Jan Lucassen
This article, Jan Lucassen, has recently been created via the Articles for creation process. Please check to see if the reviewer has accidentally left this template after accepting the draft and take appropriate action as necessary.
Reviewer tools: Inform author |
This article, Jan Lucassen, has recently been created via the Articles for creation process. Please check to see if the reviewer has accidentally left this template after accepting the draft and take appropriate action as necessary.
Reviewer tools: Inform author |
- Comment: The review below has been done under the wrong criterion. The relevant standard is not whether there are third party sources to meet GNG. The relevant standard is WP:PROF., and that is normally met by showing the person to be influential in their subject as demonstrated by citations to their work. DGG ( talk ) 02:06, 26 November 2021 (UTC)
- Comment: no sources? Articles are based solely on what independent reliable sources have reported about a topic. Theroadislong (talk) 18:47, 25 November 2021 (UTC)
Jan Lucassen
Jan Lucassen is a Dutch historian. He studied history at Leiden University and obtained his PhD at Utrecht University in 1984 with Migrant Labour in Europe 1600-1900. The Drift to the North Sea (London, 1987). He specializes in the history of labour, the long-term development of labour relations, migration and monetisation in relation to the development of wage labour.
In 1988 he joined the International Institute of Social History (IISH), where he set up the research department, and was IISH's Research Director until the end of 2000. Since then, he has been a Senior Research Fellow at the IISH and an Honorary Fellow since 2012[1]. He is a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences[2] since 2004. From 1990 until his retirement in 2012, he was Professor of International and Comparative Social History at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Jan Lucassen is considered, together with Marcel van der Linden, as the founder of the Global Labour History approach, which advocates a worldwide perspective on the history of work and labour relations. Unlike classical labour history, Global Labour History does not focus solely on the male industrial worker in the North Atlantic region since the Industrial Revolution, but takes as its starting point the broadest possible definition of work, including domestic labour and various forms of forced labour. He is one of the principal instigators of IISH's Global Collaboratory on the History of Labour Relations, 1500-2000, in which a taxonomy of global labour relations was developed.
In 2021, he published The Story of Work: A New History of Humankind[3], a global history of work, from prehistoric times until the present, published by Yale University Press. The book was well received in the UK, with positive reviews in The Economist.[4], The Times[5], The Daily Telegraph[6], The Guardian[7], The New Statesman[8], and Financial Times[9]. The Economist listed the book as one of the best books of 2021[10], while it was also mentioned as the best book of 2021 by British historian Simon Sebag Montefiore in the BBC History Magazine.[11] In a recent online public lecture and discussion at the London School of Economics, Professor Patrick Wallis described the book 'a culmination of decades of scholarship that is turned into an incredibly engaging book that opens up [the history of work] to a wide readership'.[12]
Publications (selection)
- Jan Lucassen, The Story of Work: A New History of Humanity (New Haven, 2021) ISBN 978-0300256796; Dutch translation: De wereld aan het werk. Van de prehistorie tot nu (Zwolle, 2021) ISBN 978-9462584686
- Jan Lucassen, Leo Lucassen (Eds.), Globalizing Migration History: The Eurasian Experience 16th-21st centuries (Leiden and Boston, 2014) ISBN 978 9004271357
- Leo Lucassen en Jan Lucassen, Winnaars en verliezers. Een nuchtere balans van vijfhonderd jaar immigratie (Amsterdam, 2011, 2015) ISBN 978 9035136434German translation: Gewinner und Verlierer. Fünf Jahrhunderte Immigration. Eine nüchterne Bilanz (Münster, 2014) ISBN 978 3830930624
- Jan Lucassen, Outlines of a History of Labour (Amsterdam: IISH Research Paper 2013)
- Jan Lucassen, Leo Lucassen, “From mobility transition to comparative global migration history”, in: Journal of Global History 6 (2011), pp. 299-307
- Jaap Kloosterman, Jan Lucassen, Rebels with a Cause: Five Centuries of Social History Collected by the IISH (Amsterdam, 2010) ISBN 978 9462984103
- Jan Lucassen, Leo Lucassen, Patrick Manning (eds), Migration History in World History: Multidisciplinary Approaches (Leiden and Boston, 2010) ISBN 978 9004205628
- Jan Lucassen, Leo Lucassen, “The mobility transition revisited, 1500-1900: what the case of Europe can offer to global history”, Journal of Global History 4 (2009), pp. 347-377
- Jan Lucassen, Tine De Moor, Jan Luiten van Zanden (Eds), “The Return of the Guilds”, International Review of Social History 53 (2008), Supplement 16
- Jan Lucassen (Ed.), Wages and Currency: Global Comparisons from Antiquity to the Twentieth Century (Bern 2007) ISBN 978 3039107827
- Albin Gladen, Antje Kraus, Piet Lourens, Jan Lucassen, Peter Schram, Helmut Talako, Gerda van Asselt (eds), Hollandgang im Spiegel der Reiseberichte evangelischer Geistlicher. Quellen zur saisonalen Arbeitswanderung in der zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts (Münster, 2007) ISBN 9783402068007
- Jan Lucassen, “The Brickmakers’ Strikes on the Ganges Canal in 1848-1849", in: International Review of Social History 51 (2006) Supplement 14, pp. 47-83
- Jan Lucassen (ed.), Global Labour History: A State of the Art (Bern, 2006, 2008) ISBN 9783039115761
- Maarten Prak, Catharina Lis, Jan Lucassen, Hugo Soly (eds.), Craft Guilds in the Early Modern Low Countries: Work, Power and Representation (Aldershot etc., 2006) ISBN 9781138379114
- Jan Lucassen (co-editor with Leo Lucassen), Migration, Migration History, History: Old Paradigms and New Perspectives (Bern, 1997, 1999, 2005) ISBN 9783039108640
- Piet Lourens, Jan Lucassen, Arbeitswanderung und berufliche Spezialisierung. Die lippischen Ziegler im 18. und 19. Jahrhundert (Osnabrück, 1999)
- Marcel van der Linden, Jan Lucassen, Prolegomena for a Global Labour History (Amsterdam, 1999)
- Jan Lucassen, Rinus Penninx, Newcomers. Immigrants and their Descendants in the Netherlands 1550-1995 (Amsterdam, 1997)
- P. van Royen, J.R. Bruijn, J. Lucassen (Eds), "Those Emblems of Hell"? European Sailors and the Maritime labour Market, 1570-1870 (St. John’s, 1997) ISBN 9780968128831
- K. Davids, J. Lucassen (Eds.), A Miracle Mirrored: The Dutch Republic in European Perspective (Cambridge, 1995) ISBN 9780521158275
References
- ^ https://iisg.amsterdam/en/about/staff/jan-lucassen
- ^ https://www.knaw.nl/leden/lucassen
- ^ https://yalebooks.co.uk/display.asp?k=9780300256796
- ^ https://www.economist.com/books-and-arts/2021/07/22/a-long-view-of-work-shows-how-little-it-has-changed-over-millennia/ 'A Long View of Work Shows How Little It Has Changed over Millennia'
- ^ https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/the-story-of-work-a-new-history-of-humankind-by-jan-lucassen-review-how-the-industrious-revolution-changed-us-s78wsr9ph/ 'How the Industrious Revolution Changed Us'
- ^ https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/non-fiction/story-work-went-prehistoric-farmers-gig-economy/ 'How We Went from Prehistoric Farmers to the Gig Economy'
- ^ https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/aug/26/the-story-of-work-and-the-man-who-mistook-his-job-for-his-life-review-pride-in-a-job-well-done/ 'The Story of Work and The Man Who Mistook His Job for His Life review – pride in a job well done'
- ^ https://www.newstatesman.com/story-work-history-humankind-jan-lucassen-review/ 'How work makes us human'
- ^ https://www.ft.com/content/7202c5d4-fbc9-4ad7-93c2-cb05e6b582e9
- ^ the best books of 2021
- ^ BBC History Magazine, 25 December 2021, page 71.
- ^ https://www.youtube.com/embed/cISOVr4EFiU?start=126