@inbook{62413edb67d245e5902b18c1bf1b06a7,
title = "A Migrant/Minority Economy?: Jewish and Greek Migrant Entrepreneurial Patterns in the Greek Interwar Clothing Industry, 1923–1940",
abstract = "This chapter surveys the development of the clothing industry that enabled mass production to develop in interwar Greece. The influx of over 1,000,000 repatriated refugees in the wake of the Turkish-Greek transfer agreement (1923) led to cheap labour markets and broader consumer circles. Jewish and Greek Orthodox entrepreneurs, particularly around Thessalonica—the largest Jewish community in pre-1940 Greece—took advantage of both these factors. Drawing, inter alia, on archival document from the Jewish-owned Bank Amar, the chapter analyses:The context—industrial growth in Greece following the transferThe knitting and ready-made underwear industriesThe ready-made {\textquoteleft}needle industry{\textquoteright}—shirts and clothing accessoriesSelf-employed seamstresses (gender and entrepreneurship)",
author = "Meron, \{Orly C.\}",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-031-33302-6\_5",
language = "الإنجليزيّة",
isbn = "978-3-031-33301-9",
series = "Springer Texts in Business and Economics (STBE)",
publisher = "Springer",
pages = "63--78",
editor = "Michelle Brandstrup and L{\'e}o-Paul Dana and Daniella Ryding and Gianpaolo Vignali and Myriam Carat{\`u}",
booktitle = "The Garment Economy",
}