scholarly journals Thuiskomen in Nederland: migratiegeschiedenis schrijven met Delpher

2021 ◽  
pp. 119-137
Author(s):  
Kees Teszelszky

Delpher is the largest collection of full-text Dutch-language digitised historical news­papers, books, journals and copy sheets for radio news broadcasts available on a website. This article shows the possibilities of Delpher for doing research on Dutch-Hungarian relations by showing the results of an explorative study on a part of the migration history of one Hungarian family in The Hague. The author shows some very specific parts of the micro history of this family based on the content of newspaper advertisements. These sources were identified by addresses, telephone numbers and unique names.

2020 ◽  
pp. 026732312096683
Author(s):  
Henrik Hargitai

This analysis provides a detailed snapshot of the radio news landscape in Hungary, a European-Union-member ‘illiberal state’ in mid-April 2018, a few weeks after the general election. In this study, we wished to quantitatively characterize radio news broadcasts. This is the first study that provides a detailed analysis of contemporary radio news output across all formats, target audiences, owners and regions in Hungary. The study uses several quantitative and geographic indicators that include objective elements such as news ecosystem diversity, local news production, news about local issues, sound bites, credited political press, news sections and more subjective news framing and a framing-based bias indicator. Our results show that the ideological diversity of radio news was far the highest in the Budapest region. MTVA, the state media provider had significantly more politically biased news than other stations. Local radios never criticized local public affairs. A few stations in Budapest did broadcast balanced, pro-opposition and critical news, but they were in minority over pro-government news items that dominated the rural media landscape with significantly less choice.


2007 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leo Lucassen

Migration history has made some major leaps forward in the last fifteen years or so. An important contribution was Leslie Page Moch's Moving Europeans, published in 1992, in which she weaves the latest insights in migration history into the general social and economic history of western Europe. Using Charles Tilly's typology of migration patterns and his ideas on the process of proletarianization since the sixteenth century, Moch skilfully integrates the experience of human mobility in the history of urbanization, labour relations, (proto)industrialization, demography, family history, and gender relations. Her state-of-the-art overview has been very influential, not least because it fundamentally criticizes the modernization paradigm of Wilbur Zelinsky and others, who assumed that only in the nineteenth century, as a result of industrialization and urbanization, migration became a significant phenomenon. Instead, she convincingly argues that migration was a structural aspect of human life. Since then many new studies have proved her point and refined her model.


2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 187-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire Duffield ◽  
Sarah Fallon ◽  
Jean Stopford

AbstractThe team responsible for Legal Journals Index explain how journal articles are selected, indexed and loaded to this online legal information service provided by Sweet & Maxwell. They outline the history of LJI and discuss the criteria for determining which journals are included in the service; how the Articles team decides which articles will be indexed; the content of an LJI index entry; how an abstract is written; the use of the taxonomy; the full text journals service on Westlaw; and the work of the Document Delivery team.


Transfers ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Paul G. Keil

Humans and elephants have historically shared the forested mountain ranges of Zomia, a geography defined by the regular movement of people and an ecology shaped by the movement of its elephant population. This article will examine how free-roaming elephant pathways facilitated human mobility in the highlands defining the Indo-Myanmar border. It will analyze the more-than-human agency that emerges when following elephant trails and the varying role this forest infrastructure might have played in the social and political history of the region. The article will explore two historical examples. First, the migration of a Lisu community in Upper Myanmar who utilized elephant paths to navigate their passage. Second, how the British Empire exploited a network of elephant-human tracks to subjugate the peoples living in Mizoram, northeast India. In these regions the patterns of migration, history of colonization, and identities and practices of communities must be understood in relation to wild elephants.


Author(s):  
Redactie KITLV

- T.W. Kamil, E.M. Uhlenbeck, De Systematiek der Javaanse Pronomina. Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, vol. XXX. ‘s-Gravenhage, Martinus Nijhoff, 1960. 63 p.- J. Noorduyn, Hans Kähler, Grammatik der Bahasa Indonésia, mit Chrestomathie und Wörterverzeichnis. Otto Harrassowitz. Wiesbaden 1956. VII + 307pp.- J.L. Swellengrebel, J.H. Hooykaas-v. Leeuwen Boomkamp, Ritual purification of a Balinese temple. Verhand. Kon. Nederl. Ak. v. Wetenschappen, Afd. Letterk., N.R. LXVIII, no. 4. 38 blz. tekst, 41 blz. afbeeldingen en register.- L. Kok, Bernhard H.M. Vlekke, Nusantara. A history of Indonesia. Wholly revised edition. W. van Hoeve Ltd, The Hague and Bandung, 1959; VIII, 479 p.- W. Ph. Coolhaas, B.H.M. Vlekke, Corrigenda op Nusantara, A history of Indonesia. Wholly revised edition. W. van Hoeve Ltd, The Hague and Bandung, 1959; VIII, 479 p.- S. Kooijman, C.A. Valentine, Masks and men in a Melanesian Society. The Valuku or Tubuan of the Lakalai of New Britain. University of Kansas Publications, Social Science Studies, 1961. Lawrence, Kansas, 76 pp., 2 kaarten, 18 foto’s en 3 kleurenproducties van tekeningen.- P. van Emst, A.P. Vayda, Maori warfare. Polynesian Society Maori Monographs No. 2. The Polynesian Society Inc. Wellington 1960. 141 pp.- ,


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