"Whelehan's book is a model of global history in which migration is pictured as the motor of social and political change around the world... Whelehan helps us to see the international land politics of the 1880s as one of the major social movements." - Jo Guldi (English Historical Review) "Niall Whelehan's groundbreaking study…will surely provide an essential cornerstone for future studies of emigrant activism." - Patrick Mahoney (Irish Historical Studies) "This provocative and important book…casts important light on the international and radical dimensions of the Irish Land League agitation and suggests promising new pathways for working-class historians to explore." - Elizabeth McKillen (Labor: Studies in Working Class History) "Changing Land is a fascinating study of class, gender, social and political reform, and the diaspora during the Land War in nineteenth-century Ireland. It argues convincingly that the land war was part of a wider ideological moment in world history and that social activism should be accorded attention equal to the political perspective, in the nationalist narrative. It is a fine exemplar of how to take an integrated approach to the history of Ireland and that of its geographically widespread diaspora. Based on hitherto unseen primary sources, this book offers an innovative and significant contribution to the received historical narrative of the land war in Ireland and within the diaspora, as well as inserting Ireland into the history of international radicalism." - Bernadette Whelan, Professor Emeritus, University of Limerick, Ollscoil Luimnigh, Ireland "An outstanding work, meticulously researched, lucidly written, and conceptually sophisticated. Changing Land promises to be one of the most exciting books published on Irish history this year. Whelehan is an outstanding scholar and this volume will consolidate his reputation as among the leading historians of Ireland." - Thomas Bartlett, Professor Emeritus, University of Aberdeen "An invaluable resource for future scholars of Irish agrarian radicalism." (Patrick Maume, Studia Hibernica) ""A fascinating study of transnational radicalism…a complex and impressive book."" (Fintan Lane, Irish Literary Supplement)