Inter- and intracultural differences in European history textbooks
In: Explorationen /Studien zur Erziehungswissenschaft 50
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In: Explorationen /Studien zur Erziehungswissenschaft 50
In: Historical Social Research, Supplement, Heft 30, S. 227-234
In Germany, migration research is still a relatively young line of research. Several obstacles complicated a critical recovery of research concepts on the history of population and migration that had been shaped as early as in the 1920s. This was the result of the multilayered disavowal of academic demography - because of its role in Nazi Germany, because of the long-lasting primate of history of politics in post-WW ll Germany, and finally because of the late emergence of the history of society. This situation has profoundly changed during the last decades of the twentieth century. Reasons were the increasing historical distance to the 'fall of man' of demography in Nazi Germany, the reorientation of historiography in the context of critical social and cultural sciences; the inclusion of labor-market research into migration research, and the shaping of interdisciplinary and integral research concepts.
In: Jahrbuch für Europäische Geschichte
The present issue of the European History Yearbook showcases research initially presented at the annual Mainz-Oxford graduate workshop "European History Across Boundaries from the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century". The essays shed the straightjacket of national history and cross boundaries and borders. They do so by discussing the transcultural, transnational, and transimperial scopes of their research. Methodologically speaking, the European history that the authors have been researching and writing draws on comparative history, the study of transfer processes and entanglements, and the histoire croisée, among others. The contributions are not only interested in writing European history across boundaries but also in decentering Europe. Individual papers deal with Central America, East Africa, the Middle East, and Oceania. They take the readers far away from the imperial metropolises of Berlin, Madrid, or London - and yet still tell a story about these European imperial centres and societies
In: Variorum collected studies series CS886
In: Studien zur Geschichte der europäischen Integration (SGEI) Band 29
In: Jahrbuch für Geschichte des ländlichen Raumes 2019
In: Variorum collected studies series CS 692
ISSN: 1611-8944
ISSN: 2631-9764
In Germany, migration research is still a relatively young line of research. Several obstacles complicated a critical recovery of research concepts on the history of population and migration that had been shaped as early as in the 1920s. This was the result of the multilayered disavowal of academic demography – because of its role in Nazi Germany, because of the long-lasting primate of history of politics in post-WW ll Germany, and finally because of the late emergence of the history of society. This situation has profoundly changed during the last decades of the twentieth century. Reasons were the increasing historical distance to the 'fall of man' of demography in Nazi Germany, the reorientation of historiography in the context of critical social and cultural sciences; the inclusion of labor-market research into migration research, and the shaping of in-terdisciplinary and integral research concepts.
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Abstract ; In Germany, migration research is still a relatively young line of research. Several obstacles complicated a critical recovery of research concepts on the history of population and migration that had been shaped as early as in the 1920s. This was the result of the multilayered disavowal of academic demography – because of its role in Nazi Germany, because of the long-lasting primate of history of politics in post-WW ll Germany, and finally because of the late emergence of the history of society. This situation has profoundly changed during the last decades of the twentieth century. Reasons were the increasing historical distance to the 'fall of man' of demography in Nazi Germany, the reorientation of historiography in the context of critical social and cultural sciences; the inclusion of labor-market research into migration research, and the shaping of in-terdisciplinary and integral research concepts. ; SeriesInformation ; Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung. Supplement No. 30 (2018): Historical Migration Research. An Autobiographical Perspective Starting Point and Frequency: Year: 1988, Issues per volume: 1, Volumes per year: 1 ; SeriesInformation ; Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung. Supplement No. 30 (2018): Historische Migrationsforschung. Eine autobiografische Perspektive. Starting Point and Frequency: Year: 1988, Issues per volume: 1, Volumes per year: 1 ; SeriesInformation ; Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung. Supplement ; SeriesInformation ; Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung. Supplement
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In: Die Friedens-Warte: Journal of International Peace and Organization, Band 80, Heft 1-2, S. 208-211
ISSN: 0340-0255
In: Historische Anthropologie: Kultur, Gesellschaft, Alltag, Band 22, Heft 1, S. 141-143
ISSN: 2194-4032
Historical Climatology draws from climatology and (environmental) history. lt aims at reconstructing climate and natural disasters for the period preceding the creation of meteorological networks. Moreover it investigates the impact of climate extremes on societies and it points out to past debates on social representations of climate. Up to 1989 no coherent methodology was available. Since then cooperation emerged in the framework of EU research projects. As a result common approaches and standards were developed. The article discusses the evidence and explains how long time series of monthly and seasonal temperature and precipitation indices were obtained from the data. Validation has revealed that such series are good substitutes for instrumental measurements. Recently climatologists have included this data into statistical models to construct charts of monthly surface pressure, temperature and precipitation in Europe back to 1659. Less efforts were made to investigate the effects of climatic variations and extremes on societies. lt is still not known how past societies perceived climatic extremes and natural disasters and how they adapted to them. Undoubtedly climate affected the use and availability of energy resources (food, fodder, fire-wood) and the outbreak of climate sensitive epidemics. Which climatic constellations mattered, needs to be assessed within the specific context. In any case the vulnerability of the society needs to be taken into account. The mental, legal and political setting affected the search for scapegoats in periods of crises. lt is demonstrated that extended witch-hunts took place in the late sixteenth century because a part of society held the witches directly responsible for the high frequency of climatic anomalies during this period. ; Historical Climatology draws from climatology and (environmental) history. lt aims at reconstructing climate and natural disasters for the period preceding the creation of meteorological networks. Moreover it investigates the impact of climate extremes on societies and it points out to past debates on social representations of climate. Up to 1989 no coherent methodology was available. Since then cooperation emerged in the framework of EU research projects. As a result common approaches and standards were developed. The article discusses the evidence and explains how long time series of monthly and seasonal temperature and precipitation indices were obtained from the data. Validation has revealed that such series are good substitutes for instrumental measurements. Recently climatologists have included this data into statistical models to construct charts of monthly surface pressure, temperature and precipitation in Europe back to 1659. Less efforts were made to investigate the effects of climatic variations and extremes on societies. lt is still not known how past societies perceived climatic extremes and natural disasters and how they adapted to them. Undoubtedly climate affected the use and availability of energy resources (food, fodder, fire-wood) and the outbreak of climate sensitive epidemics. Which climatic constellations mattered, needs to be assessed within the specific context. In any case the vulnerability of the society needs to be taken into account. The mental, legal and political setting affected the search for scapegoats in periods of crises. lt is demonstrated that extended witch-hunts took place in the late sixteenth century because a part of society held the witches directly responsible for the high frequency of climatic anomalies during this period.
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