کارگران مهاجر در اقتصاد معدنکاری آفریقای جنوبی: مبارزه برای تأمین نیروی کار معادن طلا، ۱۸۹۰-۱۹۲۰
Migrant Labour in South Africa's Mining Economy : The Struggle for the Gold Mines' Labour Supply, 1890-1920
معرفی کتاب «کارگران مهاجر در اقتصاد معدنکاری آفریقای جنوبی: مبارزه برای تأمین نیروی کار معادن طلا، ۱۸۹۰-۱۹۲۰» (با عنوان لاتین Migrant Labour in South Africa's Mining Economy : The Struggle for the Gold Mines' Labour Supply, 1890-1920) نوشتهٔ Alan H. Jeeves، منتشرشده توسط نشر ACP - McGill Queen's University Press در سال 1985. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
This book is a study of the origins of migratory labour and racial discrimination in South Africa's premier industry, the gold mines of the Witwatersrand. Based upon government records and private business archives, it examines the highly competitive world of mine labour recruiting at the turn of the century and concludes that this regimented labour system was the product not only of the mining companies but also of political pressures and economic needs in South African society. The systerm was remarkable for the hardship it imposed, for the size of the labour force recruited - more than 200,000 low-wage black labourers were delivered annually to the industry's grim, barrack-like compounds - and for the fact that most of the workers were African pastoralists without previous industrial experience. Forced to work in appalling conditions amid much squalor and disease, more than 50,000 miners died on the Witwatersrand in a single decade. Contents Illustrations Tables Preface Abbreviations Introduction PART ONE: Foundations, 1890–1910 1 Mining Capital and the State under Kruger and Milner 2 Toward a Racial Division of Labour on the Witwatersrand PART TWO: The System at Work 3 The Making of a Labour Pool: Recruiting in the Eastern Cape 4 The Native Recruiting Corporation and Its Rivals 5 The Recruiting Nexus: Touts, Headmen, and Their Recruits PART THREE: Mine Labour in the Subcontinental Economy 6 The WNLA'S Mozambique Connection 7 Tropical Recruiting and the Bid for the Labour of the Hinterland Conclusion Appendixes 1 Average Number of Africans Employed on Mines and Works, Transvaal, 1903–20 2 Mineworkers Received, 1902–20 3 "Voluntary" Labour on Transvaal Gold Mines, 1905–20 4 Territorial Analysis of Desertion, 1909–20 Notes Bibliography Index A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Z "In tracing the development of the recruiting system, Alan Jeeves shows how a large proportion of the labour supply came to be controlled by private labour companies and recruiting agents, who aimed both to exploit the workers and to extract heavy fees from the employing companies. The gold indusry struggled for years against the internal divisions which created the competition for labour, until at last the Chamber of Mines, with the support of the state, succeeded in driving out the private recruiters and centralizing the system under its control. This study of the interests involved in the struggle for control of the black labour supply reveals much about the forces which created and now entrench racial domination in South African's industrial economy."--Publisher's description
دانلود کتاب کارگران مهاجر در اقتصاد معدنکاری آفریقای جنوبی: مبارزه برای تأمین نیروی کار معادن طلا، ۱۸۹۰-۱۹۲۰