Publications Relating to the Project
Amy J. Lloyd, ‘“The Englishmen Here are Much Disliked”: Hostility towards English Immigrants in Early-Twentieth-Century Toronto’ in Tanja Bueltmann, David T. Gleeson and Donald M. MacRaild (eds.), Locating the English Diaspora 1500-2010 (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2012)
Presentations - Forthcoming
'The Global English: Historical Perspectives' Conference, Northumbria University, 17-18 July 2014: 'Immigration and Economic Development: The Contribution of English Immigrants to Canada's Economic Boom, 1896-1914'
Presentations - Past
Diaspora Studies Graduate Workshop, University of Edinburgh, 25 February 2014: 'English Immigration and Canadian Economic Development, 1905-1913'
‘Migrations, Mobility and Diaspora: New Conceptualizations, Sources and Methods’ Workshop, University of Guelph (Guelph, Ontario, Canada), 16 August 2013: ‘Examining English Settlement in Canada in the Early-Twentieth Century: Record Linkage Between Passenger Lists and the 1911 Canadian Census’
'Connected Histories of Empire' Conference, Centre for the Study of Colonial and Postcolonial Societies, University of Bristol, 16 July 2013: 'Characterising and Charting Migration Flows: Passenger Lists, Census Returns and English Emigration to Canada, 1905-1913'
Canadian Studies Open Research Seminar, University of Edinburgh, 15 November 2012: ‘“The Englishmen Here are Much Disliked”: Hostility towards English Immigrants in Early-Twentieth-Century Toronto’
Britain and the World Conference, University of Edinburgh, 21-23 June 2012: ‘Who Emigrated? Exploring English Emigration to Canada in the Early Twentieth Century Using Passenger List and Census Data’
European Social Science History Conference, University of Glasgow, 11-14 April 2012: ' Who Emigrated? Using Passenger Lists and Census Returns to Study English Emigration to Canada, 1900-1914'
‘Locating the Hidden Diaspora’ Conference, Northumbria University, 8 July 2010: ‘“No Englishmen Need Apply”: Canadian Hostility towards English Immigrants, 1900-1914’