Mob violence against free labour migrants in the age of the nation state. How can the Atlantic experience help to find global patterns?

This article asks under what historical conditions people who consider themselves as belonging to the ingroup resort to collective violence against free labour migrants. Based on cases in the North Atlantic, and largely limited to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it offers a starting point fo...

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Published in:International Review of Social History
Main Author: Lucassen, L.A.C.J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1887/3283732
https://doi.org/10.1017/S002085902200027X
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spelling ftunivleiden:oai:scholarlypublications.universiteitleiden.nl:item_3283732 2024-06-02T08:11:35+00:00 Mob violence against free labour migrants in the age of the nation state. How can the Atlantic experience help to find global patterns? Lucassen, L.A.C.J. 2022 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1887/3283732 https://doi.org/10.1017/S002085902200027X en eng https://doi.org/10.1017/S002085902200027X doi:10.1017/S002085902200027X lucris-id: 438742231 https://hdl.handle.net/1887/3283732 International Review of Social History Article / Letter to editor info:eu-repo/semantics/article Text 2022 ftunivleiden https://doi.org/10.1017/S002085902200027X 2024-05-06T13:14:43Z This article asks under what historical conditions people who consider themselves as belonging to the ingroup resort to collective violence against free labour migrants. Based on cases in the North Atlantic, and largely limited to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it offers a starting point for a more global approach. By using the concept of boundary work, I conclude that once ethnic boundaries are in place they need maintenance, through discourse, legislation, and surveillance. Migrants defined as outsiders, who did not accept their inferior role and thus became direct competitors for such key resources as jobs and houses, were bound to evoke irritation, protest, and, in extreme cases, mob violence. The latter occurred a number of times in early modern England, but such incidents occurred especially in the period 1860–1880 (US and Australia), 1880–1900 (Western Europe), and on both sides of the Atlantic around World War I. In all these cases, boundary-making (through heightened nationalism, imperialism, and embedded racial hierarchies) was prominent, while, at the same time, the state was unable or unwilling to protect its citizens against competition on the labour market and to provide a welfare safety net. This lack of actual boundary maintenance could lead to mob violence, especially when authorities were unwilling or unable to intervene. Moreover, it is striking that violence was directed especially against outsiders who were considered racially or culturally inferior. These included the Chinese and African-American internal migrants in the United States and colonial migrants in the United Kingdom. Cities, Migration and Global Interdependence Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Leiden University Scholarly Publications International Review of Social History 1 25
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description This article asks under what historical conditions people who consider themselves as belonging to the ingroup resort to collective violence against free labour migrants. Based on cases in the North Atlantic, and largely limited to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it offers a starting point for a more global approach. By using the concept of boundary work, I conclude that once ethnic boundaries are in place they need maintenance, through discourse, legislation, and surveillance. Migrants defined as outsiders, who did not accept their inferior role and thus became direct competitors for such key resources as jobs and houses, were bound to evoke irritation, protest, and, in extreme cases, mob violence. The latter occurred a number of times in early modern England, but such incidents occurred especially in the period 1860–1880 (US and Australia), 1880–1900 (Western Europe), and on both sides of the Atlantic around World War I. In all these cases, boundary-making (through heightened nationalism, imperialism, and embedded racial hierarchies) was prominent, while, at the same time, the state was unable or unwilling to protect its citizens against competition on the labour market and to provide a welfare safety net. This lack of actual boundary maintenance could lead to mob violence, especially when authorities were unwilling or unable to intervene. Moreover, it is striking that violence was directed especially against outsiders who were considered racially or culturally inferior. These included the Chinese and African-American internal migrants in the United States and colonial migrants in the United Kingdom. Cities, Migration and Global Interdependence
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lucassen, L.A.C.J.
spellingShingle Lucassen, L.A.C.J.
Mob violence against free labour migrants in the age of the nation state. How can the Atlantic experience help to find global patterns?
author_facet Lucassen, L.A.C.J.
author_sort Lucassen, L.A.C.J.
title Mob violence against free labour migrants in the age of the nation state. How can the Atlantic experience help to find global patterns?
title_short Mob violence against free labour migrants in the age of the nation state. How can the Atlantic experience help to find global patterns?
title_full Mob violence against free labour migrants in the age of the nation state. How can the Atlantic experience help to find global patterns?
title_fullStr Mob violence against free labour migrants in the age of the nation state. How can the Atlantic experience help to find global patterns?
title_full_unstemmed Mob violence against free labour migrants in the age of the nation state. How can the Atlantic experience help to find global patterns?
title_sort mob violence against free labour migrants in the age of the nation state. how can the atlantic experience help to find global patterns?
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/1887/3283732
https://doi.org/10.1017/S002085902200027X
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op_source International Review of Social History
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doi:10.1017/S002085902200027X
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