The Shortest History of Migration, Ian Goldin
The Shortest History of Migration, Ian Goldin
List: $15.99 | Sale: $11.20
Club: $7.99

The Shortest History of Migration

Author: Ian Goldin

Narrator: Julian Elfer

Unabridged: 6 hr 22 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 03/25/2025


Synopsis

From the Silk Roads to the Berlin Wall, discover the globe-turning history of human migration

We are a species in motion—from the first steps of Homo sapiens across Africa to America's "melting pot." And when we move—in search of better things, or against our will—our beliefs and skills clash and combine, reshaping society time and again.

In this visionary Shortest History of Migration, Ian Goldin uncovers key moments of cultural exchange while carefully examining empire, slavery, and war. Throughout, we meet famous explorers (Zheng He), exiles (Pablo Neruda), and everyday people in extraordinary circumstances: a Jewish man saved by the Kindertransport, a Japanese gardener who blossomed in Mexico City.

Today, freedom of movement is being curtailed, even as climate change and conflict mobilize people everywhere around the world. Goldin reminds us that passports at every border are a modern invention (he traces the "birth of big brother" to World War I), revealing the folly of trying to halt migration—and proposing commonsense policy instead.

A gripping chronicle of want and wanderlust, this is a moving portrait of humanity—in every sense of the word.

About Ian Goldin

Ian Goldin is Director of the Oxford Martin School at the University of Oxford and Professor of Globalization and Development. From 2001 to 2006, he was Vice President of the World Bank and the Bank's Director of Development Policy. Following the end of apartheid, Ian was economic adviser to President Mandela and Chief Executive of the Development Bank of Southern Africa Previously, Ian was Principle Economist at the EBRD and Head of Programmes at the OECD Development Centre. Ian has received wide recognition, including having been knighted by the French Government for his services to development, and nominated Global Leader of Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum. His books include Is the Planet Full?, Divided Nations, and Globalisation for Development.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Erik on September 20, 2024

People move. People have always moved. Should anyone think otherwise, this book will be a useful read. For everyone else, it has perhaps limited use. Because I don’t believe the hostility to migrants is based on ignorance of this fact, just that it should have no bearing on people’s current right to......more

Goodreads review by Willem on March 05, 2025

This should be an essential read for anyone voting in democratic elections… completely rips apart any argument that migration is a negative. This book will help you better understand the world and our history. It will also help prevent your anxieties around immigration that is so often used as a sca......more

Goodreads review by T.O. on July 22, 2024

Another pick of the shelves of Waterstones that takes a look at an issue of key contemporary political significance. Goldin is a very erudite and articulate writer on this subject and, in these densely packed factual tome, makes some significant points. The history of humanity is one of migration, of......more

Goodreads review by Paul on February 16, 2025

I enjoyed the style - direct and to the point - and had several AHA moments (vegetation migrates with people; Yugoslavia's split into 6! countries, remittances constitute a significant part of many developing nations' economies), but the author's entirely unbalanced view limits the experience. It's......more

Goodreads review by Roland on December 04, 2024

This book gives a short overview of migrations in the world showing how it has shaped history as well as the challenges of migrations today. However because it is short, it is also superficial narrating facts rather than analysing them. However, it is also a useful reminder of what migrants have bro......more