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Unemployment Revisited in Comparative Perspective: Labour Market Policy in Strasbourg and Liverpool, 1890–1914

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2007

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Abstract

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Many historical studies, some of them comparative, have explored the foundations of welfare states and the birth of unemployment policies in Europe in the late nineteenth century. Nearly all have focused on political debate at national level. This paper bases its analysis on labour market reforms initiated in Strasbourg and Liverpool in the decades preceding World War I. It explores how bona fide unemployed workers, the proper clients of official help, were distinguished from the mass of the poor and indigent. The labour market had to be defined and organized before policies for the unemployed could be put in place. The object is to demonstrate not only how this was done, but also how different perceptions of social justice and economic efficiency influenced both the process and the outcomes of public interventions, in this instance undermining attempts to transfer specific policies from one country to another.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2007 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis

Footnotes

Research for this paper was funded by the European Commission under EUROCAP (Framework 5). I acknowledge the help from my colleagues Benedicte Zimmermann and Simon Constantine for providing material and to them, Stuart Macdonald and Daniel Clegg for comments on earlier texts. Thanks are also due to three anonymous referees, in particular a French commentator for very helpful and detailed suggestions; also to Professor Peter Hennock for constructive comment and for access to the typescript of his forthcoming book, The Origins of the Welfare State in Britain and Germany, 1850–1914 (Cambridge, forthcoming). Responsibility for all opinions expressed here, however, remains mine alone.