DéPOT: Deindustrialization and the Politics of Our Time
Deindustrialization and the Politics of Our Time
13 episodes
5 months ago
The DéPOT partnership examines the historical roots of deindustrialization and the contemporary responses to it. The goal is to understand deindustrialization in transnational or comparative perspective, its causes, the responses to it, its effects, and its legacies. The partnership joins 25 leading specialists in the study of deindustrialization as well as 18 research centres and 16 industrial museums, heritage groups, trade unions, labour archives, Indigenous organizations, and publishers. The focus is on the transnational connections between and comparisons among the United States, Canada, Germany, France, Italy, and the United Kingdom – the heart of the old “industrial world.”
The DéPOT podcast serves as a place for deindustrialization-related conversations about research, methodology, and publications, primarily with graduate student and post doctoral affiliates and co-investigators.
Please visit https://deindustrialization.org to learn more about the project.
All content for DéPOT: Deindustrialization and the Politics of Our Time is the property of Deindustrialization and the Politics of Our Time and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The DéPOT partnership examines the historical roots of deindustrialization and the contemporary responses to it. The goal is to understand deindustrialization in transnational or comparative perspective, its causes, the responses to it, its effects, and its legacies. The partnership joins 25 leading specialists in the study of deindustrialization as well as 18 research centres and 16 industrial museums, heritage groups, trade unions, labour archives, Indigenous organizations, and publishers. The focus is on the transnational connections between and comparisons among the United States, Canada, Germany, France, Italy, and the United Kingdom – the heart of the old “industrial world.”
The DéPOT podcast serves as a place for deindustrialization-related conversations about research, methodology, and publications, primarily with graduate student and post doctoral affiliates and co-investigators.
Please visit https://deindustrialization.org to learn more about the project.
Oral History Methodology w/ Naomi Petropolous, Rebekah Chatellier, Amber Ward & Pete Hodson
DéPOT: Deindustrialization and the Politics of Our Time
50 minutes 23 seconds
3 years ago
Oral History Methodology w/ Naomi Petropolous, Rebekah Chatellier, Amber Ward & Pete Hodson
In this episode of the DéPOT podcast, Naomi Petropoulos (Queen’s University Belfast) speaks with Rebekah Chatellier (University of Strathclyde), Pete Hodson (Trinity College Dublin) and Amber Ward (University of St. Andrews) about the use of oral history in their work, how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted their oral history practices, as well as their hopes for a future in which oral history interviewing is less encumbered by the pandemic.
You can find more about the DéPOT project at www.deindustrialization.org.
Music: "Never Give Up" by Ketsa. Used under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0; https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/summer-with-sound/never-give-up.
DéPOT: Deindustrialization and the Politics of Our Time
The DéPOT partnership examines the historical roots of deindustrialization and the contemporary responses to it. The goal is to understand deindustrialization in transnational or comparative perspective, its causes, the responses to it, its effects, and its legacies. The partnership joins 25 leading specialists in the study of deindustrialization as well as 18 research centres and 16 industrial museums, heritage groups, trade unions, labour archives, Indigenous organizations, and publishers. The focus is on the transnational connections between and comparisons among the United States, Canada, Germany, France, Italy, and the United Kingdom – the heart of the old “industrial world.”
The DéPOT podcast serves as a place for deindustrialization-related conversations about research, methodology, and publications, primarily with graduate student and post doctoral affiliates and co-investigators.
Please visit https://deindustrialization.org to learn more about the project.