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IX. Asians Compared: Some Observations regarding Indian and Indonesian Indentured Labourers in Surinam, 1873-1939
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 April 2010
Extract
The drive towards the abolition of the slave trade at the beginning of the 19th century was not effective until the 1850s. It was perhaps the only migratory intercontinental movement in history which came to a complete stop because of political pressures in spite of the fact that neither the supply nor the demand for African slaves had disappeared.
Because of the continuing demand for bonded labour in some of the plantation areas in the New World (notably the Guiana's, Trinidad, Cuba and Brazil) and because of a new demand for bonded labour in the developing sugar and mining industries in Mauritius, Réunion, Queensland (Australia), Natal (South Africa), the Fiji-islands and Hawaii an international search for ‘newslaves’ started.
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- Itinerario , Volume 11 , Issue 1: India and Indonesia from the 1830s to 1914: The Heyday of Colonial Rule , March 1987 , pp. 149 - 154
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- Copyright © Research Institute for History, Leiden University 1987
References
Notes
1 Engerman, Stanley L., ‘Contract Labour, Sugar, and Technology in the Nineteenth Century’, Journal of Economic History 43 (1938) 635–639CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
2 Marks, Shula and Richardson, Peter eds., International Labour Migration: Historical Perspectives (London 1984); andGoogle ScholarSaunders, Kay ed., Indentured Labour in the British Empire, 1834-1920 (London/Canberra 1984)Google Scholar.
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4 Tinker, Hugh, A New System of Slavery (Oxford 1974)Google Scholar; Meager, Arnold Joseph, ‘The Introduction of Chinese Laborers to Latin America: the “coolie trade” 1847-1874’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of California, Davis 1975); andGoogle ScholarRichardson, Peter, ‘Coolies, Peasants and Proletarians: the Origins of Chinese Indentured Labour in South Africa, 1904-1907’ in: Marks, and Richardson, eds., International Labour Migration, 167–185Google Scholar.
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7 Chinese: Meager, , ‘Introduction of Chinese Laborers’, 55.Google ScholarIndians: Omvedt, Gail, ‘Migration in Colonial India. The Articulation of Feudalism and Capitalism by the Colonial State’, Journal of Peasant Studies 7 (1980) 188. Javanese: Peter Boomgaard, ’Multiplying Masses: Nineteenth Century Population Growth in India and Indonesia’ (in this volume) table 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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11 Tinker, New System of Slavery, chapter 3.
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14 Data from Koloniale Verslagen, 1890-1921. My thanks to A.J. Kuijpers, who calculated the percentages. Data on India from Davis, K., The Population of India and Pakistan (Princeton 1951) 70. Some of this material is drawn from:Google ScholarEmmer, P. C., ‘The Great Escape: the Migration of Female Indentured Servants from British India to Surinam, 1873-1916’ in: Richardson, D. ed., Abolition and its Aftermath; the Historical Context, 1790-1916 (London 1985) 225–266Google Scholar.
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17 Emmer, P. C., ‘The Meek Hindu, the Recruitment of Indian Indentured Labour for Service Overseas, 1870-1916’ in: Emmer, P. C. ed., Colonialism and Migration; Indentured Labour Before and After Slavery (The Hague 1986) 199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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