This article analyses the controversy that surrounded the employment of Chinese-indentured labourers on the rubber estates of British North Borneo during the 1920s and 1930s. Using North Borneo as a case study, the article seeks to challenge the assertion made by historians that Chinese indenture had been abolished by the 1920s. I argue that Chinese-indentured workers made up a significant component of the workforce until the 1940s. My study of British North Borneo is part of a project that seeks to historicise the abolition of Chinese indenture across the Asia-Pacific region. While there is a wealth of rich work on the emergence of Chinese-indentured labour in the nineteenth century, analysis of the processes by which it was abolished have...
Debates between colonial administrators and anti-slavery British reformers during the interwar years...
Recently the flow of labour from China to Indonesia has fuelled many discussions but is not a new ph...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explores the relationship between colonial gover...
To what extent did authoritarian regimes in Asia repress labour activism during a period of catch-up...
On 30 May 1925 British officers opened fire on Chinese union protesters in Shanghai’s Internat...
In contrast to the "coolie trade, " which has been extensively studied, Chinese migration from south...
This article re-examines the, well documented, campaign that took place, in the nineteen twenties an...
First published in 1984. Indentured labour migration in the nineteenth century intersects many of th...
International audienceThe reasons for Chinese Emigration to America and elsewhere were largely econo...
This chapter examines unfree labour in three industries in the nineteenth and early twentieth centur...
Drawing on archival sources in Britain, Singapore, Malaysia, and the United States, this article exp...
Protest movements are an aspect of history garnering closer attention in recent years, in particular...
This article analyses the experiences of Chinese elites who sought access to the hill stations of Ma...
This article argues that in order to develop a Marxist theory of action, it is necessary to go beyon...
This article traces the decolonization of Britain's informal empire over the teak trade in Thailand ...
Debates between colonial administrators and anti-slavery British reformers during the interwar years...
Recently the flow of labour from China to Indonesia has fuelled many discussions but is not a new ph...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explores the relationship between colonial gover...
To what extent did authoritarian regimes in Asia repress labour activism during a period of catch-up...
On 30 May 1925 British officers opened fire on Chinese union protesters in Shanghai’s Internat...
In contrast to the "coolie trade, " which has been extensively studied, Chinese migration from south...
This article re-examines the, well documented, campaign that took place, in the nineteen twenties an...
First published in 1984. Indentured labour migration in the nineteenth century intersects many of th...
International audienceThe reasons for Chinese Emigration to America and elsewhere were largely econo...
This chapter examines unfree labour in three industries in the nineteenth and early twentieth centur...
Drawing on archival sources in Britain, Singapore, Malaysia, and the United States, this article exp...
Protest movements are an aspect of history garnering closer attention in recent years, in particular...
This article analyses the experiences of Chinese elites who sought access to the hill stations of Ma...
This article argues that in order to develop a Marxist theory of action, it is necessary to go beyon...
This article traces the decolonization of Britain's informal empire over the teak trade in Thailand ...
Debates between colonial administrators and anti-slavery British reformers during the interwar years...
Recently the flow of labour from China to Indonesia has fuelled many discussions but is not a new ph...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explores the relationship between colonial gover...