'Tomas Hammar and his associates ... have produced a book on migration theory that avoids the pitfalls of pressing the topic into the procrustean beds of general paradigms, be they rational choice theories or agentless variants of system analysis ... It is a genuinely multidisciplinary effort to provide analytical tools and hypotheses for empirical research . . Highly recommended reading for anyone interested in migration studies.'International Migration Review'Provides an exciting starting point for future debate and analysis within the field of international migration.'The International History Review'An excellent collection of thoughtful and stimulating reviews, theories, and arguments about how best to conceptualize immigration, how to incorporate non-mobility in the theories of migration, and, in turn, how these fit with issues of comparative development. I know of no volume that has been as successful in integrating the thinking of sociologists, demographers, eco