This chapter examines unfree labour in three industries in the nineteenth and early twentieth century. It focuses on the forms and consequences of protest which arose amongst workers in these industries in response to the conditions under which they were employed. The Assamese tea industry, Vietnamese rubber plantations and Northern Australian cattle ranching used differing means of production, technology and investment but all relied on colonial governments to enable them to recruit and retain a \u27contracted\u27 labour force. The forms of the labour relationship varied but led to protests which often took on a wider meaning in struggles for liberation
The history of Indonesian labour activism as seen from an Australian perspective is best known in th...
This article examines labour controls in traditional tea plantations in Bangladesh. This study finds...
In the early twentieth century, Chinese cabinetmakers' militancy in Melbourne not only secured a fai...
This article analyses the controversy that surrounded the employment of Chinese-indentured labourers...
The history of Indonesian labour activism as seen from an Australianperspective is best known in the...
On 30 May 1925 British officers opened fire on Chinese union protesters in Shanghai’s Internat...
The occupation of Assam by the British in the first half of the nineteenth century led Assam to be c...
Studies of working people have long been framed by the concepts of "free" and "unfree" labour, a pai...
The conflict over 'coolie labour' was of great importance in colonial Australia. Like the debates an...
First published in 1984. Indentured labour migration in the nineteenth century intersects many of th...
The Tea Plantations in the Darjeeling district of West Bengal is a world-renowned tea producing regi...
Queensland in the late nineteenth century was a society of paradox, containing within it very divers...
This is a history of the labour movement in the Australian region of North Queensland during the fir...
This chapter focuses on conflicts of development from the point of view of the entanglement between ...
This chapter focuses on conflicts of development from the point of view of the entanglement between ...
The history of Indonesian labour activism as seen from an Australian perspective is best known in th...
This article examines labour controls in traditional tea plantations in Bangladesh. This study finds...
In the early twentieth century, Chinese cabinetmakers' militancy in Melbourne not only secured a fai...
This article analyses the controversy that surrounded the employment of Chinese-indentured labourers...
The history of Indonesian labour activism as seen from an Australianperspective is best known in the...
On 30 May 1925 British officers opened fire on Chinese union protesters in Shanghai’s Internat...
The occupation of Assam by the British in the first half of the nineteenth century led Assam to be c...
Studies of working people have long been framed by the concepts of "free" and "unfree" labour, a pai...
The conflict over 'coolie labour' was of great importance in colonial Australia. Like the debates an...
First published in 1984. Indentured labour migration in the nineteenth century intersects many of th...
The Tea Plantations in the Darjeeling district of West Bengal is a world-renowned tea producing regi...
Queensland in the late nineteenth century was a society of paradox, containing within it very divers...
This is a history of the labour movement in the Australian region of North Queensland during the fir...
This chapter focuses on conflicts of development from the point of view of the entanglement between ...
This chapter focuses on conflicts of development from the point of view of the entanglement between ...
The history of Indonesian labour activism as seen from an Australian perspective is best known in th...
This article examines labour controls in traditional tea plantations in Bangladesh. This study finds...
In the early twentieth century, Chinese cabinetmakers' militancy in Melbourne not only secured a fai...