16 research outputs found
Internationalizing Working-Class History since the 1970s: Challenges from Historiography, Archives, and the Web
In this essay the communication practices of labor migrants and their
evolution from nineteenth-century print media to late twentieth-century
electronic media provide the frame for a discussion of the
limitations of national approaches to collection and interpretation.
Multiple languages and knowledge of cultures of origin are required,
cooperative library and research projects are necessary. On the basis
of the Labor Newspaper Preservation Project it is argued that analysis
of the bibliographic data by themselves, without going into the contents
of the newspapers, revises current assumptions about processes
of migration, acculturation, and internationalist class positions. The
classic North American immigrant labor press came to an end in the
1970s. New patterns, feminization of migration and mobility to domestic
and caregiving work, and new patterns of communication led
to an ascendancy of electronic publications. Electronic publications
and global rather than hemispheric migration will require different
collecting strategies. These, like their printed predecessors, provide
a perspective on migrants that differs from ethnicity and state-side
approaches. Human rights rather than class struggles and migrant
remittances rather the denationalization are the themes, nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) rather than labor organizations
are the publishers.published or submitted for publicatio
The press of labor migrants in Europe and North America 1880s to 1930s
SIGLEAvailable from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, Duesternbrook Weg 120, D-24105 Kiel A 161180 / FIZ - Fachinformationszzentrum Karlsruhe / TIB - Technische InformationsbibliothekDEGerman
The press of labor migrants in Europe and North America 1880s to 1930s
SIGLEUuStB Koeln(38)-1A5419 / FIZ - Fachinformationszzentrum Karlsruhe / TIB - Technische InformationsbibliothekDEGerman
'Normally I should belong to the others': Young people's gendered transcultural competences in creating belonging in Germany and Canada
Young people create differentiated models of belonging. Their strategies reflect contexualized competences - the capacity to understand and negotiate the influence of national frameworks in specific situations. Theories that understand belonging as processual and intersectional offer useful frameworks with which to analyse this. This article uses data from empirical research with young people in a German secondary school and a Canadian junior high school to highlight young people's situated competences and their critique of the respective frameworks of belonging