For working people, the cost of getting to work, in terms of time and expense, is a crucial aspect of daily life. In the twentieth century, people's opportunity to travel increased. This did not, however, apply to everyone. The absence of affordable housing near job locations combined with the lack of safe, efficient, and affordable mobility options aggravated social exclusion for some. No Bicycle, No Bus, No Job details how power relations have historically enabled or restricted workers' mobility in twentieth century Netherlands. Blue-collar workers, industrial employers, and the state shaped…mehr
For working people, the cost of getting to work, in terms of time and expense, is a crucial aspect of daily life. In the twentieth century, people's opportunity to travel increased. This did not, however, apply to everyone. The absence of affordable housing near job locations combined with the lack of safe, efficient, and affordable mobility options aggravated social exclusion for some. No Bicycle, No Bus, No Job details how power relations have historically enabled or restricted workers' mobility in twentieth century Netherlands. Blue-collar workers, industrial employers, and the state shaped workers' everyday commute in a changing playing field of uneven power relations that shifted from paternalism to neo-liberalism.
Patrick Bek is a historian who received his PhD in 2021 from Eindhoven University of Technology. His research interests include labor history, history of technology, and mobility studies. He currently lectures at Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Figures Introduction How Workers' Travel was Controlled in Many Ways Mobility in Key Dutch Industrial Centers Grasping the Worker's Perspective of Mobility 1 Responding to the Transport Mismatch 1920-1940 2 Protesting Bus Regulations during the Depression 1926-1938 3 Mobility Austerity during War and Scarcity 1940-1947 4 Mobility Barriers during Postwar Industrialization 1947-1970 5 Postwar Mobility Practices 1947-1970 6 Disciplining Cyclists and Moped Riders 7 Mobilizing Rural and Migrant Workers by Company Bus 8 Leaving Workers to their Own Devices during Deindustrialization 1970-1990 Conclusion Bibliography Archival Collections Online Collections Newspaper and Journal Articles Published Documentation of Government and Non-Governmental Organizations Scholarly Publications Index
Acknowledgements Figures Introduction How Workers' Travel was Controlled in Many Ways Mobility in Key Dutch Industrial Centers Grasping the Worker's Perspective of Mobility 1 Responding to the Transport Mismatch 1920-1940 2 Protesting Bus Regulations during the Depression 1926-1938 3 Mobility Austerity during War and Scarcity 1940-1947 4 Mobility Barriers during Postwar Industrialization 1947-1970 5 Postwar Mobility Practices 1947-1970 6 Disciplining Cyclists and Moped Riders 7 Mobilizing Rural and Migrant Workers by Company Bus 8 Leaving Workers to their Own Devices during Deindustrialization 1970-1990 Conclusion Bibliography Archival Collections Online Collections Newspaper and Journal Articles Published Documentation of Government and Non-Governmental Organizations Scholarly Publications Index
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