The Unemployed in the Danish Newspaper Debate from the 1840S to the 1990S

The Unemployed in the Danish Newspaper Debate from the 1840S to the 1990S Study Paper No. 21 - Study Paper

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Publisher's Synopsis

The revolutionary events of 1848 heralded the demise of absolute monarchy in Denmark. In the wake of a deep crisis in Europe's industrial heartlands, debate about the unemployed raged as well. In Paris, revolutionary workers discussed the right to work as a universal human right, and similar demands were raised in the Copenhagen newspaper world. Other fixed points in the history of the unemployment debate include the period up to the passing of the first act on state approved unemployment insurance funds in 1907, the deep recession of the 1930s, the liberation summer of 1945, and the welfare state's revision of unemployment legislation in 1967. The post-1973 crisis saw the debate flare up again, and the flames had still not been doused completely by the mid-1990s. This pamphlet provides a wider perspective on how the more influential Danish newspapers dealt with the theme of "the unemployed" during this 150-year period, outlining the arguments that the leading Danish newspapers deployed on the subject.

Book information

ISBN: 9788776743741
Publisher: University Press of Southern Denmark
Imprint: University Press of Southern Denmark
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 93
Weight: 227g
Height: 240mm
Width: 170mm
Spine width: 6mm