Ein ewiges Hin und Her. Kontinentale, transatlantische und lokale Migrationsrouten in der Spätphase der Habsburgermonarchie

According to new perspectives in migration history, spatial mobility was never a linear phenomenon restricted to a single move from an area of out-migration to an area of in-migration. Instead, as it will be argued here, migration in Central Europe was a ›multidirectional phenomenon‹. Based o...

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Main Author: Annemarie Steidl
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: StudienVerlag 2008-01-01
Series:Österreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften
Online Access:https://journals.univie.ac.at/index.php/oezg/article/view/3946
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spelling doaj-9217454ee86e4aff8e978479cb452cd52021-03-18T20:47:21ZdeuStudienVerlagÖsterreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften1016-765X2707-966X2008-01-0119110.25365/oezg-2008-19-1-3Ein ewiges Hin und Her. Kontinentale, transatlantische und lokale Migrationsrouten in der Spätphase der HabsburgermonarchieAnnemarie Steidl0Institut für Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte, Universität Wien According to new perspectives in migration history, spatial mobility was never a linear phenomenon restricted to a single move from an area of out-migration to an area of in-migration. Instead, as it will be argued here, migration in Central Europe was a ›multidirectional phenomenon‹. Based on various statistics on internal, continental, and transatlantic migration, the interwoven patterns of coming and going have been analyzed for Austro-Hungary in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. First, the importance of coming and going for city growth and its connections among rural areas are shown. Second, as an example for labor migration of Poles from Western Galicia indicates, inhabitants of the Habsburg Monarchy could choose between different routes to migrate. The third example that deals with trans- atlantic migration poses the question of how useful terms such as ›emigration‹ and ›immigration‹ are in the context of a return rate of nearly 40 percent of transatlantic migrants. https://journals.univie.ac.at/index.php/oezg/article/view/3946
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annemarie Steidl
spellingShingle Annemarie Steidl
Ein ewiges Hin und Her. Kontinentale, transatlantische und lokale Migrationsrouten in der Spätphase der Habsburgermonarchie
Österreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften
author_facet Annemarie Steidl
author_sort Annemarie Steidl
title Ein ewiges Hin und Her. Kontinentale, transatlantische und lokale Migrationsrouten in der Spätphase der Habsburgermonarchie
title_short Ein ewiges Hin und Her. Kontinentale, transatlantische und lokale Migrationsrouten in der Spätphase der Habsburgermonarchie
title_full Ein ewiges Hin und Her. Kontinentale, transatlantische und lokale Migrationsrouten in der Spätphase der Habsburgermonarchie
title_fullStr Ein ewiges Hin und Her. Kontinentale, transatlantische und lokale Migrationsrouten in der Spätphase der Habsburgermonarchie
title_full_unstemmed Ein ewiges Hin und Her. Kontinentale, transatlantische und lokale Migrationsrouten in der Spätphase der Habsburgermonarchie
title_sort ein ewiges hin und her. kontinentale, transatlantische und lokale migrationsrouten in der spätphase der habsburgermonarchie
publisher StudienVerlag
series Österreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften
issn 1016-765X
2707-966X
publishDate 2008-01-01
description According to new perspectives in migration history, spatial mobility was never a linear phenomenon restricted to a single move from an area of out-migration to an area of in-migration. Instead, as it will be argued here, migration in Central Europe was a ›multidirectional phenomenon‹. Based on various statistics on internal, continental, and transatlantic migration, the interwoven patterns of coming and going have been analyzed for Austro-Hungary in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. First, the importance of coming and going for city growth and its connections among rural areas are shown. Second, as an example for labor migration of Poles from Western Galicia indicates, inhabitants of the Habsburg Monarchy could choose between different routes to migrate. The third example that deals with trans- atlantic migration poses the question of how useful terms such as ›emigration‹ and ›immigration‹ are in the context of a return rate of nearly 40 percent of transatlantic migrants.
url https://journals.univie.ac.at/index.php/oezg/article/view/3946
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