<p>Review of the original edition of <i>Contested Domains</i>:</p><p>‘Warwick is today what the LSE was in the thirties: the main English-speaking centre of applied labour movement academic activity…Robin Cohen’s wonderfully stimulating collection of essays is a fine example of the Warwick tradition.’<strong> Dennis Macshane</strong> <i>The Tribune, April 1982</i></p><p>'Thoroughly demanding as is the best of British scholarship...Refreshingly original, it is also soundly grounded in the classics. It merits a close reading form all intrigued by the evolving international division of labour, especially those who hear, as does Cohen, in the often 'hesitant and uncertain' voice of working people an 'intimation of an alternative future.<strong>''Arthur B. Shostak</strong>, <em>Labour Studies Journal, 20 (4) 1996</em>. </p><p>'South Africa also gives clear proof of Cohen's arguments that the working class in the Third World is capable of going well beyond 'economistic' struggles. <strong>Alan Gilbert,</strong> <em>Workers' Liberty, 16, 2011</em>. </p>
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Robin Cohen is Emeritus Professor of Development Studies at the University of Oxford. For the first decade of his academic career, he worked on comparative labour issues. His books included Labour and Politics in Nigeria (1974) and the co-edited collections The development of an African working class (1975), International Labour and the Third World (1987), African Labor History (1978) and the current title, Peasants and Proletarians. He subsequently wrote on the themes of migration, globalization and diasporas. His best-known work is Global diasporas: An introduction (3rd edition, 2022).