Friday, 12 December 2003
Welcome addresses:
Sonja Puntscher-Riekmann, Vice-President of the University
Robert Hofmann, Head of the History Department
Introduction: Josef Ehmer, University of Salzburg
9:30 – 12:30
Chair: Stan Nadel
Commentator: Adam Walaszek, Jagiellonian University, Krakow
Andrea Komlosy, University of Vienna
Coming - Going - Staying - Returning: Migratory Itineraries between Economic Constraints, Individual Choice, and Collective Networking
Hermann Zeitlhofer, University of Salzburg and Vienna
Internal Migration in the Late Habsburg Monarchy
Lars Olsson, Växjö University, Sweden
Seasonal Workers from Galicia as Contracted Labour in Early Twentieth Century Sweden
14:00 – 18:00
Chair: Annemarie Steidl
Commentator: Tibor Frank, Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest
Sylvia Hahn, University of Salzburg
Gender, Labor, and Migration in 19th Century Austria
Angiolina Arru, Universita’ degli Studi di Napoli
Circulation of Credit and Migration. A Case Study from Central Italy.
Jochen Krebber, Cologne
Chain Migration Reconsidered: The Spatial and Social Dimension of 19th Century German Migration to North America
Engelbert Stockhammer, Bilkent University, Ankara
Building a Regression Model to Explain Migration from the Habsburg Monarchy at the Turn of the 19th Century
Saturday, 12 December 2003
9:00 – 12:30
Chair: Sylvia Hahn
Commentator: Hartmut Keil, University of Leipzig
Andreina de Clementi, Universita’ degli Studi di Napoli
Internal and Transatlantic Migration in Italy: A Regional Map
Marie-Pierre Arrizabalaga, Université de Cergy-Pontoise, France
Migration Patterns among Basque Men and Women in the Nineteenth Century
Brian McCook, University of Berkeley
The Babylonian Exile: Continental and Transatlantic Polish Migration and Re-migration, 1880-1924
Albert Lichtblau, University of Salzburg
Jewish Migrants from Galicia in the 1920ies
14:00 – 18:00
Chair: Christoph Jeggle, University of Freiburg and Berlin
Commentator: Peter Marschalck, Bremen
Annemarie Steidl, University of Salzburg
Relations between Continental and Transatlantic Migration from the Late Habsburg Monarchy: Building a Regression Model
Stan Nadel, Salzburg
Internal, Continental and Transatlantic Migration: the View from America
Josef Ehmer, University of Salzburg
Presentation of a Research Project: Migration in German Population Science and Historiography