Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1724573025> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W1724573025 endingPage "73" @default.
- W1724573025 startingPage "37" @default.
- W1724573025 abstract "The Pacific Northwest underwent rapid economic growth in the late 19th century and cities on both sides of the Canada/US border burgeoned. The building boom was sustained by a large cohort of tradesmen and skilled labourers who lived in modest cabins, tenement blocks, boarding houses, and residential hotels. Most of these urban wageworkers were unmarried. They left few records of their experiences outside the job site or union hall. In this case study of Victoria, British Columbia circa 1891, we deployed a historical geographical information system (hgis ) to reconstitute the urban residential and social space of about 2,000 otherwise elusive working men. Our research framework combines qualitative methods that are familiar to historians and quantitative methods favoured by geospatial researchers. By integrating both qualitative and quantitative data, we are able to represent the multiple spatial conditions experienced by Victoria’s wageworkers in the early 1890s. In the process, we repopulated the city and reconstructed a largely vanished urban landscape. A primary objective of the essay is to demonstrate how gis can be used as a research tool and new epistemology in the field of labour history. Abstract: La region du nord-ouest du Pacifique a connu une forte expansion economique a la fin du xixe siecle et les villes des deux cotes de la frontiere canado-americaine se sont developpees rapidement. Le boom de la construction a ete soutenu par l’importante cohorte de gens de metier et d’ouvriers qualifies qui vivaient dans des cabanes modestes, des immeubles locatifs, des pensions et des hotels-residences. La plupart de ces salaries urbains etaient celibataires. Ils ont laisse peu de documents attestant de leurs experiences hors de leur lieu de travail ou de leur local syndical. Dans cette etude de cas de la ville de Victoria, en Colombie-Britannique, vers 1891, nous avons deploye un systeme d’information geographique-historique (sigh ) pour tenter de reconstituer l’espace residentiel et social urbain d’environ 2 000 travailleurs ayant laisse peu de traces. Notre cadre de recherche conjugue des methodes qualitatives familieres aux historiens et des methodes quantitatives que preferent les specialistes de la recherche geospatiale. En integrant les donnees qualitatives et quantitatives, nous pouvons representer les multiples conditions spatiales dans lesquelles ont vecu les salaries de Victoria au debut des annees 1890. Ce processus nous permet de repeupler la ville et de reconstruire un paysage urbain largement disparu. Un des objectifs premiers de cet essai est de montrer comment les systemes d’information geographique (Sig ) peuvent servir d’outils de recherche et de nouvelle epistemologie dans le domaine de l’histoire ouvriere." @default.
- W1724573025 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1724573025 creator A5026428484 @default.
- W1724573025 creator A5039956375 @default.
- W1724573025 creator A5045911899 @default.
- W1724573025 creator A5060416365 @default.
- W1724573025 date "2013-12-09" @default.
- W1724573025 modified "2023-09-22" @default.
- W1724573025 title "Dwelling Places and Social Spaces: Revealing the Environments of Urban Workers in Victoria Using Historical GIS" @default.
- W1724573025 cites W128363437 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1485668865 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1519095442 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1527652419 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1536167914 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1539705704 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1589775390 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1594684443 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W172650738 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1976873289 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1977739039 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1985612800 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1989852249 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1990859904 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W1999756353 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2021731231 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2030328149 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2053518075 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2054433560 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2067522489 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2068081783 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2070944216 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2072340787 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2072758395 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2078105381 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2096258735 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2111343503 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W21362445 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2163654051 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2169022623 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2318727218 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2324242808 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2324346459 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2391664656 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2395021693 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2564531237 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2799691899 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2800226382 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2903620235 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W2970768616 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W3144323804 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W3148085964 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W418769056 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W566960956 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W587237622 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W593544865 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W598124022 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W598495931 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W611293816 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W616788630 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W626565011 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W627873433 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W631953471 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W637070006 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W647334371 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W654858999 @default.
- W1724573025 cites W655353959 @default.
- W1724573025 hasPublicationYear "2013" @default.
- W1724573025 type Work @default.
- W1724573025 sameAs 1724573025 @default.
- W1724573025 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W1724573025 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1724573025 hasAuthorship W1724573025A5026428484 @default.
- W1724573025 hasAuthorship W1724573025A5039956375 @default.
- W1724573025 hasAuthorship W1724573025A5045911899 @default.
- W1724573025 hasAuthorship W1724573025A5060416365 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C127413603 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C136264566 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C141441539 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C15708023 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C162324750 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C2549261 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C2780631588 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C58640448 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C6303427 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C87717796 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConceptScore W1724573025C127413603 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConceptScore W1724573025C136264566 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConceptScore W1724573025C141441539 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConceptScore W1724573025C142362112 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConceptScore W1724573025C15708023 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConceptScore W1724573025C162324750 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConceptScore W1724573025C166957645 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConceptScore W1724573025C205649164 @default.
- W1724573025 hasConceptScore W1724573025C2549261 @default.