Labour Procurement in Pre-Monetary Europe

Allbwn ymchwil: Pennod mewn Llyfr/Adroddiad/Trafodion CynhadleddPennodadolygiad gan gymheiriaid

  • Raimund Karl
In societies with a monetary economy, one of the, if not the preferred means of procuring the workforce necessary to carry out a particular work is to simply pay those who are required to do the work. In societies with a pre-monetary economy, this is much less simple: after all, money does not (yet) exist, and thus, no one can be paid with it. Yet sometimes, it becomes necessary – particularly for labour-intensive tasks – to get a sizeable workforce to do, not what they would want to do themselves, but that which those who want to get a particular job done would want them to. For that, it is either necessary that the workers are convinced that they actually want to do what needs to be done voluntarily, or they must be motivated by other than monetary rewards to commit themselves to the work, or at least to make themselves available for it. This contribution attempts to demonstrate how workforces were recruited, co-ordinated, and deployed in pre-monetary ‘Celtic’ societies – primarily such of the insular early middle ages, secondarily in those of the European Iron Age – by means of social networking and non-monetary rewards to carry out such labour-intensive tasks.
Iaith wreiddiolSaesneg
TeitlPersistent economic ways of living
Is-deitlProduction, Distribution, and Consumption in Late Prehistory and Early History
GolygyddionAlzbeta Danielisová, Manuel Fernández-Götz
Man cyhoeddiBudapest
CyhoeddwrArchaeolingua
Tudalennau21-37
Nifer y tudalennau16
Cyfrol35
ISBN (Argraffiad)9789639911703
StatwsCyhoeddwyd - 31 Awst 2015

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