ISBN:
9789004686984
Language:
English
Pages:
XIV, 460 Seiten
,
Illustrationen
Series Statement:
Studies in global social history volume 53
Series Statement:
Studies in global migration history volume 16
Series Statement:
Studies in global social history
Series Statement:
Studies in global migration history
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als Migrant actors worldwide
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als Migrant actors worldwide
DDC:
305.56209034
Keywords:
19. Jahrhundert (1800 bis 1899 n. Chr.)
;
20. Jahrhundert (1900 bis 1999 n. Chr.)
;
20th century
;
c 1800 to c 1900
;
Arbeitsmigranten
;
Arbeiterklasse
;
Soziale Lage
;
Geschichte
;
Welt
;
Migrant labor History
;
Working class Social conditions
;
Sex discrimination Law and legislation
;
Emigration and immigration History
;
20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000
;
General & world history
;
Geschichte allgemein und Weltgeschichte
;
HISTORY / Social History
;
HISTORY / World
;
Migration, Einwanderung und Auswanderung
;
Migration, immigration & emigration
;
Modern history to 20th century: c 1700 to c 1900
;
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration
;
Social & cultural history
;
Sozial- und Kulturgeschichte
;
Aufsatzsammlung
Abstract:
""Capital is moved to where low-wage labour is available, and migrants move - often in large numbers - to where investments and/or wealth accumulated due to specific historic factors create a demand for labour". This volume explores this idea and contributes to the fields of global labour, working-class, and migration history by illuminating the lives of working people over the 19th and 20th centuries. The book's twenty authors discuss a wide range of topics, from capital investments in terms of the availability of low-wage labour and forced mobilization to gender discrimination."
Description / Table of Contents:
List of Figures and TablesNotes on Contributors1âIntroduction Migrant Actors Worldwide: Capitalist Interests, State Regulations, and Left-Wing Strategiesï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââDirkï"¿ ï"¿Hoerderï"¿ï"¿ and ï"¿ï"¿Lukasï"¿ ï"¿Neisslï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿Part 1ï"¿Perspectives, Approaches, Framesï"¿2âPluralist States, Multiple Migrations, International ApproachesââDirkï"¿ ï"¿Hoerderï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿3âWorld-Systems, Uneven Development, and MigrationââChristofï"¿ ï"¿Parnreiterï"¿ï"¿ and ï"¿ï"¿Dirkï"¿ ï"¿Hoerderï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿Part 2ï"¿Class/Classes: Formations, Outsourcing, Informalizing, Global Hierarchiesï"¿4âIntroductionââDirkï"¿ ï"¿Hoerderï"¿ï"¿ and ï"¿ï"¿Lukasï"¿ ï"¿Neisslï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿5âOutsourcing the Working Class Guestwork in Turbulent Timesï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââMahuaï"¿ ï"¿Sarkarï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿6âIs There Informal Labour? The Concept, theï"¿ iloï"¿ s Ideology, and Greece as an Exampleï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââAlikiï"¿ ï"¿Vaxevanoglouï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿7âUtilizing Population Movements How States Use Emigration to Regulate National Economiesï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââCeciliaï"¿ ï"¿Bruzeliusï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿8âThe Quest for Chinese Labour Colonial Competition for Coolies and the Emergence of the Modern Chinese Workerï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââSeldaï"¿ ï"¿Altanï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿9âAfrican Agency versus State and Capital Control Migration to the British Northern Rhodesian Copperbelt in Comparative Perspective, 1920s to 1960sï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââDï"¿áï"¿cilï"¿ ï"¿Juifï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿Part 3ï"¿Empires and Labour Regimes - and the Left ï"¿10âIntroductionââDirkï"¿ ï"¿Hoerderï"¿ï"¿ and ï"¿ï"¿Lukasï"¿ ï"¿Neisslï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿11âOrganizable and Unorganizable Migrants Racism and Internationalism in Early-Twentieth-Century Social Democracyï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââLucasï"¿ ï"¿Poyï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿12âLabour Migration Regimes in Imperial Russia, the Soviet Union, and the Russian FederationââLewis H.ï"¿ ï"¿Siegelbaumï"¿ï"¿ and ï"¿ï"¿Leslie Pageï"¿ ï"¿Mochï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿13âProducing (Im-)mobile Capital and Labour in the Arab-Gulf Region From the British Empire to Independent Statesï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââRadhikaï"¿ ï"¿Kanchanaï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿14âThe Making of a Neoliberal Labour Regime in California Immigration, American Empire, and Union Organizing in the 1980s and 1990sï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââRichardï"¿ ï"¿Saichï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿Part 4ï"¿Regional Migration Patterns, Work Regimes, and Worker Agencyï"¿15âIntroductionââDirkï"¿ ï"¿Hoerderï"¿ï"¿ and ï"¿ï"¿Lukasï"¿ ï"¿Neisslï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿16âForeign Polish Labour Migrants in the German Empire A Reassessmentï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââBeateï"¿ ï"¿Althammerï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿17âColonial Boom Towns Migration and Insecure Urban Tenure in Industrializing Southern Rhodesiaï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââKatharineï"¿ ï"¿Frederickï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿18â Ceylon for Sinhalese! Depression Politics and Indian Migrants in Ceylonï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââRitesh Kumarï"¿ ï"¿Jaiswalï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿Part 5ï"¿Workingmen s and -women s Agency in Globally Interconnected Spacesï"¿19âIntroductionââDirkï"¿ ï"¿Hoerderï"¿ï"¿ and ï"¿ï"¿Lukasï"¿ ï"¿Neisslï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿20âBetween Migrants and States Japanese Entrepreneurs and Professionals in Two Port Cities in the Pacific World, 1880s to 1920sï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââYukariï"¿ ï"¿Takaiï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿21âDeterring Free and Deploying Interned Migrant Ukrainian Workers The Catholic Church, the Canadian State, and the Quebec Asbestos Strikes of 1915 and 1916ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââGeoffreyï"¿ ï"¿Ewenï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿22âA Special Category of Women in Austria and Internationally Migrant Women Workers, Trade Union Activists, and the Textile Industry, 1960s to 1980sï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ââVeronikaï"¿ ï"¿Helfertï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿ï"¿23âFi
Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index
,
Zielgruppe: 5PDD
Permalink