Migration Museums Around The World
Argentina
- Museo de la inmigración
Australia
- Immigration Museum (Melbourne, State of Victoria)
Migration Museum, Adelaide - Australia's oldest migration museum
- Migration Museum(Adelaide, State of South Australia)
- NSW Migration Heritage Centre (New South Wales, Australia)
Brazil
- Memorial do Imigrante
Canada
- Pier 21
- Immigrants to Canada
- Virtual Museum of orphans immigrated to Canada
Denmark
- Immigrant Museet — The Danish Immigration Museum
France
- Cité nationale de l’histoire de l’immigration
Germany
- DOMiT — Dokumentationszentrum
- Emigration World BallinStadt
- Museum über die Migration in Deutschland
- Das Migrationsmuseum Rheinland Pfaltz im Internet
Ireland
- Cobh Heritage Centre
Israel
- Babylonian Jewry Heritage Center
Italy
- Altre Italie
The Netherlands
- Kosmopolis — The House of Cultural Dialogue
Portugal
- Museu da Emigração e das Comunidades
San Marino
- San Marino Study Centre on Emigration — Museum of the Emigrant
Serbia
- Serbian Migration Museum ,
South Africa
- Lwandle Migrant Labour Museum
Spain
- MhiC — Museo de Historia de la Inmigración de Cataluña
- Arquivo da Emigración Galega
Sweden
- Immigrant-institutet
- National Museums of World Culture
- The Multicultural Centre
- Swedish Emigrant Institute
United Kingdom
- 19 Princelet Street
- Migration Museum Project
- Indian Presence in Liverpool
- History of London’s diverse communities
- Moving Here
- England's Past for Everyone
United States of America
- Ellis Island Museum
Other countries such as Switzerland and Belgium have support for national museums of migration but both of these have been put on hold because of lack of funding.
Read more about this topic: Migration Museum
Famous quotes containing the words museums and/or world:
“In museums and palaces we are alternate radicals and conservatives.”
—Henry James (18431816)
“What a vast traffic is drove, what a variety of labour is performed in the world to the maintenance of thousands of families that altogether depend on two silly if not odious customs; the taking of snuff and smoking of tobacco; both of which it is certain do infinitely more hurt than good to those that are addicted to them!”
—Bernard Mandeville (16701733)