Essay Topic Hub

Migration
Essays

953+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

953 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Migration, as a historical subject, examines the large-scale movement of peoples across regions and borders and the forces that drive those movements. It appears in courses covering world history, social history, economic history, and cultural studies, often because it sits at the intersection of political change, economic pressure, and cultural transformation. What makes migration academically compelling is the way it connects individual experience to broad structural forces — questions of population movement, development, and national identity are rarely separable from the deeper currents of history shaping any given era.

The papers archived on this subject approach migration from several distinct angles. Some take a historical and comparative view, examining how migration and trade functioned across empires such as the Holy Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire. Others focus on the cultural consequences of movement, analyzing processes like cultural assimilation, the emergence of multicultural societies, and the development of distinct dialects and linguistic patterns. Several papers engage with westward expansion and settlement as a domestic migration story, while others evaluate policy-oriented questions about whether migration produces net positive outcomes for receiving countries and their populations.

A strong essay on migration in a history context requires a clearly scoped thesis that specifies a time period, a population, and a direction of causation — for instance, whether economic development drives migration or migration drives development. Evidence drawn from population data, policy records, and cultural analysis tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating migration as a uniform phenomenon; the strongest essays distinguish carefully between voluntary movement, forced displacement, and the varied ways different groups experienced settlement and assimilation.

953 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Second Ghetto From the First
The author of this essay, Arnold R. Hirsch, sets the stage for his presentation on urban populations of African-Americans against the backdrop of two race riots in Chicago; the first he alludes to happened in 1919, when…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Economies Economic Growth in East
The economic growth of the countries in East Asia has been the subject of debate for numerous specialized sociologists and economists, amongst which most tend to associate it with increased industrialization and…
Paper Undergraduate
American West history and settlement patterns
Frederick Turner and Women on the Frontier
Paper Undergraduate
Historiography of Chinese American History
The Exclusion Act; Redefining Citizenship
Paper Doctorate
Black Death and Its Impact on Western
A treament of the Black Death and its vairous consequences.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Vietnam International Hospital Case Study
Vietnam International Hospital Case Study
Research Paper Doctorate
Immigrant and Ethnic History Compare
Compare the Land-Allotment Strategy used with the Choctaw's with the Treaty Strategy that was applied to the Cherokee. What are the key differences between both approaches to Indian lands?
Essay Doctorate
America as a melting pot: Zangwill's concept and cultural integration
Is United States of America in the second decade of 21st century a melting pot -- the kind of melting pot that was envisaged by Israel Zangwill close to 104 years ago? The answer is an overwhelming no.
Paper Doctorate
Future of Nursing in Texas
Like all other states in the U.S. Texas is on the brink of what many assume will be a disruptive nursing shortage (Texas Team, 2009). Nurses are the largest demographic portion of the health care delivery system, and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Influence of secularization on scientific theory in 19th century Europe
Religion in the 19th Century: Distancing itself from the Populace