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International Review for Social History (1936 - 1938),
Bulletin of the International Review of Social History (1937 - 1955)
Title history
Title history
- ISSN: 0020-8590 (Print), 1469-512X (Online)
- Editor: Aad Blok Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis, The Netherlands
- Editorial board
Published for Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis. The International Review of Social History (IRSH) is one of the leading journals in the field of social history, more in particular the history of work, workers, and labour relations, defined in the broadest possible sense, including workers’ struggles, organizations, and associated social, cultural, and political movements, both in the modern and the early modern periods, and across periods. IRSH is an online-only journal that aims to be truly global in scope and stresses the need for a comparative perspective that acknowledges the interrelationship of historical change and the phenomena and factors underlying that change. We welcome submissions from all over the world that deal with the social history of work, workers, and labour relations, explored on a local, regional, national, or transnational level, but always with an eye to how they contribute to a better understanding of what constitutes global labour history.
Areas covered include the life and work of slaves, wage labourers, artisans, peasants, and the self-employed; related issues of class, gender, age, and race and ethnicity; social, cultural, and political movements, including the intellectual ideas that played a part in those movements; citizenship; theoretical and methodological issues; and the environment and ecology in relation to the social.
Submissions that fall within this range of themes and topics in the field of social history of work and workers are welcomed, particularly those providing a comparative, transnational, or transcontinental perspective.
Areas covered include the life and work of slaves, wage labourers, artisans, peasants, and the self-employed; related issues of class, gender, age, and race and ethnicity; social, cultural, and political movements, including the intellectual ideas that played a part in those movements; citizenship; theoretical and methodological issues; and the environment and ecology in relation to the social.
Submissions that fall within this range of themes and topics in the field of social history of work and workers are welcomed, particularly those providing a comparative, transnational, or transcontinental perspective.
Latest research articles
International Review of Social History blog
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The World of Sugar and the Commodity Frontiers Initiative: Editorial
- 20 February 2026,
- In 2021, Sven Beckert, Ulbe Bosma, Mindi Schneider and Eric Vanhaute published the research agenda of the Commodity Frontiers Initiative (CFI), in which...
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Economic liberalism and social revolts in Africa and the Middle East
- 01 April 2021,
- This special issue looks at the revolts and other, often contentious, social responses to the forced liberalization programs in Africa and the Middle East from...
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Women and Gender in Mining: Challenging Masculinity through History
- 05 February 2020,
- Taking a long-term and global labour history perspective, the editors highlight how, historically, the concept of masculinity became so interwoven with mining...