Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T23:58:37.811Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

MOVING BEYOND COLONIAL CONTROL? ECONOMIC FORCES AND SHIFTING MIGRATION FROM RUANDA-URUNDI TO BUGANDA, 1920–60

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2019

MICHIEL DE HAAS*
Affiliation:
Wageningen University

Abstract

Migration was a crucial component of the spatially uneven formation of labour markets and export-oriented economies in colonial Africa. Much of this mobility was initiated by migrants themselves rather than by colonial authorities. Building on analytical concepts from economic history and migration theory, this study explains the changing composition and magnitude of one such uncontrolled migration flow, from Ruanda-Urundi to Buganda. Migrants’ mobility choices – when to migrate, for how long, and with whom – proved highly responsive to shifting economic opportunity structures on the sending and receiving ends. Initially, large differences in terms of land and labour endowments, socio-economic structures, and colonial interventions, combined with substantial scope for price arbitrage, created large spatial inequalities of opportunity and strong incentives for circular male labour migration. Over time, however, migration contracted as opportunities in Ruanda-Urundi and Uganda converged, not in the least as a result of large-scale mobility itself.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Acknowledgements: I am grateful to Corinne Boter, Shane Doyle, Andreas Eckert, Leigh Gardner, Ewout Frankema, Hilde Greefs, Dácil Juif, Doreen Kembabazi, Niek Koning, Sven van Melkebeke, Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk, Aidan Russell, and two anonymous reviewers for their valuable input on the manuscript. I thank Ashley Rockenbach for sharing some archival finds in the Kabale District Archive (Uganda), and Pim Arendsen for assistance with the maps. I acknowledge the financial support of the European Research Council under the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (ERC Grant Agreement no. 313114) as part of the project ‘Is Poverty Destiny? A New Empirical Foundation for Long-term African Welfare Analysis’. Author's email: [email protected].

References

1 Archives Africaines Bruxelles (AAB), RWA 352 Résidents of Gatsibu, Rukira, Kigali, Shangugu, Kisenyi, and Lubengera to Résident of Ruanda, May–Aug. 1925.

2 Gouvernement Belge, Rapport Sur l'Administration Belge du Ruanda-Urundi Pendant l'Année 1923 (henceforth: Rapport [YEAR]), 24. Translations from French to English are mine.

3 Rapport 1923, 63–4.

4 Newbury, D., ‘Returning refugees: four historical patterns of “coming home” to Rwanda’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 47:2 (2005), 252–85CrossRefGoogle Scholar; A. Rockenbach, ‘Contingent homes, contingent nation: Rwandan settlers in Uganda, 1911–64’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Michigan, 2018), 163–259.

5 Daley, P., ‘From Kipande to the Kibali: the incorporation of refugees and labour migrants in Western Tanzania, 1900–87’, in Black, R. and Robinson, V. (eds.), Geography and Refugees: Patterns and Processes of Change (London, 1993), 21Google Scholar.

6 Austin, G., ‘Explaining and evaluating the cash crop revolution in the “peasant” colonies of tropical Africa, ca. 1890 – ca. 1930: beyond “vent for surplus”', in Akyeampong, E., Bates, R., Nunn, N., and Robinson, J., eds., Africa's Development in Historical Perspective (Cambridge, 2014), 295320CrossRefGoogle Scholar; de Haas, M., ‘Measuring rural welfare in colonial Africa: did Uganda's smallholders thrive?’, Economic History Review, 70:2 (2017)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ehrlich, C., ‘The Ugandan economy, 1900–1945’, in Harlow, V. and Chilver, E. (eds.), History of East Africa, Volume 2 (Oxford, 1965), 395475Google Scholar; Wrigley, C., Crops and Wealth in Uganda, a Short Agrarian History (Kampala, 1959)Google Scholar.

7 Gambia and coastal Senegal: c. 60–70,000 circular migrants annually in the 1920s; Gold Coast: c. 150–200,000 annual migrants in the 1950s. Hopkins, A., An Economic History of West Africa (New York, 1973), 224Google Scholar.

8 Sunseri, T., ‘Labour migration in colonial Tanzania and the hegemony of South African historiography’, African Affairs, 95:391 (1996), 581–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9 For attempts at summarizing the fragmented literature on African historical migration see Cordell, D., ‘Interdependence and convergence: migration, men, women, and work in sub-Saharan African Africa, 1800–1975’, in Hoerder, D. and Kaur, A. (eds.), Proletarian and Gendered Mass Migrations (Leiden, 2013), 175215Google Scholar and Curtin, P.Africa and global patterns of migration’, in Wang, G. (ed.), Global History and Migrations (Boulder, 1997), 71Google Scholar.

10 For late colonial anthropological and economic perspectives, see Swindell, K., ‘Labour migration in underdeveloped countries: the case of subsaharan Africa’, Progress in Geography, 3:2 (1979), 243–8CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed. For a recent seminal study stressing the aspirations of migrants: Manchuelle, F., Willing Migrants: Soninke Labor Diasporas, 1848–1960 (London, 1997)Google Scholar. For the wider scholarly debate in which such studies can be situated, de Haas, H., ‘Migration and development: a theoretical perspective’, International Migration Review, 44:1 (2010), 227–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

11 This perspective became current among ‘underdevelopment’ theories. Key studies include Amin, S. (ed.) Modern Migrations in Western Africa (London, 1974)Google Scholar, and Cordell, D., Gregory, J., and Piché, V., Hoe and Wage: a Social History of a Circular Migration System in West Africa (Boulder, Co., 1996)Google Scholar. For a discussion of the (older) historiography, see Swindell, ‘Labour migration’, 248–54.

12 This led Swindell to conclude that ‘attempts to explain changing rates of migration over time have been tried, but all of them suffer from an inadequate data base’, a statement that requires little qualification up to today. Swindell, ‘Labour migration’, 246.

13 As noted by Chrétien, J.-P., The Great Lakes of Africa: Two Thousand Years of History (Cambridge, MA, 2003), 910Google Scholar. A call for further research on migration from Ruanda-Urundi to Uganda is made in Newbury, D., The Land Beyond the Mists: Essays on Identity and Authority in Precolonial Congo and Rwanda (Athens, Ohio, 2009), 47Google Scholar.

14 Key examples include, on Uganda, Ehrlich, ‘The Ugandan economy’; Elkan, W., Migrants and Proletarians: Urban Labour in the Economic Development of Uganda (London, 1960)Google Scholar; Mamdani, M., Politics and Class Formation in Uganda (London, 1976)Google Scholar; Powesland, P., Economic Policy and Labour, a Study in Uganda's Economic History (Kampala, 1957)Google Scholar; Reid, R., A History of Modern Uganda (Cambridge, 2017)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; S. Rutabajuuka, ‘Colonial capitalism and labour regulation in Uganda: 1900–1953’ (unpublished PhD thesis, Queen's University, 2000); Wrigley, Crops and wealth; on Rwanda, L Dorsey, ‘The Rwandan colonial economy, 1916–1941’ (unpublished PhD thesis, Michigan State University, 1983); on the Congolese and Rwandese Lake Kivu region, S. van Melkebeke. ‘“Changing grounds”. The development of coffee production in the Lake Kivu region (1918–1960/62): the colonial state, labor, land and production for the world market’ (unpublished PhD thesis, Universiteit Gent, 2017); on Burundi, Gahama, J., Le Burundi sous Administration Belge: la Période du Mandat 1919–1939 (Paris, 1983)Google Scholar; Hatungimana, A., Le café au Burundi au XXe siècle: paysans, argent, pouvoir (Paris, 2005)Google Scholar.

15 Richards, A. (ed.), Economic Development and Tribal Change: a Study of Immigrant Labour in Buganda (Cambridge, 1973)Google Scholar.

16 Chrétien, J.-P. and Mworoha, E., ‘Le cas de l'émigration des Banyarwanda et des Barundi vers l'Uganda’, in Commission Internationale d'Histoire des Mouvements Sociaux et des Structures Sociales (ed.), Les migrations internationales de la fin du XVIIIe siècle à nos jours (Paris, 1980)Google Scholar; Chrétien, J.-P., ‘Des sédentaires devenus migrants: les motifs de departs des Barundais et des Rwandais vers l'Ouganda’, Cultures et developpement, 10:1 (1978), 71101Google Scholar. Rockenbach, ‘Contingent’.

17 Powesland, Economic Policy; Rutabajuuka ‘Colonial capitalism’.

18 Doyle, S., ‘Parish baptism registers, vital registration and fixing identities in Uganda’, in Breckenridge, K. and Szreter, S. (eds.), Registration and Recognition: Documenting the Person in World History (Oxford, 2012), 277–98Google Scholar; Lyons, M., ‘Foreign bodies: the history of labour migration as a threat to public health in Uganda’, in Nugent, P. and Asiwaju, A. (eds.), African Boundaries: Barriers, Conduits and Opportunities (Athens, Ohio, 1996), 131–44Google Scholar; G. Mathys, ‘People on the move: frontiers, borders, mobility and history in the Lake Kivu region’ (unpublished PhD thesis, Ghent University, 2014); Newbury, ‘Returning Refugees’; Rockenbach, ‘Contingent’.

19 See Austin, G., ‘Factor markets in Nieboer conditions: pre-colonial West Africa, c. 1500–c.1900’, Continuity and Change 24:1 (2009), 2353CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Austin, G., ‘Resources, techniques, and strategies south of the Sahara: revising the factor endowments perspective on African economic development, 1500–2000’, Economic History Review, 61 (2008), 587624CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Curtin ‘Africa and global patterns’, 71; Domar, E., ‘The causes of slavery or serfdom: a hypothesis’, Journal of Economic History, 30 (1970), 1832CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Green, E., ‘The economics of slavery in the eighteenth-century Cape Colony: Revising the Nieboer-Domar Hypothesis’, International Review of Social History, 59:1 (2014), 3970CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hopkins, Economic History, 22–7; 223–5; Nieboer, H., Slavery as an Industrial System (The Hague, 1910)Google Scholar. The importance of factor endowments for understanding African history is also stressed in Iliffe, J., The African Poor: a History (Cambridge, 1987)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

20 Frankema, E. and van Waijenburg, M., ‘Structural impediments to African growth? New evidence from British African real wages, 1880–1965’, Journal of Economic History, 72:4 (2012), 895926CrossRefGoogle Scholar. A similar macro-regional distinction is made by Amin, S., ‘Underdevelopment and dependence in black Africa – origins and contemporary forms’, The Journal of Modern African Studies, 10:4 (1972), 503–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar

21 Frankema and Van Waijenburg, ‘Structural’, 910, also see de Haas, ‘Measuring’.

22 de Haas, H., ‘The internal dynamics of migration processes: a theoretical inquiry’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 36:10 (2010), 15871617CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

23 De Haas, ‘Internal dynamics’, 1588

24 Richards (ed.), Economic, 71.

25 If anything, and as we shall see later in the paper, socio-economic conditions between Buganda and Ruanda-Urundi had begun to converge substantially by the time Richards conducted her fieldwork.

26 Based on present-day borders and population estimates in Frankema and Jerven, ‘Writing history backwards’, 907–31.

27 Four times if we only count the indigenous population of Buganda. Uganda, Census 1959; Rapport 1959.

28 Chrétien, J.-P., ‘The slave trade in Burundi and Rwanda at the beginning of German colonization, 1890–1906’ in Médard, H. and Doyle, S. (eds.), Slavery in the Great Lakes Region of East Africa (Oxford, 2007), 210–30Google Scholar; B. Lugan, ‘Le commerce de traite au Rwanda sous le régime allemand (1896–1916)’, Revue Canadienne des Études Africaines, 11:20: 235–68.

29 DesForges, A., Defeat Is the Only Bad News: Rwanda under Musinga, 1896–1931 (Madison, Wis., 2011)Google Scholar; Vansina, J., Antecedents to Modern Rwanda: the Nyiginya Kingdom (Oxford, 2005)Google Scholar; Louis, W., Ruanda-Urundi, 1884–1919 (Oxford, 1963)Google Scholar.

30 Vansina, Antecedents, 130.

31 André, C. and Platteau, J.-P., ‘Land relations under unbearable stress: Rwanda caught in the Malthusian trap’, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 34 (1998), 147CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Leurquin, P., Le niveau de vie des populations rurales du Ruanda-Urundi (Leopoldville, 1960), 3638Google Scholar. Also see Gourou, P., La densité de la population au Ruanda-Urundi: esquisse d'une étude géographique (Bruxelles, 1953)Google Scholar.

32 Vansina, Antecedents, 42, 127–34. Also, Iliffe, African Poor, 61–3.

33 Iliffe, African, 64.

34 Lugan, ‘Le commerce’.

35 Desforges, Defeat, 50.

36 Ibid., 94; Melkebeke, Van, ‘Divergence in rural development: the curious case of coffee production in the Lake Kivu region (first half twentieth century)’, African Economic History. 46:2 (2018), 117–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

37 Sunseri, T., Vilimani: Labor Migration and Rural Change in Early Colonial Tanzania (Portsmouth, N.H., 2002), 27, 140, 185Google Scholar; Chrétien and Mworoha, ‘Le cas’, 645.

38 Dorsey, ‘Rwandan colonial economy’, 19; B. Lugan, ‘Causes et effets de la famine « Rumanura » au Rwanda, 1916–18’, Revue Canadienne des Études Africaines, 10:2, 347–56.

39 Rapport 1921; Uganda Census Returns 1921.

40 Rapport 1921, 56.

41 Rapport 1922, 18.

42 Hanson, H., Landed Obligation: the Practice of Power in Buganda (Portsmouth, N.H., 2003)Google Scholar; Reid, R., Political Power in Pre-colonial Buganda: Economy, Society and Welfare in the Nineteenth Century (Oxford, 2002)Google Scholar; Low, D., Fabrication of Empire: the British and the Uganda Kingdoms, 1890–1902 (Cambridge, 2009)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Médard, H., Le Royaume du Buganda au XIXe Siècle (Paris, 2007)Google Scholar.

43 Tuck, M., ‘Women's experiences of enslavement and slavery in late nineteenth and early twentieth century Uganda’, in Médard, H., and Doyle, S. (eds.), Slavery in the Great Lakes Region of East Africa (Oxford, 2007), 176Google Scholar. Also Richards (ed.), Economic, 170–2; Twaddle, M., ‘The ending of slavery in Buganda’, in Miers, S. and Roberts, R. (eds.), The End of Slavery in Africa (Madison, Wisconsin, 1988), 119–49Google Scholar; Twaddle, M., ‘Slaves and peasants in Buganda’, in Archer, L. (ed.), Slavery and Other Forms of Unfree Labour (London, 1988), 118–29Google Scholar.

44 Hanson, Landed, 182, 17; Wrigley, ‘Changing’, 22.

45 Hanson Landed, 97–8; Reid, Political, 116; Twaddle, ‘Slaves’, 123.

46 Doyle, S., Before HIV: Sexuality, Fertility and Mortality in East Africa, 1900–1980 (Oxford, 2013), 59104CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hanson, Landed; J. Kuhanen, ‘Poverty, health, and reproduction in early colonial Uganda’ (unpublished PhD thesis, Joensuu University, 2005), 119–34.

47 Twaddle, ‘Ending’. The (gradual) decline of polygyny further limited elites’ access to female labour. Musisi, N., ‘Morality as identity: the missionary moral agenda in Buganda, 1877–1945’, Journal of Religious History, 23 (1999), 5174CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

48 Powesland, Economic, 13–34; Hanson, Landed, 192–232; Twaddle, ‘Ending’, 138–45

49 Hanson, Landed, 165–97; Powesland, Economic, 13–34, De Haas, ‘Measuring’.

50 Chrétien and Mworoha, ‘Le cas’, 646; Desforges, Defeat, 46–8, 50, 67, 82, 178–9; Louis, Ruanda-Urundi; Newbury, D., ‘The Rwakayihura famine in eastern Rwanda: a nexus of colonial rule’, in Nsabimana, T. (ed.), Histoire Sociale de l'Afrique de l'Est (XIXM-XXh siecles) (Bujumbura 1991), 278Google Scholar; Rapport 1923, 123; AAB RWA 352 Kisenyi Resident to Ruanda Resident, 29 May 1925.

51 Lugan, ‘Le commerce’, 249; AAB RWA 352 Gatsibu Resident to Ruanda Resident, 20 May 1925; Kigali Resident to Ruanda Resident, 11 June 1925; Shangugu Resident to Ruanda Resident, undated (estimated mid-1925), Kisenyi Resident to Ruanda Resident, 29 May 1925; Desforges, Defeat, 178–9, Roberts, A., ‘The sub-imperialism of the Baganda’, The Journal of African History, 3:3 (1962), 435–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Steinhart, E., Conflict and Collaboration: The Kingdoms of Western Uganda, 1890–1907 (Princeton, 1977), 239–54Google Scholar.

52 Richards (ed.), Economic, 29–30.

53 Kabale District Archives (henceforth KDA) LAB 1 10i Survey of Banyaruanda Complex 1950, Section II; Richards (ed.), Economic, 36; Desforges, Defeat, 267.

54 Dorsey, ‘Rwandan colonial economy’; Pedersen, S., The Guardians: the League of Nations and the Crisis of Empire (Oxford, 2015), 244–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

55 Desforges, Defeat, 194–7.

56 Chrétien and Mworoha, ‘Le cas’, 665–6; Desforges, Defeat, 204. For cases of people using migration to British territory to evade French forced labour demands, see Asiwaju, A., ‘Migrations as revolt: the example of the Ivory Coast and the Upper Volta before 1945’, The Journal of African History, 17:4 (1976), 577–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Vaughan, C., ‘Violence and regulation in the Darfur-Chad borderland c. 1909–56: policing a colonial boundary’, The Journal of African History, 54:2 (2013), 177–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

57 AAB RWA 352 Administrateur Territorial to Gabiro Resident, 27 May 1932; Rockenbach, ‘Contingent’, 47, 75–6. Rwandan king Musinga himself, before he was deposed in 1931, corresponded with officials in Uganda about the possibility of asylum. Desforges, Defeat, 235.

58 AAB RWA 352 Gatsibu Resident to Ruanda Resident, 20 May 1925; Kisenyi Resident to Ruanda Resident, 29 May 1925

59 Online appendix Table 2.

60 Dorsey, ‘Rwandan colonial economy’, 121.

61 Dorsey, ‘Rwandan colonial economy’, 91, 121; AAB RWA 352 Kigali Resident to Ruanda Resident, 11 June 1925

62 Hanson, Landed, 165–232.

63 The abolition was also due to international pressure to scale down forced labour after scandals in Kenya. Twaddle, ‘Ending’, 144.

64 Powesland, Economic, 33.

65 For wages, see Online appendix. For cloth prices, I have used import prices for unbleached cloth from the Uganda Blue Book for 1919 and 1925.

66 From c. 0.04 acres to c. 0.23 acres per capita. Uganda, Blue Books.

67 Ahluwalia, D., Plantations and the Politics of Sugar in Uganda (Kampala, 1995)Google Scholar.

68 On this process of incorporation and its limits, Richards (ed.), Economic, 161–223.

69 Ibid., 29.

70 Powesland, Economic, 42.

71 The assumption of a well-functioning currency market appears reasonable in light of the available evidence. Import prices for cloth from British India in Uganda and Ruanda-Urundi closely followed the official exchange rate. While no consumer price series are available for comparison, if anything we may expect prices to have been slightly higher in Ruanda-Urundi than in Uganda, considering that most textiles were imported via the East African harbours, and had to be transported over railway and road via Tanganyika Territory. The market for currency itself appears to have been quite functional, although currency traders probably made substantial profits. Dorsey cites evidence ‘that currency speculation was so profitable to some Africans that [in the late 1920s] the Union Minière had difficulty recruiting workers in eastern Ruanda.’ Dorsey, ‘Rwandan colonial economy’, 92–3. By 1943, South Asians controlled at least some of the currency exchange at the border, charging a commission of 10 to 15 percent. UK National Archives (henceforth UKNA) CO 536/209/6 Morgan to British Consulate, Costermansville 2 Apr. 1943. Data from Online appendix Table 2.

72 AAB RWA 352; Rukira Resident to Ruanda Resident, 26 May 1925.

73 AAB RWA 352 Gatsibu Resident to Ruanda Resident, 20 May 1925.

74 AAB RWA 352 Kisenyi Resident to Ruanda Resident, 29 May 1925; Rockenbach, ‘Contingent’, 37, 42, 76.

75 Gahama, Le Burundi, 373.

76 Rapport 1921 cf. KDA 70 AGR Veterinary Relations with Belgian Territory, 1922; KDA 151 Veterinary Relations with Belgian Ruanda, 1937; AAB RWA 352 Kigali Resident to Ruanda Resident, 11 June 1925; AE/11 3300 1935 Les famines du Nord Est de l'Urundi.

77 Rather than cotton textiles, migrants wore cheap garments from locally made bark-cloth. V. Nakazibwe, ‘Bark-cloth of the Baganda people of Southern Uganda: a record of continuity and change from the late eighteenth century to the early twenty-first century’ (unpublished PhD thesis, Middlesex University, 2005), 194–6.

78 Chrétien and Mworoha, ‘Le cas’, 654.

79 Buell, R., The Native Problem in Africa (New York, 1928), 569Google Scholar; Richards (ed.), Economic, 30.

80 Uganda's Director of Medical and Sanitary Services, cited in O. Dak, ‘A geographical analysis of the distribution of migrants in Uganda’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Nairobi, 1968), 7.

81 AAB RWA 352 Administrateur Territorial Biumba, 14 June 1938; Gatsibu Resident to Ruanda Resident, 20 May 1925; Rukira Resident to Ruanda Resident, 26 May 1925; AAB RWA 352 Shangugu Resident to Ruanda Resident, undated (estimated 05/1925) AEII/3301 Vice-Gouverneur Général Ruanda-Urundi, 1 Mar. 1943.

82 Buell, The Native Problem, 462–3; Gahama, J. Le Burundi, 44–9.

83 J. Higginson, ‘The making of an African working class: the Union minière du Haut Katanga and the African mine workers, 1907–1945’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Michigan, 1979).

84 Governor-General of Ruanda-Urundi, cited in Lyons ‘Foreign bodies’, 134.

85 Higginson, ‘The making’; Juif, D. and Frankema, E., ‘From coercion to compensation: institutional responses to labour scarcity in the central African copperbelt’, Journal of Institutional Economics, 14:2 (2018), 313–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

86 S. van Melkebeke, ‘More continuity than change. Arbeid en arbeidsrelaties in the koffieplantagesector van Kivu tijdens het interbellum’ (unpublished MA thesis, Ghent University, 2012); Mathys, ‘People on the move’, 223.

87 Newbury, Cohesion, 279.

88 Cornet, A., Histoire d'une famine, Rwanda 1927–1930: crise alimentaire entre tradition et modernité (Louvain, 1996)Google Scholar.

89 Desforges, Defeat, 235; Newbury, ‘Rwakayihura’.

90 AAB AE/II 3300 Moulaert à Hymans, Octobre 1929; Pedersen, Guardians, 248–49.

91 Uganda, Second Report of the Labour Advisory Committee: Organisation of the South-western Labour Migration Routes (Entebbe, 1943), 13; AAB RWA 352 ‘Emigration saisonnière vers l'Uganda et le Tanganyika Territory’, 13 Oct. 1938.

92 Ibid.

93 Richards (ed.), Economic, 36; KDA LAB 1 10i Survey of Banyaruanda Complex 1950, Section II; Uganda, Labour Report 1930

94 AAB AE/11 3300 1935 Les famines du Nord Est de l'Urundi.

95 See Desforges, Defeat, 234–35.

96 Dorsey, ‘Rwandan colonial economy’, 166–205; Hatungimana, Le café; Van Melkebeke, ‘“Changing grounds”’, 82; Van Melkebeke, ‘Divergence’.

97 Underlying data are in Online appendix Table 2.

98 AAB RWA 352 Ruanda Governor, 19 March 1931; AAB RWA 352 Gatsibu Governor to Ruanda Governor, 20 May 1925; ‘Repatriement des émigrés Banyarwanda de l'Uganda’, 21 Nov. 1930; Orde-Browne, G. S. J., Labour conditions in East Africa (London, 1946), 89Google Scholar; KDA (ADM) 112 ‘Native Affairs Repatriation’, Provincial Commissioner, Western Province, Masindi, 4 Apr. 1949; KDA LAB.1 10i ‘Survey of Banyaruanda Complex 1950’, section I.

99 Newbury, Cohesion of Oppression, 155.

100 AAB RWA 352 ‘Retraite des Chefs’ Entre-Nous, May 1937.

101 Ibid., also see Chrétien, ‘Le cas’; Codere, H., The Biography of an African Society, Rwanda, 1900–1960: Based on Forty-eight Rwandan Autobiographies (Tervuren, 1973), 257Google Scholar.

102 Underlying annual figures are in Online appendix Table 3.

103 Chrétien, J.-P., ‘Une révolte au Burundi en 1934: les racines traditionalistes de l'hostilité à la colonisation’, Annales Histoire, Sciences Sociale 25(6), 16781717CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gahama, Le Burundi, 61–134.

104 Uganda, Report of the Committee of Enquiry into the Labour Situation in the Uganda Protectorate, 1938 (Entebbe, 1938)Google Scholar; Uganda, Second Report; KDA LAB 1 10i Survey of Banyaruanda Complex 1950, Section II; Powesland, Economic; Richards (ed.), Economic. Figures on migration can be found in Online appendix Table 1.

105 Chrétien and Mworoha, ‘Le cas’, 658.

106 Data in Online appendix Table 2.

107 Even in a wider British Africa perspective, Uganda's wage decline during the Great Depression was particularly steep. Frankema and van Waijenburg, ‘Structural’.

108 Cited in Chrétien and Mworoha, ‘Le cas’, 654

109 Uganda, Report of the Committee, 31; Uganda, Second Report, 20–21, 25, 30; Rutubajuka, ‘Migrant labour’, 38–40; Ahluwalia, Plantations, 110–20; Powesland, Economic, 11

110 Wrigley, Crops and Wealth, 59.

111 Lyons, ‘Foreign bodies’, 138. Wrigley, Crops and Wealth, 59.

112 On the expansion of Robusta coffee cultivation in Buganda see Richards, A. I., Sturrock, F., and Fortt, J. M. (eds.), Subsistence to Commercial Farming in Present-Day Buganda (Cambridge, 1973)Google Scholar.

113 Uganda, Report of the Committee, 49. Cf. Richards (ed.), Economic, 63.

114 Uganda, Second Report, 7.

115 KDA (ADM) 112 Native Affairs Repatriation Labour Commissioner to the Provincial Commissioners, Buganda, East and West, 5 Dec. 1930. Also AAB RWA 352 Administrateur Territorial Ruanda, 17 June 1938; AAB BUR 261 Administateur Territorial Ruyigi, 16 Mar. 1933; Tothill, J. (ed.), A Report on Nineteen Surveys Done in Small Agricultural Areas in Uganda with a View to Ascertaining the Position with Regard to Soil Deterioration (Kampala, 1938), 33Google Scholar; RWA 352 ‘Emigration vers l'Uganda’, Apr. 1937.

116 Singiza, D., La famine Ruzagayura (Rwanda, 1943–44): causes, conséquences et réactions des autorités (Bruxelles, 2011)Google Scholar.

117 Uganda, Second Report, 2, 38.

118 UKNA CO 536/209/6 Letter from Laballe, stationed in ‘Masaku, Tanganyika’ (sic; should be: Masaka, Uganda) to Mr. and Mrs. Lawson in Dublin 7 Sep. 1942.

119 UKNA CO 536/209/6 Orde Browne to Scott 30 Sept. 1942; Parliamentary question.

120 UKNA CO 536/209/6 The Anti-Slavery and Aborigines Protection Society to The Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies, 1 Feb. 1943.

121 UKNA CO 536/213/4 Author unknown, 13 Jan. 1944; Governor of Uganda to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 14 Dec. 1943.

122 New agricultural technologies brought in by returning migrants may have also facilitated greater agricultural productivity. See Leurquin, Le niveau de vie, 30, 69, 343.

123 Rwanda's coffee cultivation benefited from returning migrants’ experience with the crop in Uganda. Van Melkebeke, ‘Changing grounds’, 163.

124 See Online appendix Table 2.

125 On colonial investments, B. Paternostre de la Mairieu, Le Rwanda: son effort de développement, 154–204; Rockenbach, ‘Contingent’, 182–4. See wages data in Online appendix Table 2. In the early 1950s, a mere 6 per cent of interviewed migrants stated that avoiding labour obligations was their reason for coming to Buganda. Richards (ed.), Economic, 266; also Chrétien and Mworoha ‘Le cas’, 656.

126 Brixhe, A., De katoen in Belgisch-Congo (Bruxelles, 1953), 109–16Google Scholar. Prices of locally produced cloth for the years 1948–60 are shown in Online appendix Table 2.

127 On the strikes see Thompson, G., Governing Uganda: British Colonial Rule and its Legacy (Kampala, 2003), 246–67Google Scholar. De Haas, ‘Measuring’, 620–21.

128 Wrigley, C., ‘The changing economic structure of Buganda’, in Fallers, L. (ed.), The King's Men: Leadership and Status in Buganda on the Eve of Independence (Oxford, 1964)Google Scholar.

129 AAB RWA 352 ‘Etat des mouvements des indigènes du Ruanda a l'Uganda, enregistrés à Kakitumba’; KDA LAB.1 files 3i, 3ii and 3iii ‘Emigrant & Immigrant Kabale Labour Camp 1949–1957’.

130 AB RWA 352 ‘Emigration saisonnière vers l'Uganda et le Tanganyika Territory’, 13 Oct. 1938, Richards (ed.), Economic, 135, 265.

131 Ibid., 267.

132 Both are likely to be underestimates, since ethnic identities were fluid and numerous migrants declared themselves Ganda or Kiga. See Doyle, ‘Parish’; Uganda, Census 1959, 19.

133 Uganda, Second Report, 2; Uganda, , Third Report of the Labour Advisory Committee: Supervision of Labour and Other Matters Relating to Conditions of Employment in Uganda (Entebbe, 1944)Google Scholar.

134 Leiden African Studies Centre, 675.57 United Nations Committee on Rural Economic Development of the Trust Territories, ‘Study of population, land utilization and land system in Ruanda-Urundi’, 16–17; Chrétien and Mworoha, ‘Le cas’, 665.

135 UKNA CO 536/213/4 Visit to the Belgian Mandated Territory at Ruanda-Urundi, 6–8 Jan. 1945.

136 This is, perhaps, one reason why during the 1950s schoolchildren in Ngozi (Burundi) sang that ‘those who go to Buganda are complete idiots.’ Chrétien and Mworoha, ‘Le cas’, 664.

137 Doyle, ‘Parish’; Richards (ed.) Economic, 161–93; Rockenbach, ‘Contingent’, 81–124.

138 Richards (ed.), Economic, 196.

139 Ibid., 194–200; also Rockenbach, ‘Contingent’, 107–20.

140 Gravel, P., Remera: a Community in Eastern Ruanda (The Hague, 1968), 111–17Google Scholar; Richards (ed.), Economic, 266. By the early 1950s, tax rates in Ruanda-Urundi had converged with those in Uganda. Richards (ed.), Economic, 67–8.

141 Numerous migrants signed a contract with a recruiter for one of the South Asian sugar plantations or other expatriate firms in Ruanda-Urundi or at the border, only to disappear in the countryside once in Buganda. UKNA CO 536/213/4 Unknown author on 24 May 1946; FO 371 File 1016 Governor of Uganda to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 17 Jan. 1949; CO 822/1631 Minutes of the Ninth interterritorial conference on migrant labour from Ruanda-Urundi, 16–17 March 1959.

142 AAB RWA 352 Migration des indigènes Banyarwanda vers les Colonies Britanniques, 23 May 1947.

143 Since the majority of political refugees lived outside refugee camps in western Uganda, it is likely that this estimate includes Rwandan refugees as well, which means that the number of earlier migrant families who had returned is even greater than the figure suggests. It should also be noted, however, that a share of the settled migrants likely identified as Ganda in the census.

144 Tensions between rural immigrants and local populations developed in many parts of Africa. See Boone, C., Property and Political Order in Africa: Land Rights and the Structure of Politics (Cambridge, 2014), 91176Google Scholar.

Supplementary material: File

De Haas supplementary material

Appendices 1-2

Download De Haas supplementary material(File)
File 349.8 KB