ABSTRACT

As with many industrial workers, Zambian miners claim a special role in their families, communities and national development policies. Their middle-class identity, built through dangerous and demanding labour, colonial histories and a transition from labour camps to a neoliberal workplace structure, shapes daily practices and through this a narrative of national development. This chapter focuses upon how Zambian miners understand their obligations and entitlements, and through this how they make demands on the state, capital and on themselves. It attempts to combine insights into the uneven status of subjectivities under capitalism with arguments for taking seriously hierarchically embedded personhoods and the promises made to Global South citizens through narratives of ‘development’. However, in doing so, it foregrounds that workers’ greater political significance vis-à-vis the state than capital can inadvertently enable greater claims by the latter.