Connecting Neighborhoods with Worksites: Coercion, Labor Migration, and Shipbuilding Workers in Late Ottoman İstanbul

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Date

2025

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Volume Title

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Open Access Color

HYBRID

Green Open Access

No

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No
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Average
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Average
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Abstract

This article highlights the state's labor coercion practices and their perpetual characteristic in defining the history of migration and migrants' experiences in the city. It underlines the internal relationship between production processes and relations on the one hand and the mobility of workers and their families on the other. For this purpose, it focuses on the migration dynamics of shipbuilding workers in mid-nineteenth-century & Idot;stanbul, most of whom worked in the Imperial Arsenal (Tersane-i Amire) and dwelled in the neighborhoods of the surrounding quarter of Kas & imath;mpa & scedil;a. I will utilize the population records of one of these neighborhoods, the Seyyid Ali & Ccedil;elebi, where the relationship between the worksite and the residential community was evident, and the wage records of the Imperial Arsenal to understand the relationality of migration and work processes. Based on an analysis of these sources, I will point to the connections between the configuration of migration networks built in or through the Arsenal and the settlement patterns in the neighborhood. I will particularly argue that relations at the workplace and the coercive dynamics that underlined these relations significantly impacted the migration and settlement patterns in the nineteenth century.

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Keywords

Migration, Forced Labor, Ottoman Empire, Imperial Arsenal, Black Sea, Alexandria

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WoS Q

Q1

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Q3
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N/A

Source

New Perspectives on Turkey

Volume

73

Issue

Start Page

75

End Page

95
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