Pore over family documents such as birth certificates and old passports, photographs and heirlooms, however trinket-like they might seem. Family history requires research in its broadest sense.
Jessica Huntley and Angela Davis at the Keskidee Centre, London, (c.1975).
Courtesy of Michael McMillan/Huntley Archives at London Metropolitan Archives
Cricket was a significant bridge between England and ‘home’ in the Caribbean, making the sport an important part of the black Atlantic cultural exchange.
Windrush has turned out to be a defining moment in telling the story of Britain, with writing by Caribbean migrants fundamental to exposing the realities of the British empire.
Reggae, dancehall, and identity: how Jamaican music transformed British society.
Holly Squire/Canva
A paper trail, both typed and handwritten, documents Cummings’ dogged efforts to secure accommodations and resources for the Windrushers on a time crunch.
All photos by Tony Maiden for the Preston Black History Group
Her novels and essays, especially Small Island and The Long Song, brought Britain’s slave-owning colonial history home to ordinary Britons, black and white alike.
Labour’s Diane Abbott and Shami Chakrabarti during a visit to Yarl’s Wood detention centre in February 2018.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Archive
The new NHS charging regime will have a severe impact on the most vulnerable people in society.
Deported and drowned: an Italian memorial in London to those who died on the Arandora Star in 1940.
Martin Addison / Remembrance for the Drowned via Wikimedia Commons
Professor of International Migration and Forced Displacement and Director of the Institute for Research into International Migration and Superdiversity, University of Birmingham
Deputy Director, Intellectual Forum at Jesus College in the University of Cambridge, and Researcher for the Department of Social and Political Sciences, Bocconi University, University of Cambridge