ABSTRACT
This book offers a view of shifts in labour relations in various parts of the world over a breathtaking span, from 1500 to 2000, with a particular emphasis on colonial institutions. How did growing demand for colonial commodities affect labour in the Global South? How did colonial interference with land and labour markets affect developments in labour relations? And what were the effects of the introduction of colonial currencies? The contributors to this volume answer those questions and more, combining global perspectives with impressively detailed case studies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter 1|16 pages
Introduction
part I|177 pages
Labour in the Production of Global Commodities
chapter 2|37 pages
The Industrialization of the Developing World and Its Impact on Labour Relations, 1840s to 1940s
chapter 3|40 pages
Economic Institutions and Shifting Labour Relations in the Indian, Brazilian, and South African Diamond Mines
chapter 5|38 pages
Threads of Imperialism
chapter 6|31 pages
The Triumph of the Peasant Option and the Parasitic Cotton Sector in Malawi, 1891 to 1995
part II|87 pages
Changing Labour and Land Market Institutions
chapter 7|30 pages
Extractive Economy and Institutions?
chapter 9|27 pages
Wage Labour and Slavery on the Cape Frontier
part III|67 pages
Monetization and the Payment of Work
