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Some more population-related links popped up over the past week.



  • CBC Toronto reported on this year’s iteration of Winter Stations. A public art festival held on the Lake Ontario shorefront in the east-end Toronto neighbourhood of The Beaches, Winter Stations this year will be based around the theme of migration.

  • JSTOR Daily noted how the interracial marriages of serving members of the US military led to the liberalization of immigration law in the United States in the 1960s. With hundreds of thousands of interracial marriages of serving members of the American military to Asian women, there was simply no domestic constituency in the United States
  • Ozy reported on how Dayton, Ohio, has managed to thrive in integrating its immigrant populations.

  • Amro Ali, writing at Open Democracy, makes a case for the emergence of Berlin as a capital for Arab exiles fleeing the Middle East and North America in the aftermath of the failure of the Arab revolutions. The analogy he strikes to Paris in the 1970s, a city that offered similar shelter to Latin American refugees at that time, resonates.

  • Alex Boyd at The Island Review details, with prose and photos, his visit to the isolated islands of St. Kilda, inhabited from prehistoric times but abandoned in 1930.
  • VICE looks at the plight of people who, as convicted criminals, were deported to the Tonga where they held citizenship. How do they live in a homeland they may have no experience of? The relative lack of opportunity in Tonga that drove their family's earlier migration in the first place is a major challenge.

  • Window on Eurasia notes how, in many post-Soviet countries including the Baltic States and Ukraine, ethnic Russians are assimilating into local majority ethnic groups. (The examples of the industrial Donbas and Crimea, I would suggest, are exceptional. In the case of the Donbas, 2014 might well have been the latest point at which a pro-Russian separatist movement was possible.)

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  • Le Devoir took a look at the importance of the seal hunt for the Iles-de-la-Madeleine.

  • Alex Boyd at The Island Review details, with prose and photos, his visit to the now-deserted island of St. Kilda.

  • The Economist took a look at the German North Sea island of Heligoland.

  • Orlando Milesi writes at the Inter Press Service about the threats posed by climate changes to the iconic statues and marine resources of Rapa Nui.

  • VICE looks at the plight of people who, as convicted criminals, were deported to the Tonga where they held citizenship. How do they live in a homeland they may have no experience of?

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  • CBC Prince Edward Island reports on a poster showing the hundred largest islands in the world. (PEI is #96.)

  • A broken undersea cable has disrupted Internet service throughout the Kingdom of Tonga, Motherboard reports.

  • The melting of ice is southwestern Greenland is accelerating, CBC reports.

  • CityLab notes controversy in Montréal regarding plans to redesign the insular Parc-Jean-Drapeau.

  • Al Jazeera looks at the problems facing the inhabitants of the United Kingdom's overseas territories, almost all islands, faced with Brexit.

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  • JSTOR Daily links to a paper examining how a speculative sugar boom in early modern Madeira was the first of its kind.

  • Simon Worrall interviews author Malachy Tallack about the latter's book of imaginary places, notably islands.

  • News that the DNA of a preserved thylacine has been salvaged is fantastic. Besides the scientific interest of this, could this lead to the resurrection of this Tasmanian species?

  • Elaina Zachos notes the many problems facing the many cute rabbits product of a recent introduction to the Japanese island of Ōkunoshima.

  • A volcanic island that recently emerged from the sea off of Tonga turns out to be much more durable than scientists had expected.

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  • The Buffer blog advises online writers as to how often they should post on different media.

  • Centauri Dreams reacts to the discovery of the ocean under Saturn's moon Enceladus.

  • The Dragon's Tales notes a recent paper claiming to set limits on a potential distant planet X and observes archeological data suggesting a 9th century settlement date for a Tongan island.

  • Eastern Approaches comments on the Hungarian election.

  • A Fistful of Euros' Doug Merrill warns that if Russia does move into eastern Ukraine, terrible choices will be afoot.

  • Geocurrents' Claire Negiar takes a look at the Caribbean island of St. Martin, divided between French and Dutch halves.

  • Joe. My. God. links to an article examining the use of the drug Truvada to prevent HIV infection and notes that Blondie's Debbie Harry has come out as bisexual.

  • Language Log's Victor Mair explains what Chinese might mean when they talk about prayer.

  • Towleroad's Ari Ezra Waldman comments on Brandon Eich's resignation.

  • Window on Eurasia notes one Russian commentator's argument that the Baltic States have been lost to the Russian sphere, another noting a fall in anti-Caucasian sentiment in the media as Ukraine heats up.

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Over at Demography Matters, I've got a post up examining the massive and vital role that migration has played in Tonga particularly and the South Pacific generally.

Go, read!
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