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German meat processing industry

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Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2015) 114 (1): 204–214.
Published: 01 January 2015
... mobility coming from countries with lower average wage levels, trade unions in particular have to mobilize new resources and go beyond their traditional focus on labor market insiders. © 2015 Duke University Press 2015 German meat processing industry migrant workers posted workers directive...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2015) 114 (4): 909–910.
Published: 01 October 2015
...  471 Veriava, Ahmed, Introduction: Reopening the Constituent Process  426 Wagner, Bettina, and Anke Hassel, Labor Migration and the German Meat Processing Industry: Fundamental Freedoms and the Influx of Cheap Labor  204 Warren, Shilyh, Abortion, Abortion, Abortion, Still: Documentary Show...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2015) 114 (1): 192–194.
Published: 01 January 2015
.... Perrotta’s essay on Romanian agricultural workers laboring in south- ern Italy; Wagner and Hassel’s analysis of Bulgarian and Romanian workers in the German meat processing industry; and Sacchetto and Andrijasevic’s piece on Polish, Slovak, Romanian, and Bulgarian electronics assembly workers...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2021) 120 (3): 493–514.
Published: 01 July 2021
... denied class con- sciousness entirely. Consider, for instance, those whom Marx and Engels term the lumpenproletariat, from the German word for rags : without formal wage labor and forced to exist on the margin of society, the lumpenproletariat are, Marx wrote, the refuse of all classes. Marx ([1852...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2007) 106 (4): 753–767.
Published: 01 October 2007
.... For the majority of Eastern European countries (perhaps with the excep- tion of Czechoslovakia and East Germany), Communism meant, among other things, a massive invasion of modernization. In Poland, the state had begun the process of modernization before World War II, but German rule and Soviet invasion...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2009) 108 (2): 395–415.
Published: 01 April 2009
... or, indeed, foreign heads of state. It would be all too easy, although perhaps still worthwhile, to interrogate this claim to dramatic centrality by intellectuals on the grounds of new German, French, or Italian ideology: that is, as the new “critical criticism” of the intellectual anxiously...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2017) 116 (4): 797–813.
Published: 01 October 2017
... “the revolution” meant such different things—but of man and woman, nomad and farmer, young and old, settled and homeless, literate and illiterate, north and south, east and west, Russian and Uzbek, Uzbek and Chechen, Chechen and Yakut, Yakut and German, one-sixth of the world and the other five-sixths...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2020) 119 (1): 95–111.
Published: 01 January 2020
... calls into question. The second agricultural revolution is often associated with a rift in what Marx called the metabolic interaction between man and the earth (Marx 1976: 677). Marx, who was informed by the work of a German chemist, Justus von Liebig, understood this largely in terms of declining...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2006) 105 (2): 373–390.
Published: 01 April 2006
..., with the anthropolo- gists remarking on the historical inaccuracy of portraying the Illini (who were mostly farmers, hunters, and traders) dressed up for a war dance in the costume of a Sioux warrior from a Plains Indian tribe. Their statement points out that this is akin to ‘‘representing Italians or Germans...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2002) 101 (4): 779–805.
Published: 01 October 2002
..., with the rela- tively sudden penetration of German colonizers into this fertile agricul- Alien-Nation 795 tural region. Their land expropriated for the establishment of plantations manned largely by foreigners, the Bakweri found themselves crowded...