Duncan Money Profile picture
Jul 30, 2018 9 tweets 3 min read Read on X
First day of the @WEHC2018! Currently at the opening plenary where Sevket Pamuk is speaking on understudied aspects of past waves of globalisation. #wehc2018
Pamuk: we need to pay more attention to the local, and the interaction between the local and the global. Outcomes of globalisation at local level varied considerably. #WEHC2018
Pamuk: changes in institutions caused by globalisation may be more important than trade and capital flows most commonly studied. #WEHC2018
Pamuk: we need to focus on the uneven impact of globalisation and it's distributional outcomes. #WEHC2018
Pamuk: long-distance exchanges before 1500 were not limited to trade but included transfer of diseases, technologies, ideas and institutions #WEHC2018
Pamuk: one good example is that coins were very similar across Eurasia before 1500 #WEHC2018
Pamuk: the indirect impact of globalisation before the modern era was important, especially the rise of merchant classes and their influence #WEHC2018
Pamuk: 19th century globalisation provided positive results in the aggregate but outcomes were uneven and were not beneficial for all. #WEHC2018
Pamuk: 19th century globalisation created it's own politics of backlash. #WEHC2018

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More from @mininghistory

Dec 7, 2022
Professional news: my contract at Leiden ends this month so I'm leaving academia. I'm good at my job. I publish a lot (3 books, 21 articles/chapters), got great teaching evaluations and supervised 4 PhDs since finishing my own in 2016. It's not enough though.
I have to accept that I will never get a permanent academic job, and have also realised I no longer want one. Working conditions at universities are deteriorating. At Leiden, I took on the work of two colleagues who had burnouts. Unsurprisingly, I found their jobs stressful!
People often say encouraging things about my work and prospects for employment. The reality of the academic job market is that my profile has been enough to get me only one one job interview this year, despite many applications.
Read 4 tweets
Dec 5, 2022
My review of 'Settlers at the End of Empire' by @drjeansmith has been published in the @ihr_history Reviews in History. Her book is a very welcome contribution to migration history:
reviews.history.ac.uk/review/2469
Post-war migration in Britain usually means immigration to Britain. The important contribution of this book is to show that this occured alongside mass emigration from Britain, and how this changes our understanding of migration and migration policy.
This collective experience of emigration is absent in popular memory. As I note in the review, ‘Migration’ means the arrival of the Empire Windrush at Tilbury in 1948, not the Carnarvon Castle departing Southampton for Cape Town at the same time.
Read 4 tweets
Sep 25, 2020
Today marks the 50th anniversary of the Mufulira Mine Disaster, #Zambia's worst ever mining disaster. On 25 September 1970, 89 miners on the night shift were entombed when vast quantities of mud and water leaked from a surface tailings dam and inundated the mine.
#mininghistory
Mufulira was the world’s largest underground copper mine, but it took only 15 minutes for the entire eastern section to flood. Survivors recalled a noise like thunder, a shockwave of air through the tunnels, then the lights going out before the wet mud rushed through the tunnels.
Pictures from the aftermath give an indication of the terrible force of the mud rush that surged through the underground workings.
Read 15 tweets
Sep 21, 2020
This photo I came across from the @TWArchives got me thinking about the global division of labour, specifically who could do what kinds of jobs in different places at the same time. The photo shows dockworkers in Sunderland manually unloading chromite from a ship in 1949. Image
What caught my eye is that the caption labels it "East African chromite," which is probably incorrect. The chromite was almost certainly mined in Zimbabwe, in open pits in Shurugwi (then Selukwe) and then shipped to Britain via Beira. Image
Chromite was manually extracted and then loaded onto trains to Beira. Here, the work was done by African men and it was absolutely unthinkable for whites to shovel chromite, and regarded as dangerous to racial prestige. This was not appropriate work for white men.
Read 6 tweets
Sep 10, 2020
Yesterday I spent a happy afternoon in the @ASCLibrary looking through two boxes of material on #Zambia recently donated by Frans Verstraelen. This was a mixture of books, reports, leaflets, and periodicals from the University of Zambia, some of which are now very hard to find.
The focus of much of the books and pamphlets is on Christianity, Christian churches and humanism (the guiding ideology of the country after independence). Several things by and about Kenneth Kaunda as well ImageImage
As an aside, Henry Meebelo (who was a historian and theoretician of the United National Independence Party) is seriously overdue an intellectual biography.
Read 7 tweets
Aug 18, 2020
Thanks to @blewis2103 I have a copy of a 1972 film on the history of Kansanshi, #Zambia, featuring an interview with with 95 year-old Chief Kapijimpanga (pictured) and footage of pre-industrial smelting techniques as recalled and reconstructed by elderly locals.
#mininghistory Image
Chief Kapijimpanga worked with the prospecting party that established a mine at Kansanshi in the 1900s and the film includes footage of the remains of that mine in the early 1970s. I think has now been obliterated by the new open pit.
If anyone would like a copy, then let me know and I will share it.
Read 4 tweets

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