Shifting labor relations in the Ottoman Empire and Turkey 1500–2000: An Introduction

IF 0.5 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
K. Hofmeester, J. Lucassen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This special section can be seen as part of a tradition of special issues of International Labor and Working-Class History (ILWCH) and the International Review of Social History (IRSH) that comment on the state of the field of Ottoman labor historiography, describe its achievements and caveats, and set the agenda for future research. The late Donald Quataert, pioneer of Ottoman labor history, started this tradition in 2001, when he edited this journal's special issue Labor History in the Ottoman Middle East, 1700–1922. Touraj Atabaki and Gavin D. Brockett followed in 2009 with their special issue of the IRSH Ottoman and Republican Turkish Labour History. With the current special section we aim to add to this tradition. In the first section of our introduction, we will provide a brief overview of the main conclusions of the first two special issues, and shed some light on what happened after 2009. In the second section, we will discuss what we hope to add: an approach based on the Global Collaboratory on the History of Labour Relations that can help us to reconstruct the development of labor relations in the Ottoman Empire and its successor states. We describe this approach and results of the project worldwide so far. The third section starts with a brief overview of the Ottoman/Turkish Republic branch of the Collaboratory that focuses mainly on Anatolia and its views on sources and methodologies. It will describe the article by Karin Hofmeester and Jan Lucassen in this special section as result of these activities and the articles by Hülya Canbakal and Alpay Filiztekin and İrfan Kovidas and Yahya Araz as results of other projects that link up perfectly with the Collaboratory approach. Special attention will be devoted to the town of Bursa and its hinterland from the sixteenth until the twentieth century, putting the developments in this city in the broader perspective of Ottoman-Anatolian and Turkish labor history.
奥斯曼帝国和土耳其1500-2000年劳动关系的变迁:导论
这一特刊可以被视为《国际劳工与工人阶级史》(ILWCH)和《国际社会史评论》(IRSH)特刊传统的一部分,评论奥斯曼劳工史学领域的现状,描述其成就和注意事项,并为未来的研究制定议程。已故的奥斯曼劳动史先驱唐纳德·夸塔尔特于2001年开始了这一传统,当时他编辑了该杂志的特刊《奥斯曼中东劳动史,1700–1922》。Touraj Atabaki和Gavin D.Brockett于2009年出版了《奥斯曼共和国土耳其劳工史》特刊。通过目前的特别部分,我们的目标是增加这一传统。在引言的第一部分,我们将简要概述前两期特刊的主要结论,并对2009年之后发生的事情有所了解。在第二节中,我们将讨论我们希望补充的内容:一种基于全球劳资关系史合作的方法,可以帮助我们重建奥斯曼帝国及其继承国的劳资关系发展。我们描述了这种方法以及迄今为止该项目在全球范围内的成果。第三部分首先简要概述了合作组织的奥斯曼/土耳其共和国分支机构,主要关注安纳托利亚及其对来源和方法的看法。它将在本特别部分中描述Karin Hofmeester和Jan Lucassen因这些活动而发表的文章,以及Hülya Canbakal和Alpay Filiztekin、Il rfan Kovidas和Yahya Araz因其他项目而发表的与合作方法完美结合的文章。从16世纪到20世纪,我们将特别关注布尔萨镇及其腹地,将这座城市的发展放在奥斯曼安纳托利亚和土耳其劳工史的更广阔视野中。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: ILWCH has an international reputation for scholarly innovation and quality. It explores diverse topics from globalisation and workers’ rights to class and consumption, labour movements, class identities and cultures, unions, and working-class politics. ILWCH publishes original research, review essays, conference reports from around the world, and an acclaimed scholarly controversy section. Comparative and cross-disciplinary, the journal is of interest to scholars in history, sociology, political science, labor studies, global studies, and a wide range of other fields and disciplines. Published for International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc.
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