ABSTRACT

This book focusses on the instruments, practices, and materialities produced by various authorities to monitor, regulate, and identify migrants in European cities from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries. Whereas research on migration regulation typically looks at local policies for the early modern period and at state policies for the contemporary period, this book avoids the stalemate of modernity narratives by exploring a long-term genealogy of migration regulation in which cities played a pivotal role. The case studies range from early modern Venice, Stockholm and Constantinople, to nineteenth- and twentieth-century port towns and capital cities such as London and Vienna.

part I|24 pages

Introduction

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

Migration Policies and Materialities of Identification in European Cities: Papers and Gates, 1500–1930s

part II|126 pages

Early Modern Period

chapter 2|20 pages

Controlling Strangers

Identifying Migrants in Early Modern Frankfurt am Main

chapter 3|21 pages

Ordering Identification

Migrants, Material Culture, and Social Bonds in Stockholm, 1650–1720

chapter 4|24 pages

Documents and Local Networks

Monitoring Migrants and Workers in Eighteenth-Century Turin 1

chapter 5|21 pages

From Community Registers to Domestic Passports

The Migration Regime in Ottoman Istanbul

part III|136 pages

Modern Period

chapter 7|22 pages

Receiving, Selecting, and Rejecting Foreign Migrants and Refugees in Port Cities

A Comparison of Bordeaux and Marseille During the Early Nineteenth Century

chapter 10|26 pages

The Practice of Control and the Illusion of Evidence

Passports and Personal Identification in Cities of Habsburg Austria

chapter 11|22 pages

Producing the ‘Undocumented Migrant’

Registration and Deportation in Early Twentieth Century London and Berlin

chapter 12|22 pages

Roma Under Surveillance in Urban Context

Control, Identification, and Expulsion in Paris, Lyon, and Marseille, 1900s–1930s

part IV|24 pages

Conclusion

chapter |18 pages

Conclusion

Cities and States: Papers and Walls