AK-Bildungshaus Jägermayrhof, Römerstraße 98
The 2019 International Conference of Labour and Social History aims at strengthening the links between labour history and rural history.
The Conference intends to address the topic “working on the land” from two different angles: firstly, agricultural work as co-production of society and nature and, secondly, rural labour relations as elements of larger political and economic systems. Contributions to this conference will explore how these two perspectives complement each other, identify research desiderata and blind spots in the respective other, creatively develop bridges and contribute to the theoretical, methodological and empirical enrichment of the history of agrarian work and labour.
The first angle highlights how agricultural work – growing cereals, tree- or garden-crops, raising cattle, working in woods and forestry or processing raw materials produced on the land – differs from other forms of work. It draws our attention to the differences of agriculture from other branches of the economy due to its natural embedment: the natural constraints on the choice of crops in specific regions, the biological growth processes of plants and animals, the seasonality of the labour process, the uncertainties of weather and the resulting output-related risks and the effects these features may have (had) on the material and immaterial traits of culture, such as settlement patterns, household composition, techniques and technology, perceptions of the environment, the possibilities to intensify the production process, the choice of contracts, social stratification and property rights. In order to grasp the co-production of society and nature, researchers might undertake in-depth case studies with a regional or local focus.
The second angle from which the topic is being addressed emphasizes the variety of rural labour relations, looking rather at commonalities with other forms of labour relations, and, last but not least, at the wide range of combinations – by individuals and households –between agricultural and non-agricultural work. This includes family farming, service in husbandry, the various forms of free and unfree labour, forced labour and wage labour (e.g. permanent, seasonal, migratory), but also agricultural activities of rural artisans and industrial workers, the gendered and age/life course-related division of labour and many other topics. The connections of these various labour relations with overarching (socio-)political and (socio-)economic formations (for instance, such as territorial states and global capitalism(s) since the sixteenth century) are of particular interest. The respective focus is on more general aspects such as class and power relations, social movements and (non-)organizations of rural workers, mobility and migration, commodity chains, governance structures, the access to landed property and other key resources and market developments as explanations for the social constitution of rural societies. This perspective calls for the broadening of research to multiple scales, ranging from local to global.
The conference aims at bringing together contributions from different disciplines (e.g. history, geography, sociology, economics, anthropology) and multiple temporal and spatial contexts, which address the complexity of rural labour relations and the agency of rural workers from the angles outlined above. Interest in long- and short-term historical processes and in social change should form the common ground for interdisciplinary discussion. Besides detailed case studies, contributions focused on international comparisons and/or transnational connections are particularly welcome. Papers might highlight the practical rooms of manoeuvre of rural actors, varying between adaptation and resistance, or explore how the history of agrarian labour and work in a given space was influenced by natural opportunities and constraints, technological developments and globalizing market forces. These are but two examples for how contributions to this conference might productively build and expand on the interconnection of rural history and labour history through a focus on the study of work.
Contact: Lukas Neissl
International Conference of Labour and Social History (ITH)
c/o Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (DÖW)
Altes Rathaus, Wipplinger Str. 6/Stg., A-1010 Vienna, Austria
email: ith[a]doew.at
For further information, see the ITH-Website;
Registration of participants at the venue
12.00 – 14.00 Meeting of the ITH Board and International Scientific Committee
14.00 – 14.30 Break
14.30 – 16.30 General Assembly of the ITH
17.00 – 17.30 Conference Opening
17.30 - 19.15 Keynote Lecture
Thijs Lambrecht (Ghent University): Commonalities and Diversities: Regulating Rural Labour in Europe, c. 1250 - c. 1850
19.15 – 21.00 Welcome Reception
9.00 – 10.30 Panel I: State-Led Transformations
Chair and comment: tba
10.30 – 10.45 Coffee Break
10.45 – 12.45 Panel II: Labour Markets
Chair and comment: tba
12.45 – 13.45 Lunch
13.45 – 15.45 Panel III: Commodity Chains
Chair and comment: tba
15.45 – 16.00 Coffee Break
16.00 – 18.00 Panel IV: Working Bodies
Chair and comment: tba
18.00 – 19.00 Dinner
19.00 – 21.00 Public evening event (in German):
“Arbeit auf dem Land: Selbstorganisation und Selbstermächtigung in der Landarbeit” (at the venue)
9.00 – 11.00 Panel V: Preindustrial Ruralities
Chair and comment: tba
11.00 – 11.15 Coffee Break
11.15 – 13.15 Panel VI: Power Struggles
Chair and comment: tba
13.15 – 14.15 Lunch
14.15 – 15.45 Concluding Debate
Chair: tba