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* Ihre Aktion:   suchen [und] (PICA Prod.-Nr. [PPN]) 1844937267
 Felder   ISBD   MARC21 (FL_924)   Citavi, Referencemanager (RIS)   Endnote Tagged Format   BibTex-Format   RDF-Format 
Bücher, Karten, Noten
 
K10plusPPN: 
1844937267     Zitierlink
Titel: 
War, work, and want : how the OPEC oil crisis caused mass migration and revolution / Randall Hansen
Autorin/Autor: 
Hansen, Randall, 1970- [Verfasserin/Verfasser] info info
Erschienen: 
New York, NY, United States of America : Oxford University Press, [2023]
Umfang: 
x, 416 Seiten
Sprache(n): 
Englisch
Angaben zum Inhalt: 
Prussians and Jews : the Six-Day War and its aftermath -- The great revaluation : OPEC -- Black gold : wealth and immigration in the Middle East -- Oil in oil-poor states : Egypt -- Oil's curses : Iran and Iraq -- Drunk on oil and gas : the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan -- No blood for oil : Iraq, 1990 -- The Taliban, 9/11, and the Second Iraq War -- The Arab nightmare : Lebanon, Libya, Syria, and global displacement in the 2010s -- ISIL and the European refugee crisis -- Expensive oil, cheap goods -- The assault on working-class wages -- Where we shop -- What we eat I : the rise and fall of meatpacking unions -- What we eat II : immigration and the meatpacking industry -- What we eat III : fish, fruit, and vegetables -- Where we live I : migrants in the US construction business -- Where we live II : building Europe -- Where we live III : Asia -- How we live : keeping our houses, raising our children -- What we wear -- Back to the future : inflation, the global economy, and migration in the 2020s.
Anmerkung: 
Includes bibliographical references and index
Bibliogr. Zusammenhang: 
Erscheint auch als: Hansen, Randall : War, work, and want. - New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2023 (Online-Ausgabe)
ISBN: 
978-0-19-765769-0 (hardback); 0-19-765769-9
978-0-19-765771-3 (ISBN der parallelen Ausgabe im Fernzugriff)
Sonstige Nummern: 
OCoLC: 1396105547     see Worldcat


Link zum Volltext: 
Digital Object Identifier (DOI): 10.1093/oso/9780197657690.001.0001


RVK-Notation: 
Sachgebiete: 
Schlagwörter (Thesauri): 
Sonstige Schlagwörter: 
Inhaltliche
Zusammenfassung: 
"This book asks why, against all expectations, global migration tripled in the five decades after 1973. The book argues that economic and geopolitical changes unleashed by the OPEC oil crisis led to well over one hundred million migrants that few people expected or wanted. More people are on the move than at any time in human history: 281 million. This total figure has more than tripled since 1975 (90 million) and almost doubled since 1990 (153 million). Economically, immigration has transformed multiple sectors of the economy: agriculture, meatpacking, fishing, construction, retail, and caregiving. Politically, migration has cut a swathe through national, regional, and global politics: reshaping coalitions, reconfiguring party systems, and helping propel the far-right to power in Europe and-in the form of Donald Trump -the United States. The enormity of these changes is doubly impressive because largescale migration was unexpected and, in the global north, unwanted: slower post-1970s economic growth should have led to less immigration, and both European and American politicians attempted to end it."

An expansive history of how an economic shock a half century ago created a world that is addicted to mass migration.The oil shock of 1973 changed everything. It brought the golden age of American and European economic growth to an end; it destabilized Middle Eastern politics; and it set in train processes that led to over one hundred million unexpected--and unwanted--immigrants. In War, Work, and Want, Randall Hansen asks why, against all expectations, global migration tripled after 1970. The answer, he argues, lies in how the OPEC Oil crisis transformed the global economy, Middle Eastern geopolitics and, as a consequence, international migration. The quadrupling of oil prices and attendant inflation destroyed economic growth in the West while flooding the Middle East with oil money. American and European consumers, their wealth drained, rebuilt their standard of living on the back of cheap labor--and cheap migrants. The Middle East enjoyed the benefits of a historic wealth transfer, but oil became a poisoned chalice leading to political instability, revolution, and war, all of which resulted in tens of millions of refugees. The economic, and migratory, consequences of the OPEC oil crisis transformed the contours of domestic politics around the world. They fueled the growth of nationalist-populist parties that built their brands on blaming immigrants for collapsing standards of living, willfully ignoring the fact that mass immigration was the effect, not the cause, of that collapse. In showing how war (the main driver of refugee flows), work (labor migrants), and want (the desire for ever cheaper products made by migrants) led to the massive upsurge in global migration after 1973, this book will reshape our understanding of the past half-century of global history


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