Available Formats
We're Here Because You Were There: Immigration and the End of Empire
By (Author) Ian Sanjay Patel
Verso Books
Verso Books
1st June 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
General and world history
Ethnic studies
941.0856
Hardback
352
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 29mm
527g
What are the origins of today's hostile environment for immigrants in Britain Using declassified documents from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, this book tells a secret history of Britains role in the end of the age of empires in the 1960s. During the post-war period, as Britain made a huge transfer of sovereign power to its former colonies, international demands for racial equality came to dominate world politics. Despite this new international recognition of racial equality, Britains colonial and Commonwealth citizens from the Caribbean, Asia and Africa were subject to a new regime of immigration control based on race. From the Windrush generation who came to the UK from the Caribbean, and the South East Asians who were expelled from East Africa, Britain was caught between attempting both to restrict the rights of its non-white citizens and redefine its imperial role in the world. Under sustained international pressure, Britain appeared to be poised to make a final transition from a colonial to a postcolonial power, symbolized by its desire to join Europe, which eventually happened in 1973. But Britains post-imperial moment never arrived, subject to endless deferral and reinvention. Instead officials drew upon an imperial vision of the world to contain what it saw as a vast migration crisis. Citizenship itself was redefined along racial lines, fatally compromising the British Commonwealth and exposing the limits of Britains influence in world politics. This book reveals an important untold global history of post-war immigration uncovering the origins of the present crisis
The contemporary politics of belonging and immigration - Ian Sanjay Patel shows in this stunning history - make no sense except against the backdrop of centuries of empire, and the decades at its messy end when British identity was refashioned. We're Here Because You Were There expertly revisits how the claim and incentive to move beyond empire followed only upon the erection of colonial hierarchy and racialized exclusion, factors which were strengthened in forgotten eras of imperial citizenship and Commonwealth unity. This book boldly and convincingly lays down a new starting point for debate today. -- Samuel Moyn, author of Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World
This is an extraordinary and important book. It is powerful, principled and courageous, a necessary and vital disquisition on the continuing legacies of colonialism and the mindset of its making and perpetuation in the modern, brutish Britain we seem to inhabit. -- Philippe Sands, author of East West Street
Combining startling new research with a clear and convincing argument, this shows just how essential the history of migration and race is to understanding Britain today. -- Daniel Trilling, author of Lights in the Distance
Many studies of immigration suffer from two weaknesses. They discuss it in isolation from a discussion of national identity, and treat it as a domestic issue that can be analysed and explained in terms of domestic constraints and compulsions. Patel's new book is happily free from these, and offers a historically rich and conceptually rigorous study of post-1945 immigration to the U.K., especially that of East African Asians. He locates it in Britain's imperial context and traces with great skill the debate on Britain's self-understanding that it sprang from and influenced. This is a first-rate book and deserves to be widely read. -- Bhikhu Parekh, author of Rethinking Multiculturalism: Cultural Diversity and Political Theory
Patel provides some much-needed context for one of the world's most contentious and vexed subjects of debate: immigration. From the legal architecture designed to make life impossible for foreigners both a century ago and today, to the hypocrisies of British officials bent on shutting out those forced from their homes, Patel succinctly and eloquently explains the long-lasting consequences of empire: how countless lives were irrevocably altered by mandarins in Whitehall offices, and the related suffering that continues into the present day. -- Dr Shashi Tharoor, author of Inglorious Empire
Patel provides an indispensable and urgently relevant account of immigration and the end of empire that reveals the mirage-like quality of the very concepts through which we typically understand postwar Britain. Situating the arrival of nonwhite people in Britain in an intra-imperial context, this bravely and innovatively wide-ranging account shows that neither were they immigrants, nor was Britain ending empire. Their arrival was a phenomenon of continuity rather than a dramatic break with the past. With a compassionate authorial voice, Patel captures the trauma of unbelonging and of racist gatekeeping of the planet against a backdrop of continuous, untrammeled British emigration. This carefully researched book is testimony to history's astonishing power to change how we understand the world we inhabit by dispelling the myths that obscure truth. -- Priya Satia, Raymond A. Spruance Professor of International History at Stanford University and author of Time's Monster
Debates about immigration in the immediate post-war decades, argues Ian Sanjay Patel in his provocative and important new book, were really about Britain's relation to changes in the outside world and to itself. He tells a story rooted both in the experience of migrants and in the archives of officials and politicians, at home, in the UN, and in the new postcolonial states. An idea of empire rooted in white power and colonial subjection was rearticulated for global times. Both Conservative and Labour governments utilized the law to establish a race-based set of rights for contemporary Britain. -- Catherine Hall, author of Civilising Subjects
Ian Sanjay Patel's meticulously researched book shows how vital it is to understand the effects of the legacies of empire on the history of migration, and our understanding of race and belonging in modern Britain. It is an essential book for our times. -- Kavita Puri, author of Partition Voices
A book of rare importance. Ian Sanjay Patel masterfully traces the long shadow cast by Empire over Britain's recent history, and its present. -- Amia Srinivasan, Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory, All Souls College, Oxford
Groundbreaking . undoubtedly a landmark contribution. -- David Wearing * Tribune *
Deeply impressed by this book. Expands upon many of the observations I make about multiculturalism in Empireland with real authority. Wish I'd been given it at school -- Sathnam Sanghera, author of Empireland
[Patel] reminds us that the British Empire and imperial thinking lasted much longer than is generally understood ... insightful -- Rohan Venkataramakrishnan * Scroll *
A book that leaves you with much food for thought, and confirms your darkest imaginings about the days of empire and the present world order it has evolved into. -- Peggy Mohan * The Wire *
This [book's] broad but telling analytical framework, combined with impressive archival research, enables [Ian Sanjay Patel] to deliver what I take to be the most compelling account of the long history of Britain's immigration laws, from 1905 to the present. It's a book that leaves me full of wonder and admiration. -- Bill Schwarz * New West Indian Guide *
Patel's book - with its wonderful title - has opened a new perspective on Britain's imperial past ... nobody has produced a more astute obituary of a progressive British idealism that believed itself uniquely gifted in world governance -- Neal Ascherson * London Review of Books *
The best possible guide to an essential history. -- Sathnam Sanghera * BBC History Magazine *
It is the signal achievement of We're Here Because You Were There to bring fresh and clear eyes to a subject many may think they know already ... scholarly, insightful and fluent -- David Feldman * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
Ian Sanjay Patel is currently LSE Fellow in Human Rights at the London School of Economics. His non-fiction writing has appeared in the New Statesman, the London Review of Books, and elsewhere. He completed his PhD at Queens' College, University of Cambridge.