Borders in Flux: Migration, Nationhood, and the Making of Modern Europe
MTA
Exploring migration, forced displacement, and border politics from the 18th century to the present
2nd Edition
This book traces the evolution of European borders and migration from the 18th century to the present, arguing that the movement of people—whether through labor migration, forced displacement, or colonial retreat—has been the primary force shaping modern national identities and state structures. In the pre-industrial era, mobility was often seasonal and fluid, but the rise of the nation-state and the upheavals of the French Revolution introduced the modern passport and the concept of territorial citizenship. The 19th and early 20th centuries saw these boundaries harden as industrialization drew rural populations to cities and mass overseas emigration channeled millions of Europeans to the Americas, while the collapse of multi-ethnic empires began a long, often violent process of ethnic homogenization.
The mid-20th century marked a catastrophic turning point, as total war and state-sponsored genocide transformed borders into instruments of annihilation. World War II and its aftermath saw the largest forced population transfers in history, including the Holocaust and the mass expulsion of ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe. During the Cold War, the continent was defined by the rigid "Iron Curtain," which restricted movement between East and West even as Western European nations established guestworker programs to fuel economic reconstruction. Simultaneously, decolonization brought a new wave of migration from former imperial territories, forever altering the demographic and cultural landscape of the metropoles and triggering enduring debates over integration and secularism.
In the contemporary era, the European Union has attempted to reconcile the removal of internal frontiers through the Schengen Agreement with the fortification of a high-tech "Fortress Europe" at its external edges. The book analyzes how modern technologies—such as biometric databases, drones, and algorithmic risk profiling—have transformed the border into a dynamic, digital network. However, the 2015 refugee crisis and the 2022 invasion of Ukraine have exposed the fragility of these systems, revealing deep-seated tensions between national sovereignty and humanitarian solidarity. Ultimately, the book illustrates that while borders have become more technologically sophisticated, they remain sites of constant negotiation between states seeking control and individuals driven by the timeless human impulses of necessity, safety, and ambition.
Rose Thomas
View booksMay 15, 2026
102,430 words
7 hours 10 minutes
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