This article delineates new research on the entangled histories of household labour, particularly women’s and children’s work, in the Netherlands and its colonies on Java. It offers suggestions for future empirical studies and how we may disentangle the workings of colonial connections on labour relations. A first analysis of the debates on Dutch and Javanese women’s and children’s work shows many ambivalences and tensions, for instance, between ideology and practice. Despite the ideal of the male breadwinner in the Netherlands, many married women and children still worked in the first half of the twentieth century. Regarding Javanese women and children too, we can discern tensions between the attempts on the one hand to “Westernize” them, ...
Woman and the Colonial State deals with the ambiguous relationship between women of both the Europea...
This paper engages in a controversy that colonialism does not end although the colony ...
In the period 1870-1940 over a million Javanese labourers travelled to Sumatra hoping for a better l...
This article delineates new research on the entangled histories of householdlabour, particularly wom...
In this article I investigate changing household labour relations and women’swork in the Dutch empir...
In this article I investigate changing household labour relations and women’s work in the Dutch empi...
In this article I investigate changing household labour relations and women’s work in the Dutch empi...
Recent postcolonial studies have stressed the importance of the mutual influences of colonialism on ...
This article investigates developments in labour policies and social norms on gender and work from a...
Comparisons and Connections: Women’s Labour Force Participation in the Netherlands and the Netherlan...
Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk investigates the extent to which colonial ties between the Netherlands ...
Many dependency theorists as well as economic historians have contended that nineteenth-century impe...
For long, international comparisons of female labour force participation (FLFP) have been based on a...
This article aims to bring together three different long-term, global comparative studies on women’s...
This study is aimed to give an explicit description of a woman labour in the rubber plantation at Ea...
Woman and the Colonial State deals with the ambiguous relationship between women of both the Europea...
This paper engages in a controversy that colonialism does not end although the colony ...
In the period 1870-1940 over a million Javanese labourers travelled to Sumatra hoping for a better l...
This article delineates new research on the entangled histories of householdlabour, particularly wom...
In this article I investigate changing household labour relations and women’swork in the Dutch empir...
In this article I investigate changing household labour relations and women’s work in the Dutch empi...
In this article I investigate changing household labour relations and women’s work in the Dutch empi...
Recent postcolonial studies have stressed the importance of the mutual influences of colonialism on ...
This article investigates developments in labour policies and social norms on gender and work from a...
Comparisons and Connections: Women’s Labour Force Participation in the Netherlands and the Netherlan...
Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk investigates the extent to which colonial ties between the Netherlands ...
Many dependency theorists as well as economic historians have contended that nineteenth-century impe...
For long, international comparisons of female labour force participation (FLFP) have been based on a...
This article aims to bring together three different long-term, global comparative studies on women’s...
This study is aimed to give an explicit description of a woman labour in the rubber plantation at Ea...
Woman and the Colonial State deals with the ambiguous relationship between women of both the Europea...
This paper engages in a controversy that colonialism does not end although the colony ...
In the period 1870-1940 over a million Javanese labourers travelled to Sumatra hoping for a better l...