Introduction
DONNA R. GABACCIA
DURING SUMMER 2000, Romans, Londoners, and Berliners hopped
on Paris-bound trains that scarcely paused at national borders. They
studied, took jobs and shifted their residences to far-off corners of the
continent without ever once considering themselves migrants; in the
European Community, they were simply Europeans on the move. Meanwhile,
on the other side of the Atlantic, the recently elected President of
Mexico, Vicente Fox raised quite a stir among his neighbors to the
North when he called for freer migration across boundaries. Although
Canadian National Railroad had for years been purchasing aging rail
lines in the U.S. to create a new trans-continental transportation system,
it wanted to promote freight, not human movement.
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