Combining data sources reveals hidden work patterns in historical labor markets
Researchers blended demographic records with court documents to map labor relations in early 1800s Sweden, uncovering informal employment and women's work that single datasets missed. The approach offers a template for policymakers and businesses seeking to understand gig work, underreported employment, and economic participation gaps that standard statistics overlook.
Originaltitel: “The Best of Both Worlds”: Two Methodological Approaches to Work and Labour Relations in Early Nineteenth-Century Västerås
<p>In this article, which has a strong methodological focus, we establish the labour relations that characterized the urban population of the Swedish town of Västerås in 1820. Several sources are combined: the so-called Tabellverket (an early form of demographic statistics) and observations made in, primarily, local court records. To assign labour relations as defined by the Global Collaboratory on the History of Labour Relations project, the preliminary picture based on the Tabellverket is complemented by systematically adding information from court records analysed in the Gender and Work project. This information captures both what people did and also, to some extent, what labour relations they were involved in. Subsequently, all the information is collated to estimate the labour relations characterizing the whole population in the selected town. The result of this experiment is a much more encompassing and richer picture of the labour relations within the selected community, one that acknowledges both women’s work and multiple employments. In a broader perspective, the case study contributes to our understanding of the gradual increase of commodified labour in the world.</p>