The British world : diaspora, culture, and identity
- C. Bridge, K. Fedorowich
- History, Economics
- 2003
Mapping the British world - Carl Bridge and Kent Federowich British emigration tot he Empire-Commonwealth since 1880 - from overseas settlement to diaspora? - Stephen Constantine a new class of women…
Empire, migration and identity in the British World
- K. Fedorowich, A. Thompson
- History, Economics
- 2015
General Editor's introduction Introduction: Mapping the contours of the British World: Empire, identity and migration - Kent Fedorowich and Andrew S Thompson 1. Malthus and the Uses of British…
Mapping the British world
- C. Bridge, K. Fedorowich
- HistoryThe New Imperial Histories Reader
- 1 May 2003
Restocking the British World: Empire Migration and Anglo-Canadian Relations, 1919–30
- K. Fedorowich
- History, Political Science
- 29 August 2016
Throughout the 1920s Canadian politicians, immigration officials, eugenicists and political commentators talked about the need to ‘Canadianize’ all migrants who arrived in the dominion, including…
GERMAN ESPIONAGE AND BRITISH COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE IN SOUTH AFRICA AND MOZAMBIQUE, 1939–1944
- K. Fedorowich
- HistoryHistorical-Philological Journal
- 1 March 2005
For most of the Second World War, German and Italian agents were actively engaged in a variety of intelligence gathering exercises in southern Africa. The hub of this activity was Lourenço Marques,…
The British Empire and Italian Prisoners of War
- B. Moore, K. Fedorowich, W. Philpott
- History
- 13 March 2002
Directing the War from Trafalgar Square? Vincent Massey and the Canadian High Commission, 1939–42
- K. Fedorowich
- Political Science
- 1 March 2012
This article explores a number of key facets of Vincent Massey's tenure as Canada's wartime high commissioner in London between 1939 and 1942. Using the personal tensions and mutual suspicions which…
Prisoners-of-War and Their Captors in World War II
- B. Moore, K. Fedorowich
- History
- 1 November 1996
During World War II, captured service personnel of all the belligerent powers found themselves incarcerated as prisoners of war. Although the number of POWs ran into the millions, comparatively…
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