened across the ocean. The last chapters examine aspects of the subsequent evolution of the Pacific Ocean into an "American lake", looking in particular at the interlocking of politics and migration.

Table of Contents

  • Silver period, 1571-c.1750. Exploration and early integration period, c.1750-c.1850: Soft gold - animal skins and the early economy of California, Jim Hardee. The gold period, c.1848 through late-19th century: San Francisco's Pacific exports, 1850-1898, David J. St.Clair
  • Powerhouse economies of the Pacific - a comparative study of gold and wheat in 19th-century Victoria and California, Warwick Frost
  • New Zealand and the gold rushes of the mid-19th century, Kenneth E. Jackson
  • Gold rush California bound - new evidence from French passenger list, Annick Foucrier
  • The rim of fire - Pacific Rim cities and the problem of fires, Lionel Frost. Imperial strategies after the gold period: World War I, the American interior, and Pacific markets - a look at distant markets, Nancy J. Taniguchi
  • Race and the right kind of island - immigration policy in Hawaii and Cuba under US auspices, 1899-1912, Katherine Bjork
  • The 1934 Tydings-McDuffie Act and Filipino exclusion - social poitical and economic context revisited, James Sobredo
  • Communists, and Japanese Imperial subjects - Okanawan immigrants within the Japanese diaspora, 1899-1941, Edith Kaneshiro
  • Hong Kong - constitutional development and corporate culture, Frank H. King
  • The Philippines annexation - an experiment of profound interest, Arthur P. Dudden
  • Cold War casualties - the impact of American nuclear testing policies in the Pacific, 1954, Martha Smith-Norris.

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