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Violence and work

Convict labour and settler colonialism in the Cape-Namibia border region (c.1855–1903)
Publication date
2021-01-22
Document type
Forschungsartikel
Author
Herzog, Kai Florian 
Organisational unit
University of Basel, Department of History
DOI
10.1080/03057070.2021.1861819
URI
https://openhsu.ub.hsu-hh.de/handle/10.24405/20274
Publisher
Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group
Series or journal
Journal of Southern African Studies
ISSN
0305-7070
Periodical volume
47
Periodical issue
1
First page
17
Last page
36
Part of the university bibliography
Nein
  • Additional Information
Language
English
Keyword
Convict labour
Labour question
Violence
Settler colonialism
Border region
Namibia
Cape Colony
German South West Africa
Abstract
This article focuses on convict labour in the Namibian–Cape border region in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It situates this form of unfree labour within broader trans-colonial discussions on the ‘labour question’ and compulsion after the abolition of slavery. The article demonstrates that convict labour was a flexible and steadily available labour force, which officials used on both sides of the Orange river to manage, in part, the fluctuating labour demands of public and private employers. While local Cape officials utilised it to meet recurring labour deficits at short notice, their German counterparts followed the long-term objective of ‘educating’ Africans to work by means of compulsion. At the same time, colonisers on this shared frontier of the Cape Colony and German South West Africa lamented the weak deterrent effects of convict labour as this potentially undermined their claimed authority and control over convicts as well as over African labour more broadly, partly unsettled by convicts’ own actions. Ultimately, this article argues that officials conceived of violence as a key measure to counter these subversive tendencies but that it had equivocal consequences that further complicated the ‘labour question’ on the ground. By analysing the debates on and (violent) practices of enforcing convict labour, the article also opens a window on to the contentious formation of settler colonialism on the ground.
Description
Issue 1 of volume 47 is also a special issue "Namibia labour history"
Version
Published version
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