Fr. 130.00

Urban Lives - An Industrial City and Its People During the Twentieth Century

English · Hardback

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Description

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Through the lens of a Swedish industrial city, Landskrona, Urban Lives looks at economic and demographic change at the micro level to understand the societal transformations that profoundly changed people's lives during the twentieth century. Based an original data infrastructure, the book follows individuals across generations and situates them in their social, institutional, and environmental contexts. Chapter authors provide novel insights into the micro-level foundations of long term economic-demographic processes, and cover important research questions related to health, family, migration, and residential segregation.

List of contents

  • List of Tables

  • List of Figures and Maps

  • List of Contributors

  • Acknowledgements

  • 1. Introduction

  • Martin Dribe, Therese Nilsson, and Anna Tegunimataka

  • 2. Landskrona: The Industrial City

  • Martin Dribe and Patrick Svensson

  • 3. Economic Inequality and Social Mobility

  • Gabriel Brea-Martinez and Martin Dribe

  • 4. Migration in Times of Economic Growth and Recession

  • Finn Hedefalk, Patrick Svensson, and Anna Tegunimataka

  • 5. Social-Class Segregation in Landskrona

  • Gabriel Brea-Martinez, Finn Hedefalk, Vinicius de Souza Maia, and Therese Nilsson

  • 6. Gender Revolution: Marriage, Fertility, and Divorce in the Industrial City

  • Luciana Quaranta and Maria Stanfors

  • 7. A Healthy Marriage? Marital Status and Adult Mortality

  • Ingrid K. van Dijk and Martin Dribe

  • 8. Maternal and Infant Health: Understanding the Role of Institutions and Medical Innovations

  • Ingrid K. van Dijk, Volha Lazuka, and Luciana Quaranta

  • 9. The Late Emergence of the Socioeconomic Gradient in Adult Mortality - An Urban Phenomenon?

  • Tommy Bengtsson, Martin Dribe, and Jonas Helgertz

  • 10. Income, Inequality, and Geography: Disparities in Age at Death

  • Gabriel Brea-Martinez, Finn Hedefalk, and Therese Nilsson

  • 11. Conclusion

  • Martin Dribe, Therese Nilsson, and Anna Tegunimataka

  • Index

About the author

Martin Dribe is Professor of Economic History and the Director of the Centre for Economic Demography at Lund University.

Therese Nilsson is Professor of Economics at Lund University and Researcher at the Research Institute of Industrial Economics.

Anna Tegunimataka is Associate Professor of Economic History at Lund University.

Summary

This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license. It is free to read at Oxford Academic and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.

The past 200 years have witnessed revolutionary changes in living conditions for most people in the Global North. While the broad outline of these processes is well known through extensive research at the macro level, we still know very little about their micro-level foundations, largely due to the lack of appropriate data in most countries.

Through the lens of a Swedish industrial city, Landskrona, Urban Lives looks at economic and demographic change at the micro level of individuals and families to understand the societal transformations that profoundly changed people's lives during the twentieth century. These societal transformations--coinciding with industrialization, post-industrialization, and the emergence and culmination of the welfare state--encompassed groundbreaking advancements in living standards, a relocation of rural populations to urban hubs, and significant alterations in the fabric of everyday working life. Including an original data infrastructure, the book follows individuals and families in Landskrona across generations, and situates them in these broader social, institutional, and environmental contexts. Each chapter provides novel insights into the micro-level foundations of long term economic-demographic processes, and covers important research questions related to health, family, migration, and residential segregation. Original and comprehensive, Urban Lives offers an examination of twentieth-century demographic, social, and economic history, illustrating how personal choices and behavior were shaped by social transformation.

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