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Dive into the research topics where Richard Paping is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard Paping.


The History of The Family | 2004

Family strategies concerning migration and occupations of children in a market-oriented agricultural economy

Richard Paping

This study focuses on family labor strategies in the 19th and early 20th centuries, using a database containing vital information on the lives of some 3000 persons born around 1830, 1850, and 1870 in the Groningen clay soil region—a predominantly agrarian area in the northern part of the Netherlands. Working-class families were moving from short-term survival strategies to long-term investment strategies in the last decades of the 19th century. Like other occupational groups, they tended to keep their children at home in larger numbers instead of finding them jobs as live-in workers—a change probably facilitated by improving real wages. Although such a change in family strategy implied lower earnings in the short run, children who stayed home experienced more upward social mobility in later life than those who left home early to become live-in servants. The increased preference for long-term investment strategies is also apparent in migratory patterns. Independent of the phases in the family cycle, working-class families became more inclined to migrate over longer distances, especially to America where unskilled laborers had better prospects.


The History of The Family | 2004

The family strategies concept: An evaluation of four empirical case studies

Theo Engelen; Jan Kok; Richard Paping

In this article, the preceding case studies are evaluated from the perspective of the family strategies concept. The studies have yielded new insights in the relationship between the family and the labor market and in the labor allocation within families. In addition, they have shown the tensions between individual life plans and collective needs. It has been difficult, however, to reach firm conclusions about which strategies were deployed by families. One of the problems is that the motives of the family members remain hidden. In addition, our databases need to be more finely tuned to the strategies concept. In particular, we know too little on the range of (strategic) options of families in the past.


The History of The Family | 2004

Labor strategies of families: An introduction

Theo Engelen; Ad Knotter; Jan Kok; Richard Paping

The collection presents an approach to history in which the dominance of structure is replaced by the effects of human agency. Individual motives and actions are the subject of these studies. In particular, the articles focus on the economic approach of family strategies, starting with a methodological discussion of the problematic concept of strategies: how to disentangle the influence of social structure, family circumstances, and individual behavior. The conflicting interests of individuals resulted in replacing the so-called “joint utility function” with that of “bargained family decisions.” The focus of the contributions is on the labor deployment of family members. All articles deal with three factors influencing labor deployment: adaptation to the structural environment, regulation of labor within the family, and reconciliation of choices at transition points during the individual life course of family members.


Comparative Rural History of the North Sea Area ; CORN Publication Series | 2007

When the potato failed. Causes and effects of the 'last' European subsistence crisis, 1845-1850

Cormac Ó Gráda; Richard Paping; Eric Vanhaute


When the potato failed. Causes and effects of the 'last' European subsistance crisis, 1845-1850 | 2006

The European subsistence crisis of 1845-1850: a comparative perspective

Cormac Ó Gráda; Eric Vanhaute; Richard Paping


The History of The Family | 2014

Beyond the census. Reconstructing Dutch women's labour market participation in agriculture in the Netherlands, ca. 1830–1910

Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk; Richard Paping


CORN Publication Series | 2007

The consequences of the potato disease in the Netherlands 1845-1860 : a regional approach

R.F.J. Paping; Vincent Tassenaar; Cormac Ó Gráda; Richard Paping; Eric Vanhaute


Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis/ The Low Countries Journal of Social and Economic History | 2011

The rural succession myth : Occupational careers and household formation of peasants’ and farmers’ offspring around 1800

Richard Paping; Erwin Karel


Historia Agraria | 2005

Oferta y demanda de criados rurales en Holanda, 1760-1920: el caso de Groningen

Richard Paping


Nederlands Agronomisch Historisch Instituut | 2004

Where the Twain meet again. New results of the Dutch-Russian project on regional development, 1750-1917.

Richard Paping; P. Kooij

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Jan Kok

International Institute of Social History

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P. Kooij

University of Groningen

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Theo Engelen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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